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Lanval (1908)

T E Ellis

Allan o hawlfraint. Y fersiwn yma Ⓗ 2021 Steffan Donnelly, CC-BY-NC-SA 4.0.

Act 1, Golygfa 2


ACT I. SCENE II.

A glade in the forest. Rocks, and a few huge, knotted trees. Late twilight.

Two charcoal-burners and a girl.

Charcoal-burner 1

Come, man, let's be getting home.

Charcoal-burner 2

Why, since we're free of the forest, let's make the most of it.

Girl

It's getting dark.

Charcoal-burner 1

Aye, so it is. Come on, man. We've gone far to-day: it's long since we dared come out here.

Charcoal-burner 2

Oh, I'll come. An I were not so feared, I'd laugh at it. First we daren't come out. Now we're feared of staying, and none too happy about going back.

Charcoal-burner 1

It's well the King and his knights have cleared the forest; we've less to fear now.

Charcoal-burner 2

Help me, girl. Well, I like knights less when they're doing well than when they're hard put to it.

Charcoal-burner 1

Why so?

Charcoal-burner 2

Why, when they're pressed they've trouble enough to fend for themselves, and they let us bide quiet; but when they're quiet and comfortable, we're best clear of them.

Charcoal-burner 1

Let's away.

Charcoal-burner 2

I'm with you. There are too many odd qualms in this valley for my liking.

Charcoal-burner 1
Come on, then. Why, who's here? A knight.

Charcoal-burner 2
More like some robber. Would we were well home.


Enter Lanval (C).

Lanval
Good, these should know. Come hither, my good folk.
Know ye these paths?

Charcoal-burner 1
Nay, I do not.

Charcoal-burner 2
Nor I.

Lanval
Come, answer me, these thickets are your home,
And ye must know them.

Charcoal-burner 1
But, good sir, we came
Thus far by chance. We know the certain path
To Carduel.

Lanval
But I would travel south.

Charcoal-burner 1
South, you — where's south?

Charcoal-burner 2
Why, anywhere but here.

Lanval
What ails your speech, and why this trembling, man?
I shall not hurt you.

Charcoal-burner 1
It grows over late;
The sun's near down.

Lanval
I see you fear. Thou, girl,
Knowest thou the roads that lead beyond this place?

Girl
Truly, my lord, I dare not overstep
These certain limits.

Lanval
Is this truth?

Girl
My lord.

Lanval
Fear not, I shall not do you harm!
Here will I rest, since I must have the day
To light my passage.

Charcoal-burner 1
We may go?

Lanval
Why not?
God speed you.


The 2nd Charcoal Burner offers to speak to Lanval.

Charcoal-burner 1
Fool, come on!

Charcoal-burner 2
He should be told.

Lanval
Stay, though, I need a service of you yet;
Light me a fire, for I'll sleep here to-night.

Charcoal-burner 1
We will, my lord. Stay, girl, and make a fire.

Lanval
Not so, my friends, stay ye and make it.

Charcoal-burner 1
Night
Is hard upon us. (They make a fire.)

Lanval
Ye shall go full soon.
Tell me, what fear ye?

Charcoal-burner 1
My father near this place
Met with the death-dogs hunting!

Lanval
Oh, I know
That tale!

Charcoal-burner 2
But more, good sir, I know this vale too well.
This wood is full of shadows, and the night
Goes not from it, but lurks the livelong day
In its deep places. One is followed marked
By a strange fear that waits for the night hours.
What was that sound?

Lanval
Nothing, my good soul.
Ye that do fear the length of all your days,
Find doubt at dawn, half courage in the day,
Terror at twilight. What the night can bring
Of added tremors I may not conceive.

Charcoal-burner 2
My lord, the shadows are not still, but move.
The air is quiet. All should be quite still.
And yet this glade is pregnant with a sound,
And silent movement in the silence hangs.
The fire is made.

Lanval
Then go, good fools — farewell!
Why go ye not?

Charcoal-burner 2
My lord, —

Lanval
Well?

Charcoal-burner 2
Speak!

Charcoal-burner 1
Nay, do thou speak.

Lanval
(Throwing them some money.)
See, here is the reward —

Charcoal-burner 2
It was not that.

Lanval
What then?

Girl
Oh, my lord,
Certain fair knights have wandered to this glade,
Seeking the fear that ever haunted it.
This hungry forest hath consumed their lives;
No man has seen them, nor has any heard
Aught of their end at any time again.
Sweet sir, return, for to remain is —

Lanval
What?

Charcoal-burner 2
Tis death, my lord.

Lanval
Why, then, 'tis death.
The night is here. Go, ye good fearful things,
Lest your own fear play havoc with your lives.
Silence! Enough! I'll have no more of this.


Exeunt charcoal-burners.

Lanval
Poor souls, they wander in a fitful dream;
Born in the shadow, nurtured like the stuff
That grows so rank between the stagnant moat
And savage wall. The usage of their days
Is but a hope that they shall pass unmarked.
Unnoticed birth, unhindered life, and thence
Unhampered passage to a state unknown.
Existence cramped beneath the wings of fear!
Poor souls, my sorrow is not half of theirs,
And yet suffices. (Lies down.) Sleep. Did I desire
To wish them well, I think to sleep is best,
Since 'tis denied them to attain great ends.



The stage grows dark and the fire burns low. Presently a figure comes from the background and begins to tend the fire. Lanval half awakes.

Lanval
Returned so soon?

Triamour
The fire burnt low, my lord.

Lanval
Dost thou not fear?

Triamour
I shall not fear here.

Lanval
Thou needst not, girl. (dreamily) It's true more danger lives
Amongst mankind than in the open woods.
The twisted branches that enframe the stars
Are not as tangled as men's motives are.
The fiercest shadows that can haunt a glade,
The forms of terror that infest bleak hills,
Are not as savage, nor as dangerous,
As fretful moods in passionate wild souls.
All nature's constant save in idle man.
Night is so sweet that I can wonder now,
As must the spirits who look down on us;
We fret and trouble, spur our willing souls,
And yet see life outpace our earnest quest.
Why not be gentle, and say just good-night,
Sleep well, my dreams, sleep well, mine enterprise;
To-morrow — well, to-morrow. Tell me, child,
Why did thy comrades fear this place so much.

Triamour
My lord, at times a phantom uses this
As her abode. She has the power to suck
The life and essence from all things she meets,
To creep about the heart of men with words
And dim illusions, till her manner draws
The soul from them, as all blood-feeding beasts,
Once fixed, drain forth their poor drugged victim's life.

Lanval
What more?

Triamour
The power that in the darkness lives
Impalpable, is hers to lose or hold.
The mysteries that on all being brood,
Are hers to open. In the mists of night
She sits embowered, and strange thoughts surround
Her habitation. For her service wait
Wild visions ready, and fantastic dreams,
To make the circuit of the sleeping world,
And breathe their formless and suggestive speech
To souls that slumber.

Lanval
(Seizing a brand from the fire.)
No charcoal-burner this.
The form itself! But, God, how fair it is —
Is this enchantment, or does mystery
In silence whispered, so infect my mind
That I see phantoms?

Triamour
Lanval.

Lanval
Hast my name?
Why, then, my soul has left its fleshly shape,
And stands to mock me.

Triamour
Have no fear.

Lanval
Not I!
If thou be flesh, and of defiant sort,
A blade can test thee. If thou art not that,
But mere refraction of disordered thought,
Thou canst not harm me.

Triamour
Nay, I shall not harm
Aught of thy being. Come, touch me if thou wilt;
No need of steel, for that will hurt me not.

Lanval
(Coming near.) So, 'tis the stuff, the substance of this world,
And no slight spirit, vaporous form of dreams,
Born of the moonbeams and the mist of lakes,
Clasped in the woodlands. Thou didst speak my name —
I know thee not!

Triamour
But I do know thee well,
For I am flesh or spirit as I please,
For some incarnate in this woman's shape,
For some the fear and terror of deep glades,
For some the flame invisible that drifts
Out of the night, that fires the soul of men
To seek the strangeness of all wild desire.

Lanval
They say the devil takes such shapes as this,
When he would tempt the constancy of knights!

Triamour
Nay, fear me not.

Lanval
Nay, I fear not, but doubt
Why thou hast come to trouble me.

Triamour
Do I
So trouble thee? I come but from my place
To taste the fever of this sickly earth,
And also —

Lanval
Also?

Triamour
I have come too close
Unto this world. My being has been snared
Into its uses.

Lanval
What meanest thou?

Triamour
Is there need
To ask of me? Nay, Lanval, I have come
Out of the quiet of the middle world
To plead with thee, I, Triamour,
One of the daughters of the middle world.

Lanval
Let me hold fast my senses, for they reel; —
I know this world!

Triamour
There is a world as well,
That lies so close unto your being's self,
Is so entwined amid your secret thoughts,
That its existence is not known of you.
This is the vapour that doth shelter man
Lest he be scorched by the fierce heat of truth.

Lanval
How may this be?

Triamour
Speak not of it, but say
I came not vainly!

Lanval
How shall I believe?

Triamour
That I do love thee? Look into mine eyes,
And say if malice or deception lie
In ambush there!

Lanval
I dare not.

Triamour
Am I then
Not fair enough?

Lanval
So wonderful and strange!
I dare not let my straining ears take hold
Upon thy speech.

Triamour
Thou wilt not hear me?

Lanval
No;
For such a beauty is too dangerous
For mortal feeling.

Triamour
I am shamed. Unkind
Thou art and cruel. (She moves away. )

Lanval
Can I endure it so,
Or will my lips enforcèd cry the words —
My soul compels them! I have but my soul
To stake on it. Stay, Triamour!

Triamour
Farewell!
My own state waits me.

Lanval
May I not attain
Unto that world?

Triamour
But by mine aid alone;
And since no pleasure or sweet feeling comes
Of this my presence, let us be apart.

Lanval
Stay but a moment.

Triamour
We shall meet no more
At any time!

Lanval
Nay, be thou merciful.
Forgive my failing. 'Twas my craven soul
That shrank in doubt from this dread novelty,
But for a time. The fashion of my fear
Was more amazement than true dread. So swift,
So strange was thy sweet coming that my mind,
But half awoken from fantastic thoughts,
Lost mastery upon itself. But now
My fear is swung to terror of long days
Without thy presence.

Triamour
This is no constancy,
To spurn me first and then implore mine aid.
Have care, Sir Lanval, this is no slight quest;
And slender souls that are not steeled of love,
May fail their entry and be ever lost
In the cold void that lies about these gates.
Art thou my knight, sworn to my services?

Lanval
Let me be so, though I had never thought
To do love-service. I will pledge my soul
Unto thy being.

Triamour
Bear witness to it, dreams,
All evil hauntings that infest the air!
Now shall remorse and foul disaster watch,
And blasting visions hang upon thy course.
See that thou fail not.

Lanval
On my soul be it!

Triamour
Look on the world, for it may be henceforth
Thou shalt not see it. Bid the earth farewell
And all its usage.

Lanval
I'll not mourn for it.
Sour and displeasing it has been to me,
Unfriends of mine most of its habitants,
And I can leave it with no pain at heart.

Triamour
Ours is a better and a stranger world,
Its gates swing open in the darkling hours
Upon the path of perfumes of the night.
Harken, ye wardens of the middle world,
Spirits of flame that stand at this world's edge —
A soul would enter! Let me touch thine eyes
And put the fabric of this world away,
A time-worn garment to be cast aside
On such a moment. Come, it is the hour!



{As she touches his eyes there is darkness and confusion. A rush of wild music. The stage remains dark for some moments, then gradually lightens, but remains darker than before. Triamour and Lanval have vanished. A horn is heard in the distance, then again nearer.

Enter Geraint and Gyfert, the latter dragging one of the charcoal-burners; with them one or two men-at-arms, with torches.

Gyfert
Wast here, fellow?

Charcoal-burner 1
Aye, for sure,
We left him here.

Geraint
Tis a wild spot, fit for unholy deeds.
Question him, Gyfert.

Gyfert

Aye, my lord. If we but find the track of him, I'll lay this dog's nose to it, and if he follow the line untruly, we have rope and trees.

Charcoal-burner 1
Spare me, my lord. Indeed, we left him here;
He bade us leave him.

Gyfert
Here's a fire, my lord,
And warm as yet.

Geraint
He cannot then be far.
A plague of this darkness. Bring the torches by.

Gyfert
Now for a cast! Speak to it truly, my ill-favoured brachet. Give tongue, fellow!

Charcoal-burner 1
Truly, my lord, we made this fire for him,
And then, being fearful, for he seemed distraught,
Prayed him return. He bade us leave him here.

Gyfert
His cloak!

Geraint
Unmarked?

Gyfert
Save of the soil, my lord.

Geraint
He may have wandered. Curse this night and gloom.

Gyfert
It grows the wilder for the touch of dawn.

Geraint
What fit of madness made him choose this place
To rest him in?

Gyfert
This fellow saith it holds
An evil name.

Geraint
Most like, the while he's in it!
Where are his tracks?

Gyfert
Confusion, 'tis too hard
In this ill light!

Geraint
We'll try by day. (To man-at-arms.) Go, thou,
And bid them bring the horses and our gear,
The while we find some spot more fit to use
For our encampment. Listen, fellow, now
If we find not this knight alive and well
Upon the morrow, 'twill go hard with thee.

Charcoal-burner 1
The evil spirit that doth haunt this glade
Hath taken him!

Geraint
What tale is this?

Charcoal-burner 1
My lord,
It is well known this place is dangerous,
A valley favoured by the dogs of hell!

Geraint
Well, well! You're likely to know more of hell
Unless we find him!

Gyfert
Tis a gallows face!
Here's a good branch.

Charcoal-burner 1
Oh, no, my lord.

Geraint
Enough.
Less noise, fool. Gyfert! come, we'll on;
Bring him away; the moon is overcast.

Gyfert
If it were not, this dog would howl to it.


Exeunt.

Curtain.

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