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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 2


ACT IV. SCENE II.

Another part of the forest. The ground rises at back of stage to a ridge. Beyond in the distance a line of wooded hills faint in the moonlight. As the Act continues the dawn begins, and towards the end of the Act a red light beats up out of the valley. When the scene opens it is nearly dark, the moon slanting through the branches in places.

Time. Three days elapse between Scenes I and II.

The two charcoal-burners are conversing in a low tone.

Charcoal-burner 1

And now youve dragged me four mile and more, what's the trouble?

Charcoal-burner 2

Do you know the light of burning thatch?

Charcoal-burner 1

Surely.

Charcoal-burner 2

Well I've seen it away north, and I've seen a mort of men down over the ford, and that's enough to bring me to the woods. I fetched you along to be neighbourly.

Charcoal-burner 1

And them over the ford, they'll be knights?

Charcoal-burner 2

They're none of ours, and anyhow we're best clear of them.

Charcoal-burner 1

Foreigners?

Charcoal-burner 2

'Tis likely. There's a sight of strangers cutting into the land, or we'd have had no need to shift hereabouts. And now we're best away south again.

Charcoal-burner 1

Why, we're safe enough here. Though I'm not fond of the woods after dark. There's more in them than I care to meet.

Charcoal-burner 2

Likely enough. I'll not call you a liar for that. But speaking of fears, do ye mind a knight that was lost, and came near getting us hemp collars?

Charcoal-burner 1

Sure I do.

Charcoal-burner 2

He's lost again. I saw him yester noon, a-ravaging through the woods like a rutting stag.

Charcoal-burner 1

Never!

Charcoal-burner 2

I'm honest enough. 'Tis the same man.

Charcoal-burner 1

D' ye think theyll pay for his finding again?

Charcoal-burner 2

He seems middling precious. Any way, I marked him down. Yes, I've harboured him. Now if any tufter comes, we'll stand fast and make our price.

Charcoal-burner 1

Halves.

Charcoal-burner 2

I'll give you your share, no more. He's my find.

Charcoal-burner 1

You're a mean stoat.

Charcoal-burner 2

See here, man, I've treated you neighbourly. Look yonder, where our huts are. What's there?

Charcoal-burner 1

Smoke!

Charcoal-burner 2

Aye, you've need to be glad you're not being cured.

Charcoal-burner 1

Let's get out of this!

Charcoal-burner 2

And leave my find? Not I! It wants an hour of dawn: we're sure enough till the light comes.

Charcoal-burner 1

Still! I heard a branch crack.

Charcoal-burner 2

This side.



Enter Bernardo.

Bernardo
Just to this ridge! I dare not go beyond.
If he have passed it, there's an end of all.
Why, what are ye?

Charcoal-burner 2
Poor men, sir.

Bernardo
Stand away:
If old, I'm not unhandy. Of what race
Are ye?

Charcoal-burner 2

Good sir, my father was a minder of cows, but I have an uncle that was follower of a great lord at Bassa, till they hanged him.

Bernardo
Of what possession are you?

Charcoal-burner 2
Of my uncle's, sir.

Bernardo
What's that?

Charcoal-burner 2

Why, doing well until you're hanged for it. Doing as you're told and keeping away from any that can tell you; making a profit with two spears' length start of the dealer; being a very firm upholder of all wars where others do the fighting. My trade is charcoal burning.

Bernardo
You know this country?

Charcoal-burner 2
Well enough.

Bernardo
Have you
Or your companions seen a wandering knight?

Charcoal-burner 2

A wild fellow in a mail shirt, wandering and cursing? A man that goes fingering the rough bark of trees, and frowning and stumbling all across the woods? Such a one?

Bernardo
It might be so.

Charcoal-burner 2
I'll lead you to him — at a price.

Bernardo
There is no need.


Lanval enters behind and halts in (C) of stage.

Bernardo
Sir Lanval! Good, my lord
Will you not answer?


Lanval turns away.

Charcoal-burner 2
There's ungratefulness!
He's come a-purpose, lest we might be paid
For finding him.

Bernardo
Sir, I have known you long
And merit not such usage.

Lanval
Is there not
A single refuge or forgotten spot
Where this dogged custom fails?

Bernardo
My lord,
I heartened you some years ago, when dull
And discontented you abjured this land,
So hear me now.

Lanval
Bernardo, all my rage
Was vented then upon the world. But since,
I've learnt to blame myself, not circumstance.

Bernardo
Is this the man that faced all Mantua,
And held his honour up against the world?

Lanval
Aye, this is he. What would you of the ghost
Which once was man?

Bernardo
My lord, I knew you well
When I was active. But the bitter clime,
The raw fierce action of this troubled state
Has wrinkled us together. And we yearn alike
For the fair spaces of the southern coasts.

Lanval
I shall not see them. Nor do I desire
To gain such ease.

Bernardo
My lord, in Italy —

Lanval
I have forsworn it. I have cursed all lands,
And yet, Bernardo, thou dost not believe
That I am guilty?

Bernardo
Nay, my lord, I know
It is not just.

Lanval
Such faith should soften me,
Whom certain ills have hardened.

Bernardo
O my lord,
Come hence with me.

Lanval
Wherefore should I?

Bernardo
There's room
For honour yet abroad.

Lanval
Is there a court
In Christendom where it will not be known
That I'm dishonoured? Let the stripling fools
Who follow fame seek honour at my hands:
For here's a man whose death would bring them worth,
Since I am one with savage, beast and thief,
And not as worthy as the butchering lords
That foul these borders. No, give me a bell,
And let me sound my coming to all men
As do the lepers: let them step aside
And shirk the wrong they gave me.

Bernardo
But my lord —

Lanval
No, no, Bernardo. Leave me as I am.
These woods are kinder than the paths of men:
They give me shelter, but the bitter souls
Whom I have served have taken everything.
I squandered on them liking, wealth and life,
And they return me scorn. What is there left?
They've had my service, honour, youth and name;
They sucked my being: at a harlot's word
They spat me out. This mire is honesty.
This thicket clearness, and the sleeting night
Warm covering, while I remember them.

Bernardo
Your wrath is just, but bear a little while
With the sour treatment of the world. And then
We'll toss the past, its broken shafts and shields
Into a corner.

Lanval
Can faith live so long?
You should know man.

Bernardo
I do.

Lanval
Yet you'd persuade
Me back to them. Nay, I am better here.
Naught's fair in dreams but some reality,
And in the real nothing's good but dreams.
Here I come closer to essential things,
Here will I stand before the veil of life
And wait its lifting.

Bernardo
But, my lord, our foes —
The white-shield Angles lie beyond this vale,
Lovers of blood who spare no living thing.

Lanval
And what of them? They can but add my death
To my account, and that's a certain debt
Which all must pay. They'll pile no infamy
Upon my name; they'll not first fondle me,
Then spurn me like a dog. I shall be glad
To meet with them; for such sword-ending is
Most honourable treatment.

Bernardo
Hark, my lord,
I hear men's movement in the valley, feet
That crush the bracken. Come away, my lord.

Lanval
Stand to it, fool, this is as kind a spot
As we shall find.


A noise in the valley.

Charcoal-burner 1

Come away, man, there are some good thick places near here.

Charcoal-burner 2

He owes me something for finding him.

Charcoal-burner 1

You'll be paid with a clout, if I know the look of man.

Charcoal-burner 2

Well, lets get away, then.



Exeunt the two charcoal-burners.

Lanval
Go thou, Bernardo.

Bernardo
Nay, my lord, I stay,
At least stand here in shadow. They may pass.


Enter from back Geraint, Gyfert and several men-at-arms.

Geraint
Back, Beric, tell thy captain that his posts
Must watch the ford; if 'saulted, hold their ground
As best they can, and bid him send to me
Report of any movement.


Exit man-at-arms.

Geraint
(To remainder) Take your rest.
You sent a runner, Gyfert, to the south;
Has he returned?

Gyfert
Not yet, my lord.

Geraint
We've swinged
The hornets' nest, and left them buzzing.


Gyfert goes to the ridge and comes back.

Gyfert
Still
As yet.

Geraint
Too quiet, they'll be up anon
And we shall feel them. Oh, a thousand men!
Only a thousand of my moorland glaives,
And all the rest of Britain could stand off
And see me match them!

Gyfert
(Moving across the stage) We've a clear space here —
At least for action. Out, you skulking dogs!
(He sees Bernardo and Lanval.)
Out of the shadow!

Geraint
(Striding across to Gyfert) Why, what's here? Old man!
This is no place for long-beards. By the saints!
Bernardo! Lanval! Sure the fates have changed
Their ancient purpose: but how came ye here?
Why, Lanval, didst thou fly me? I had meant
As surety to bring thee to this war,
Where we might gather honour. Thou art come
Alone, unarmed!

Lanval
I came of my own will,
With but one purpose, to be free of all
The cankering trouble of your squalid state,
But I can find no refuge. Let me go,
I seek some covert like a wounded beast,
Where I can brood to death.

Geraint
I know the cause
Of this despair. Give me your hand. Think now
I hold dishonour? Has my grasp a lack
Of strength in it?

Lanval
Thou hast been friend to me
Beyond my merit. I have been so pricked
In comradeship that I must do the last
Good deed of kinship. Let me go, Geraint,
I am pollution, although innocent.
I shall infect the fashion of thy days,
Draw the black wings of sour suspicion down
Upon thy being. I am a man condemned,
Pronounced degraded, and no innocence
Can change my fashion. Let me go. I spoil
Thy whole existence. I am outcast now.

Geraint
I need thy service.

Lanval
My best service is
To stand as far as may be from thy path.

Geraint
I tell thee, Lanval, I'll not hear of this.
The swollen torrent of grim circumstance
Swept us together, and upon its flood
Have we come down. I know not why we met,
Nor do I care so greatly for the cause
Of our adherence. It is possible
To make a virtue of one's tendencies,
When by some chance an instinct follows straight
On kindly endings. I am not acting now
As chosen helper of true worth distressed,
But I do this because I'll not be baulked
Of what I please; and, to be frank, I think
My liking for thee is but selfishness.
Condemned or not, I hold my course the same.
Let us abide it.

Lanval
Is it not enough
That I must suffer for such sodden crime
As I ne'er dreamt on. Is it not enough
That I must drift upon the sullen stream,
Like some wan lily of the autumn time,
In which the fairness and the flavours dead;
A thing repugnant, destined to the ooze
That beds the river? God! the little good
That I can do thee is to leave this place,
Or to rush idly on my fate beyond.

Geraint
I say thou shalt not. If need be, I stay
Thy passage hence, e'en by the force of arms.
Come, man! I thought there was more mettle here
Than such abasement shows. Art thou
So much a coward that the foolish fates
Have but to strike and thou art recreant?
Honour's no virgin to be easy soiled
By life's first contact. There is naught we lose
Which we may not hack out of time again,
If we but hold the courage to outface
Our bitter fortunes.

Lanval
Think not that I fear
To see my life out: but foul influence
Rules all my doings.

Geraint
Thou hast cause for wrath,
But rage should not be wasted on oneself
While work's toward. Dishonour's drowned in blood,
And names grow taintless in the fire of war.

Lanval
Why wilt thou drag me to the profitless
And empty quarrel of this bitten realm?
I am aweary of it.

Geraint
And I am no less.
Lanval, see this, my will has been the spur
Of all thine action. I have linked my life
To thine: and so have I accepted share
Of all thy burdens. In the ills thou hast,
I am a partner: if thou knowest shame,
I am not scatheless. Twice have I withstood
The carelessness and idle scorn of man
From faith in thee. Once, I did stake my lands
And my subsistence on thy hardiness.
I was not wrong: again I staked belief
And risked my honour and my upright name,
Which, believe me, I love as much as thou,
Upon the shadow of thy good repute.
Now our acquaintance is no longer new,
And time puts our relation to the proof.
Let us be honest. I have stood for thee,
Enacted treason, spurned old comradeship
To stand thy helper. Now it seems I lied,
And all I did for honour is become
A very falseness.

Lanval
How?

Geraint
I was constrained
By some strange liking for another type,
A stamp of being distant from myself,
To spend my life, my power and influence
Upon a man in whom I snuffed the scent
Of a clean being. Now are we at holds.

Lanval
Say on, Geraint.

Geraint
All men speak ill of thee:
I count opinion lesser than the turn
Of any pennant. But I doubt all now.
I cannot think that this spiritless poor husk
Is the same man I chose from out the herd
Who strove for honour. Was I too deceived,
And do men rightly call thee but a dog,
A common trickster and a hypocrite?

Lanval
Wilt thou believe it?

Geraint
Only from thy lips,
Yet these strange actions must incline me to it.
The thought's not sweet, but still be frank with me,
For I meet disillusion as all else,
Stoutly enough.

Lanval
I had but this to lose!
God! is there yet another rag to tear
From beggary?

Geraint
Now it is thine to loose
Or bind our friendship. I did never ask
A service of you but to turn its use
To your advancement. I have served your cause
In many fashions and not selfishly.
You squandered substance and I spent my years,
Now those you dowered have forgotten you,
And you, I fancy, have forgotten me.
Yet should you care to pay my years with hours,
And let me hold illusion to the end,
It will not grieve me. Lanval, stand by me,
Play man to my man! Be again to me
The friend I trusted.

Lanval
Wilt compel me then?

Geraint
That's not my answer.

Lanval
I'll not say "accept,"
But "take" my life: for I have nothing left
Beyond the usage of my hands. Take this,
Cast it to feed what purposes you will.
It has no merit, value or regard;
Such as it is, I give it — a free gift
From now till death.

Geraint
And I will take it so.
Fate's herald holds the trumpet to his lips,
And we stand ready in the lists of life
To challenge fortune. But thou hast no arms!
Bernardo!

Bernardo
Prince.

Geraint
Have you equipment near?

Bernardo
Not far, my lord.

Geraint
Go thou and bring it here.


Exit Bernardo.

Geraint
My course is laid, and not a storm of change
Shall turn me from it.


Enter Gyfert.

Gyfert
Our runner is returned.
He found Owain with levies of North Wales.
They come to help us.

Geraint
Could he hear no word
Of the King's forces?

Gyfert
No.

Geraint
The dawn is near!
Advise me, Lanval. I do need thy skill,
Should Arthur come not ere the light reveals
Our present weakness, we shall be hard set
To hold this passage.


Enter Captain.
Do they move?

Captain
My lord,
There is a sound of motion in their camp,
And certain horsemen have already crossed
The ford beneath us.

Geraint
Can ye hold them?

Captain
No.
I think, my lord, they move with the intent
To seize upon the vantage of this ridge
Before the day.

Geraint
They may not so intend.
What think'st thou, Lanval?

Lanval
I believe it true.
It is their custom to attack at dawn,
If they suspect not we shall be renewed,
And know our forces to be much reduced,
They will endeavour to destroy at once
This band of ours. I counsel thee attack
And bring confusion.

Geraint
We have not the strength.

Lanval
The Duke of Cornwall cannot now be far,
Owain is near. If we do lose this place
The issue's doubtful. Check them, and surprise
Leaves them half-hearted, unprepared to meet
Our armies' onset. Hold them at all costs.

Geraint
Should Arthur fail?

Lanval
We fall in either case,
If we oppose them not.

Geraint
Gyfert, my arms.


Enter a man-at-arms.

Man
My lord, their forces have o'erpast the ford,
And drive our posts.


Alarms and noise off.

Geraint
Back ye, and hold the ground


Exeunt Captain and man.

Geraint
Until my coming. Up, all Devon's men,
Let battle-hunger seize upon your limbs,
And bring you aching for the food of death.

Lanval
Come, let us go.

Geraint
While thou art still unarmed?

Lanval
(To Gyfert.)
Lend me a sword.

Geraint
No, Lanval, I command
This much obedience. Till Bernardo brings
His armament, do thou hold here the half
Of these my forces to be our support,
And then employ them as occasion turns.


The men file off. Geraint goes a few steps and then turns back to Lanval.

Lanval
I must obey.

Geraint
The hour is dark and strange.
Lanval, should this our day of severance prove,
As well it may be, let us fall assured
Of our relation. When I said I served
Your cause in pureness, I perceive I lied.
No, let me speak. Unthinkingly I strove
To turn a being to an instrument.
It was ill done. Perhaps we'll have no time,
And no occasion to be clear henceforth.
We have been much together, and I think
Our ends will not be distant. Knowing this,
I give you absolution from all vows
Of friendship.

Lanval
Nay, Geraint.

Geraint
God guard you well.
If this be not our hour, the hour will come
Which we must meet; let then our manner hold
Until that time. But should our lot decree
We meet no more — in such a case: farewell!

Lanval
Farewell, Geraint.

Geraint
Thou, Gyfert, stay with him.


Exit Geraint; increased alarms.

Lanval
One righteous man who's fool enough to think
That I am worthy. One friend who forces me
To do him wrong. The hooks of hell are fast
In all my being. I am manacled
With a cold bondage I have forged myself.
And how much simpler will the world become
For many men when I am dead! My end
Will be a kindness.


Enter Owain, Meliard and a force.

Owain
They have joined too soon.
Split legions in a forest and the odds
Are 'gainst good timing. What are ye?

Lanval
Reserves
Of Prince Geraint.

Owain
I want an honest man
To answer me.

Gyfert
He leads us.

Owain
God defend
You from his leading. You! I do not know
With what good reason you afflict our paths.
The common outcome of our judgment is
That malefactors are enforced to feel
Their punishment. The sutlers, and the scum
Of ragged thieves who haunt our armies' march,
Should be behind.

Meliard
This is too harsh, Owain!

Owain
Peace, you. But I am glad that you are dumb:
Shame marks a vestige of your former state.
Now better it, and get you out from us.
You, Gyfert, follow us.

Gyfert
My lord,
We have our orders.

Owain
And a cur to lead!
Not gone yet, fool? Out of my path, you dog.


Strikes Lanval, who reels back.

Meliard
A dog's stroke too! The man's not even armed!


Gyfert half draws.

Owain
Honour protects no vermin! What, my friend,
Will you shew teeth?

Lanval
Nay, Gyfert, hold your hand.


Alarms off.

Owain
Hearken, they're to it. Our good game begins.
Out, swords, and follow!


Exeunt Owain, Meliard, and their men.

Lanval
I am come so low,
I have no word to answer censure with,
No record to run counter to reproach.
Even these men stand shamed to follow me.

Gyfert
It is not so, Sir Lanval, we do not
Forget old battles.

Lanval
I remember now.
I led you once upon the fields of Clyde,
And once at Stirling. Take our forces on:
There is a hillock which doth lie beyond
The ridge we hold. Ye know it.

Gyfert
Aye, we do.

Lanval
Thence we can lend assistance in short space
Where it is needed. Should by chance I fail
To give the signal and direction, use
Thine own discernment.

Gyfert
I will do so, sir!


Exeunt Gyfert and men-at-arms. Lanval is left alone.

Lanval
Geraint should hold the passage of that line
Sufficiently; and yet becoming weak,
Will tempt these Angles to renewed assaults,
Whereon an army coming fresh with day
Will grip the issue. All will be success,
But I can have no share in it again.
A parasite that like the sucking-fish
Is borne about the spaces of the world
By one more powerful! No, there is no hope,
No refuge and no purpose in my life,
But to live on like some outlying wolf
Too savage even for the hungry pack.
Or to go mocked, the client of a prince,
Licking the crumbs of honour from his floor.
No, I am sure that life's not tenable
Upon such terms. And therefore let us end.
If I gained heaven she would not be there,
So 'tis no heaven! If I earned a hell
She has not done so, therefore 'tis no hell!
I should be tearing at my heart by now,
Playing Prometheus to my own regrets,
And yet I'm numb. Sensation has its end,
And all our feeling to exhaustion comes.
So, life's a silence, death an incident
Which to our dreaming puts a period.
If dreams are evil, one has but to wake
Into the darkness. Come, I'll look for it
Beyond that ridge. It is not hard to find,
And worth the seeking!


As he prepares to go out, Triamour appears.

Triamour
Lanval!

Lanval
I have done
With all these dreams, and I had hoped to pass
Unhindered hence.

Triamour
Why? Art thou not content
With all the honours, merits and rewards
The world doth give thee?

Lanval
There's no need to mock,
The hour is past when I entreated help:
True there are times which do one's memory hurt,
Whose quick remembrance stabs one's soul with hate,
And makes one loth to look upon the beast
That this has been; for I have raved and foamed,
Spent all my soul in crying for thine aid,
And brought my manhood into such a pass
That reason's self could not well recognise
Such bestial stuff to be the frame of man,
Wherein she wrought. But that is overpast.
There is no scorn can touch the heart of me,
And no reproach but is an idle tale
Too oft repeated. All I am is ash,
The cindered fragment of a billet cast
By God or chance into time's furnaces,
And now the shadow is come down on me.

Triamour
Is it not pleasant — man's acknowledgment?
Surely all love thee for thine excellence!

Lanval
Be not so hard. I learnt my impotence,
And God has gently cleansed my vanity.

Triamour
So the same shame that drove thee from mine arms,
Still dogs thy courses?

Lanval
No, I've learnt enough,
And know myself an ordinary soul,
No way distinguished from the common mass,
No way their better. I am very low,
And have no feeling but an envious hope
Of better things. Yet I am not shamed,
For there's a passion which must cry for stars,
Cry from the body of a beast that crawls
Upon this surface for the face of God.
I am not shamed, for while the spirit lives
Man must lust high.

Triamour
There is no more to learn;
The world has done with all thy services.


Confused noises off.

Triamour
This time is dying. Listen to the call!
Insurgent peoples waken from their sleep —
Race, tribe and nation. In the flux of war
All old ordainments spin to their decease.
I did not blame thee or reproach thy choice,
When thy disdain preferred the world to me,
And I change not. I know no fickleness,
But have in patience hungered for this hour,
All the old offrance of a state of peace
Awaits thee still. Ah, Lanval, I have loved,
And been so patient.

Lanval
I was never worth
A portion of such kindness. I'd have talked
Of love in days whose dawn I shall not see.
God knows I loved you, but love whips my soul
To the same end life spurred me to, since I
Have found existence folly. Let me go
And get some credit in the end of it.

Triamour
Wilt leave me?

Lanval
I am pledged
Unto Geraint.

Triamour
If thou canst leave me now,
We shall not meet at any time again,
But part for ever. Each shall sink at last
Into the gulf of uncreated things,
And have no knowledge of the other's end.
Thou hast forgotten —

Lanval
Come — the end! the end!
Tempt not my nature; while he lives, I hold
(A shout off.)
Unto Geraint.

Triamour
Geraint is dead.

Lanval
He's dead?
I sent him to it: sent my only friend
To find his death! Hes better dead than friend
Or kind to me! God help me, I am cursed!
Oh let me die, then I can do no hurt
To any one!

Triamour
Choose, then, the time is short.
Geraint is dead, slain by thy foolishness;
This battle lost.

Lanval
Arthur must come.

Triamour
He's far,
He will not come. Choose! Be with me or die,
And let our love immediate be dissolved.
The gates are closing. Wilt thou hold the world?

Lanval
The King comes not. Can I do nothing right?
Always so foolish and unfortunate.
Geraint is dead. He was a noble knight —
God rest his soul.

Triamour
(aside) His soul awaits thine own.

Lanval
All's lost, my friend, my faith and e'en my use,
Take me away.

Triamour
Now, Lanval, in this kiss
Lies the best boon the spirit gives to man.
Come swift, the gates swing in upon thy soul;
Give me thy being.

Lanval
It is done.

Triamour
Then I
Give thee the last! the kindest gift of all —
Release!



Darkness. Lanval reels and falls. When the stage lightens Triamour has disappeared, but the body of Lanval lies across the centre. Increased alarms.

The dawn begins to lighten the scene, at the same time a red glow increases at the back.

Enter Arthur, Cador, Gawain, Agravaine, Astamor and a force.

Arthur
Halt here. Go thou, Gawain, and seek
This conflict's meaning.


Exit Gawain.

Arthur
We are not too soon,
For see the pallor which precedes the birth
Of the wan day.

Agravaine
Here is an early fruit
Of this encounter.

Arthur
Who is it?

Agravaine
No man
Of consequence. His mail is thin and torn,
And he's not armoured.

Cador
Yet, Astamor, I think
I know that shape.

Arthur
No, let it be, Cador,
Whate'er his rank he'll wait full patiently
For the last service.


Arthur talks aside to Cador.

Agravaine
(Turns the body over.)
Lanval, as I live!

Astamor
Lanval!

Agravaine
Quiet. We'll not interfere.
Let him alone.

Astamor
How did he die?

Agravaine
God knows.
We'll serve no purpose in revealing this:
He'll not have long to wait for company,
And I'll not grudge him half an hour of hell.

Astamor
The King should know it.

Agravaine
Why? The man's forgot
As soon as dead. Here ends an episode,
One of those little tangled businesses,
Which colour our existence for a space,
And then slip down the years. We fought
Only a week since and I had the worst.
He was a very tall man of his hands,
Yet I am living and he's safe and dead.
Strange, Astamor, that I, the only one
Who ever came by any harm from him,
Should so regret him.

Arthur
Hark, Cador, who's here?


Enter Gawain.

Arthur
What now, Gawain? How goes it?

Gawain
Well for us,
Our slender van has held most gallantly
The ridge beyond us.

Arthur
Nobly done.

Gawain
Geraint
Is dead.

Arthur
We'll venge him —

Gawain
But Owain
Doth hold the field. The Angles are confused
And stand uncertain. We have but to strike.

Arthur
Art sure, Gawain?

Gawain
I know not how it comes,
But if some spirit who did favour us
Designed this moment, he could not do more
For victory.


Alarms.

Agravaine
Strike, Sire!

Arthur
I will. Ye lords
And 'sembled barons of this British realm,
Reveal your favour. Set my standards on,
Let the red dragon flame above our helms.
Up, all ye lances that defend this state,
All hearts that bar oppression, and all blades
That stand for Britain. 'Tis the hour at last
Wherein we triumph, and henceforth our foe
Shall know this valley by the name of woe.


Exeunt.

Curtain.

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