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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 4, Golygfa 1

ACT IV. SCENE I.

(Three days later.)

A COUNCIL CHAMBER, CARDUEL.

Geraint and Agravaine.

Agravaine
But have some patience —

Geraint
Patience! Here's the world
Aflare with swords; and we are cramped and held
For ministration, when our spurring hosts
Should ride spear-levelled.

Agravaine
They'll have ended this
Within the hour.

Geraint
Have ended! Aye, but how?
Lanval's accused of a gross falsity,
An idle, paltry, and low-seeming crime.
But were he guilty (as I'll not believe),
His penalty would far outweigh the deed.
The standards of our justice should not be
Alike for peace and passion; but the vice
Of quiet should be worth in war.

Agravaine
They say the King demands his death.

Geraint
The Queen,
I think more likely. God! what foolishness
To let the practice of the sexes twine
Within our usage.

Agravaine
A strange heresy!

Geraint
Strange, dost thou find it? Here's a soul of strength,
As thou should'st know!

Agravaine
None better!

Geraint
He may be
Condemned to death or degradation now.
For what offence? An insult to a queen!
What is an insult to a queen to me?
A hundred insults to a hundred queens? —
Is he the slighter if his tongue have slipped?
Is he less able in the talk of blades,
For such a faulting? But thou hast some cause
To much mislike him!

Agravaine
I do not, Geraint.
He overthrew me; therefore he must be
One of the noblest, best, most valiant knights
In all the world.

Geraint
Five days ago he spared
Your life.

Agravaine
And now to make a pretty tale,
I should save his? I would 'twere possible.
But I await this verdict. How can I
Divert its issue?

Geraint
I shall show you means.

Agravaine
I shall be glad. Oh, the sweet rogue, the rogue!
To think he had this hidden! I was tricked,
As all of us.

Geraint
What mean you?

Agravaine
Why, I'm kind
To all that have a likeness to myself.

Geraint
You think
That of him?

Agravaine
Surely. Rascal that he is,
I almost love him!

Geraint
By God's will, he'll die
Before he knows it.

Agravaine
Each to his taste. Here come
Our solemn judges. God help me, or I'll laugh.


Enter Cador, Gawain, and Owain.

Agravaine
My lords, the King impatiently attends
Upon your judgment.

Cador
In a little time
We shall decide it.

Agravaine
But, my lords, the knights
And barons murmur.

Cador
Go, disturb us not.


Exit Agravaine. Gawain and Owain talk apart.

Geraint
And now, Cador?

Cador
Geraint, he has confessed.
He did compare some paramour of his
To Guinevere: maintained her fairer far
Than any damsel of the court. How then
Shall I believe this taunt was unprovoked
By some denial?

Geraint
But he still maintains
His innocence upon the greater charge.

Cador
This is no time to play with subtlety.
I would have saved him were it possible.
He loved some woman. It is hers to save,
At least to prove that vile malignity
Bred not his words; and where can she be found?
Prove her existence!

Geraint
How can I do so?
I know her not.

Cador
Will not Sir Lanval tell
Her name and habit?

Geraint
I did ask of him;
He would not tell it; only he said to me
That never from her should his assistance come.

Cador
I greatly fear this woman never lived.
Hast thou, Gawain, heard aught of his desires?

Gawain
He was much noted that he paid no heed
To such adventures.

Cador
Dost thou know, Owain?

Owain
Am I a man to trouble in such case?

Cador
How can I doubt? His guilt is evident.

Geraint
I think myself his innocence is plain.
But have him guilty, 'tis convenient,
And saves you labour. Cornwall, are you mad?
This man did you some service in the past,
And now to serve some fool's fantastic shift
Of loyalty, you'll smile his life away —
His who could aid you!

Cador
I, as well as thou,
Know Lanval's worth. But I will not offend
The King I serve to save nobility.
True, it is folly to destroy a soul
For following nature. True, I cannot tell
If he be guilty or most innocent.
True, we shall lose a man of some account;
But I'll not risk disunion in our arms,
The King's suspicion, and the thousand ills
That have their birth in idle clemency.

Geraint
Will that be justice?

Cador
Care I if it's not?
I judge this case for plain commodity.
We are too near the savagery of war
To let one life prevent our purposes.
Justice itself is but a luxury
That states which stand beyond their neighbour's hopes
Can well afford. One can do wrong, Geraint,
Sobeit action does not foul the wheels
Of man's intention.

Geraint
So said I, Cador.
We need no shackles of the common mind.
Our lists are open, let all run who can;
What matters guilt?

Cador
What matters innocence?
You have a liking for the man, I know;
Not without cause. For you he is a shape
Bright in our shadows with the light he draws
From your affection. We, indifferent,
See but a motion irksome, irritant
In our estate.

Geraint
I see you mean him ill.

Cador
I never wished a harm to any man
In all my workings. But in nature's course
I have wrecked many. See, Owain is wroth,
And the grim chariot of our life rolls on.

Owain
(who has been looking from the window)
God! To be hampered in one's natural work
For such a case! Here see the clustered spears,
The glaives and axes of the gathered tribes
Waiting for us! Our banners are unfurled,
The lazy standards and forked pennons droop
And lisp in air. And we alone are dull,
Wasting the hours that give our homes and lands
To strangers' holding!

Cador
Patience, good Owain.
Let not the presence of this movement mar
Our graver judgment.

Gawain
Why should we delay?
Are we not bound by laws of chivalry?
We much condemn such action as this man
Acknowledges. For to excuse this fault
Were to lend men too great a power of scorn.
We have some name for honour in the world.
Shall we give cause that all may say of us,
"Thus do his vassals honour Arthur's wife!
This is the kindness and nobility
Of British princes!"? Is not all our state
Based upon customs which this man offends?
The law condemns him.


Re-enter Agravaine.

Geraint
And how oft, Gawain,
Hast thou gone free when, had the law received
Some strict enforcement, thou hadst earned more pain
That Lanval has?

Gawain
Am I the prisoner?
And must I answer for my honour now?

Agravaine
I hope not, brother. I am here prepared
To be a witness. I could tell a tale
Of forest meetings, love-quests sought, achieved,
Some say unwillingly.

Geraint
And more, Gawain.
How used you Pelleas?

Gawain
As well as I
Shall answer for. My failing gives no grace,
No right of entry to our counselling.
Stay by your rhyming Agravaine, and leave
This cause to us.

Agravaine
May I not then disclose
My poor opinion?

Gawain
Poor it is!

Agravaine
Of you,
No doubt, my brother. But of other men
A little different.

Gawain
This concerns you not.

Agravaine
There ye mistake you. I am much concerned;
Ye try a lust, and who's more competent
Than I to judge it? Is there lechery?
I am its master! There's no crime of love
But I have touched it.

Cador
Agravaine, our time
Brooks not such hindrance.

Agravaine
Nay, I help your dense
Old wrinkled thoughts. Our King's enangered, hot
Upon his purpose. Judge as best you can,
He will accept it.

Owain
Why must we be let
By one who's proved a liar?

Agravaine
Is it worse
To be a liar than a butcher? Then
I hope that Lanval's guilty. He may come
To be as fair a rascal as I am.

Owain
We'll push him to a better end.

Agravaine
No doubt,
For death's your woman! A foul taste, Owain,
To wish your mistress common.

Cador
This address
Will do your man small service.

Agravaine
I could never hope
To help him much. I had to speak or laugh,
And laughter would have hurt you more than words.

Cador
I see small cause for it.

Agravaine
Why look, Cador;
Of you I will say nothing, for I think
You're kindly minded: but behold Owain,
Our swart old savage handler of the sword,
A judge of love! Gawain, the advocate
Of all the virtues, and the father too
Of sundry bastards!

Gawain
Come, this goes too far;
An' I were not your brother —

Agravaine
You would lack
Even a conscience.

Owain
(to Cador) Will you still endure
This chattering fool?

Cador
Must I be judge as well
Of our opinions on each other's fame?
Drink in this vile detraction while our arms
Await their leaders? Ye do much mistake
The office ye fulfil. We'll speak
Only of this which lies before us now.
No more, Geraint, I know your arguments.
Our task is simple. We have but to prove
The value, measure, and extent of ill.
Is folly sin? I think this man's more fool
Than traitorous.

Gawain
I do regret, Cador,
This idle treatment of the very crime
That suckles evil. Is not chivalry
Ordained to tread such humours to the ground?

Cador
Aye, so it is. I value it myself
As just a charm to school souls passionate,
But not a custom whose infraction needs
Dread penalties.

Gawain
But still it is our law.
If knightliness be nothing, what are we?

Owain
Great talkers, at the least.

Cador
'Tis true.
Well, now, to finish: for some foolish speech,
And still more foolish action, we condemn
The likeliest leader who served under me.
How punish him?

Gawain
Death is the simplest way
To free ourselves from all embarrassment.

Cador
And thou, Owain?

Owain
I say kill, hang, or burn.
I for myself think that he's innocent;
But this displeasure that his trial gives
Can serve for guilt. All's guilty which will stand
Between our nature and its purposes:
So I condemn him for his innocence
That fawns on folly.

Cador
What say'st thou, Geraint?

Geraint
Nothing as yet.

Agravaine
(Aside to Geraint) It will go hard with him.
How strange it is that men hate most the deeds
In others which they practice of themselves.
What foolishness!

Geraint
I have a stroke to play
Beyond their humour.

Cador
I like it not. This man
Deserves not death, for we must not use laws
To lop our trunk of its most worthy limbs.
Upon the basis of some idle words
Shall we build scaffolds?

Gawain
Is it not enough
That our agreement smoulders into wrath?
What skill or courage balances the state
Of festering discord and half-veiled mistrust,
That we must enter if he stay with us?
Come, let the winds of resolution sweep
Away this mist wherein our souls do stand
Fiercely opponent.

Owain
Cornwall, let him die.
Why should this life hold all of us in leash,
When we are straining to take up the scent,
And run our quarry?

Cador
If it must be death —

Geraint
I say it shall not!

Gawain
Three are well agreed.

Geraint
I am not with you. Let this sentence pass,
And while I live it shall not be fulfilled,
Not if the blades of Devon can forbid
Its execution.

Gawain
Are we slighted thus?
This is rebellion!

Geraint
Call it what you will!
There is a limit to all fealty.
I know no oath that I have ever sworn
Which bids me help injustice with my arms,
Or stand by quiet whilst ye brush aside
A man's existence for your several ends.
Must I endure it? Must I sacrifice
My friend to ease the workings of your craft?
Ye plead the motion of this war demands
Lanval's destruction; but I think ye need
The power and forces that I now command
No less than that. Choose ye! If Lanval dies,
No man of Devon shall lay hand to blade;
Assist, acknowledge, or play party with
Your purpose.

Agravaine
(Aside) Now swell with righteous rage;
Have at him, brother!

Gawain
Is this a time for threats,
An hour wherein to gender civil strife?

Geraint
'Tis not my seeking.

Cador
I know well, Geraint,
We cannot spare thee. Yet it is ill done
If thou dost seek from out our poverty
To force acquaintance of a natural crime.

Geraint
I ask but justice.

Cador
Am I a vampire then,
Who gluts himself upon the blood of man?
Come, let us reason. We must needs condemn.
Were we to quit him, could our King believe
That we who held his honour in such scorn
Were true and faithful! Would he not suspect?
And God! the need is heavy on us now
Of confidence. I wish this man no ill,
Dost thou, Owain?

Owain
I liked him well.

Cador
And thou?

Gawain
Before this failing he had all the gifts
Of chivalry.

Cador
See thou, Geraint, we seek
His condemnation not of our own selves,
But of the flood wherein our persons merge.
Did not occasion so constrain our ends,
We'd soon acquit him; so he'd live again,
Chastened of sorrow, to redeem his fault,
And future deeds do penance for all hurt.

Geraint
Can they not still?

Cador
There is no future now,
But only present.

Geraint
He might still atone,
And do you service.

Cador
I do wish he could.
Most wrongs are deeds in idleness conceived,
Which have the fashion of true worth in them
Born at ill times.

Geraint
Can he have no escape?
I do suppose that it seems foul in me
To have no passion for this state and realm.
Yet I have served it and done certain deeds
For its advancement. Aye, the four of us
Have knit the threads of Britain in a web,
To stay all onset. This we did as friends,
And now this friendship will not grant a life
For friendship's sake. And, sirs, he used you well.
I am not 'customed to plead thus with men,
Nor am I prone to waste my love on such
As need excuses. Discord's in the air,
Then drive me not to severance of our bonds.

Gawain
What power have we that are the instruments
Of law and custom?

Cador
Ask us not, Geraint,
To shrink from judgment!

Agravaine
(Aside) How noble are we all!
This virtue's catching; we shall have a plague
Of this same honour!

Owain
Hearken now, ye lords,
And let my bluntness put an end to words.
I held a liking for this fellow once,
Since I believed he scorned, as well as I,
The love adventures, idle quests and aims,
In fact, all folly that this court adores.
Since he proved foolish I have lost all care.
Had but the fool denied this idle taunt,
And straight acknowledged that he loved the Queen,
We might have saved him. I advised you kill.
Death's cheap enough, and we have learnt long since
How to inflict it. Since Geraint withstands
The better issue, I'll not baulk his love,
Though I despise it, and believe that harm
Will come of it. I bid you banish him.
Proclaim him guilty, honourless and foul,
Henceforth degraded from this company.
Let him go out and see this court no more.
So shall this cause which doth offend all ears
Be dead and ended.

Cador
What say'st thou, Gawain?

Gawain
Owain is right. Let it be banishment.

Geraint
My friend degraded! Better death than that;
I'm fouled with him.

Cador
Enough, the King is here.


Enter Arthur and a company.

Arthur
Your verdicts, lords! Ye dally overlong.

Cador
Sire, we agree.

Geraint
Nay, I do not.

Cador
We three
Have thus determined — that Sir Lanval leave
This court for ever, having been proclaimed
Unworthy of true men's respect. His name
To be unknown among us.

Arthur
It is well.


Enter Gyfert and some of his men to Geraint.
Others to different knights.

Geraint
Is there no court in all the world but this?
While I am prince my home is open court
Unto Sir Lanval.

Arthur
It is not well, Geraint,
To so outface me, nor to lay thy speech
Against the manner of thy peers' consent.
I did not think Geraint should prove him false.

Geraint
Were I to yield and idly acquiesce
In such gross judgment as these barons give,
Who trim their sails by breath of their desires
And let the import of their careless hearts
Go cloaked as justice, I were false indeed.
False to myself and falser still to thee;
But I'll be honest and confess my thoughts.
Shall I from fear of the disdain of these
Refuse a shelter to what soul I will?

Arthur
Thy fealty doth bind thee to my cause,
And this defection is as sour a crime
As e'er was thought on.

Geraint
But there is no need
To fear defection. None shall say Geraint,
The son of Erbin, failed in his account.
This much for me. Unto the King I owe
All body service. While my limbs and power
Of blade or lance rest with me they shall be
Thine instrument; and while this life is mine
God, king, or devil shall not tear from me
What I protect.

Gawain
Is this not treason?

Arthur
Stay.
Proclaim the verdict of these lords abroad;
Let all the followers and our retinue
Know that Sir Lanval is adjudged as base,
False to his order, to his fealty,
To all thats honest.

Geraint
(Aside) Gyfert!

Gyfert
Here, my lord.

Geraint
Go to Sir Lanval; I'm his surety,
And bring him to me. We shall lead the van.

Gyfert
I will, my lord.

Arthur
I could be wroth, Geraint,
For I have trusted much to thy great soul;
But all prove false. So we'll not speak of it,
For this dishonour is to me the man,
And for my kingship I'll endure it so,
Being no longer man, but only king.
Amid the turmoil of these troubled days
The mist and wrack where wallows all our state,
My happiness, my pleasure and my faith
Are all gone down. Let then my honour go
And sink with them. Geraint, take thou thy task.

Geraint
I lead the van.

Arthur
I have not yet deprived
Thee of thine office. Go, be false or true
As it shall please thee! I must cringe to man
And beg his service.

Geraint
Sire, if I offend
Or wrong thy service, may the devil tear
My soul alive from its still quivering flesh,
And may — have done, the very oaths sound false!
I'm sick of speech! God's curse upon our talk,
And all the damnable dim sympathies
That cloud our passage. To the proof I go.
Let all I am stand to the test of war.


Exit Geraint.

Curtain

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