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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 2, Golygfa 2


ACT II. SCENE II.

THE FOREST. (DAWN.)

Geraint is sitting moodily over a dying fire, the men-at-arms are asleep behind him. Only Gyfert is awake.

Geraint
(to himself) A foul quest this. The world moves on apace.
I sicken for the west, and the clean winds;
These forests cramp the soul with silences.
God, for an empty brown stone-studded space,
And the faint seas beyond. Gyfert!

Gyfert
My lord.

Geraint
We'll turn again. We cannot find him here,
And there are doings in the world to-day
Which claim attention.

Gyfert
We shall find him yet.

Geraint
No doubt. His bones, a cap of steel, some links
Of rusted mail, and rotting leather shreds,
Foul with decay. Well! if that is the end
Of my endeavour, I'll not waste my days
In finding it.

Gyfert
And leave it so?

Geraint
How else?
I am not glad to prove myself a fool,
A butt for fools of my own sort. Enough;
I'll never trust my judgment of a man
Before my sense again. Rouse up
These laggards.

Gyfert
(Pointing to first charcoal-burner.)
Prince, what shall we do with this?

Geraint
He came near hanging: without cause, I think;
Give him my purse and our protection hence,
And if his absence has endangered him
With his liege lord, our warrant for his cause.
Rouse them.

Gyfert
Up, Beric! up, ye sweltering dogs!
Up, you!

Charcoal-burner 1
My lord, an evil spirit —

Gyfert
(throwing him a purse) Take
That dose to cure it.

Charcoal-burner 1
Good, my lord.

Geraint
No thanks
For such bare justice. I did never think
To much believe you, but your talk of ghosts
And bitter phantoms has persuaded me
Enough to leave the forest.


A horn in the distance.

Geraint
Why, a call!
Answer them, Beric, if they sound again.


A horn, closer.

Geraint
Sound, man!


The man-at-arms sounds a call.

Geraint
Stand fast, we know not who they are.
Loosen your blades.


Astamor and the second charcoal-burner appear (C).

Charcoal-burner 2
Here, sir, they be —

Astamor
Geraint?

Geraint
Astamor, is it?

Astamor
Surely.

Geraint
Then well met,
Sir Astamor.

Astamor
Well met, Geraint, I come
Hot-foot to bring you summons to our war.

Geraint
War?

Astamor
Aye, and no small one, in the pagan term.
The fire is up. The northmen have come down,
And the red Gaul from westward. Work's to hand.
You have not found him?

Geraint
No, nor shall I find
Aught but the knowledge I was fool to seek.

Astamor
I hoped to hear some better news than this.

Geraint
It's pitiful. Three months of wasted search
Prowling in thickets, wandering in groves,
Hampered by fools, who blubber and protest
That phantoms, vampires, ghosts, and all the brood
Of silly spirits haunt this miry wood.

Astamor
I can believe them.

Geraint
I am willing to,
Sobeit I get clear of this curst place,
All mud and thorn. I tell you, Astamor,
I dream of trees, long, endless, endless lines
Of bleached foul trunks, and hills so cloaked in leaves
They have no shape: but tell me, Astamor,
How came this war?

Astamor
In old and usual wise,
A messenger from some far fort besieged,
A rumour spreading from the common folk,
And then appeals, reports, and fearsome signs.
Then at the last plain statement of the case,
Two towers have fallen on the Clyde, the Gaul
Comes inward from the west, is helped
By the winged northmen.

Geraint
Is it so! How far
Have they pressed on?

Astamor
I know not. They say
Caer Rhiddocks ta'en.

Geraint
Then we can waste no time.
Gyfert, our harness! Bid them saddle up
And tend our horses. We have far to ride.
My horse and arms!



Confusion and hurry. Gyfert proceeds to arm Geraint while he talks to Astamor.

Astamor
How is it, Geraint,
Lanval has 'scaped you?

Geraint
That I cannot tell.
He has not taken ship, that much I know;
I found his cloak and campment: then the gods,
The fairies or the devils must have seized
Upon his body.

Astamor
You give him good scope.

Geraint
I swore I'd rax the whole wide earth for him.
Well! circumstance has made me break my pledge.
The state a man is born to sets about
His life like iron. He may wish and swear
His hours to service of his own desires;
But circumstance, position, and the rest
Of the vain follies of the world rise up
And sometime baulk him. I accept this war
As recreation, but I shall come back
To this pursuit.

Astamor
Too much persistency
To spend on such an object.

Geraint
(aside to Gyfert) Closer still;
The buckle's slack: — Well, I am not so sure
Of its unworth. I do not stake my lands
Without some faith: and I still hold myself
As shrewd a judge of men as any. Let it be!
God sparing me, I'll prove my estimates.


The two charcoal-burners wander off.

Geraint
Meanwhile, I lose enough to whet my taste
For further effort. Are your horses near?

Astamor
Not far. No doubt some of these sullen dogs
Did murder him.

Geraint
I thought of hanging them
For that suspicion. But they're innocent;
I'm sure of it.

Astamor
Well, if you think so —

Geraint
Come!
We waste the hours. How far to Carduel?

Astamor
One day's hard riding, though I squandered ten
In finding you.

Geraint
To horse, then.


Enter first charcoal-burner, running.

Charcoal-burner 1
Oh, my lord,
A ghost! a spirit!

Geraint
Yet another one?
You are prolific.

Charcoal-burner 2
See, my lord, it comes.


Enter Lanval (C}; he stops abruptly on seeing the others, and they look at each other for a moment.

Geraint
Were I not schooled to madness, I might be
Almost astonished. 'Tis the man himself.
Welcome, Sir Lanval.

Lanval
Welcome thou, Geraint.

Geraint
(aside) There's the most heartfelt greeting of my life.

Astamor
Welcome, Sir Lanval.

Lanval
Welcome, Astamor.
What do ye here?

Geraint
I seek an errant knight,
One who stole forth from Carduel its court,
Who was too peevish or too proud to ask
Aid of his friends.

Lanval
And have you found him?

Geraint
Aye,
I think we have. Sir Lanval, 'twas ill done
To slink from us in such a fashion.

Lanval
I? Is't I ye seek?

Geraint
Whom else? Think you we spend
Our days in this dank brake in search of churls
Or madmen who choose this as their retreat?
But I'll not blame thee, though I lose three months.
Suffice it all ends well.

Lanval
Three months!
Is it so long?

Geraint
Hast lost the count of time?

Astamor
He seems half dazed.
Hast thou been wounded, man,
Or in a sickness?

Lanval
I am well enough.

Geraint
Then the adventure! Come, the whole of it;
We'll hear no less!

Astamor
Aye, Lanval, tell it us.

Lanval
What shall I tell you? Ye seem real men,
And have the texture of this earth. But I
Have touched such dreams and viewed such phantomry,
That ye seem but the mist of being. God,
How thin and vap'rous is reality!

Astamor
This should be magic.

Geraint
Wait.

Lanval
I mixed
My flesh with shadows, and I wrung my soul
In impotent dumb conflict with a wraith
That was myself. How quickly they can pass —
The golden twilights and flushed dawns that turned
Never to day. The ringed, wide, brazen lakes
Shining in purple-shadowed forestry,
And gaunt pale mountains fretted like the teeth
Of some sea dragon. Oh, the wealth of it
Dies in my mind ere I can find my words.


Geraint examines his armour critically.

Geraint
Strange speech, indeed. Where have you gotten these
New arms? They shame Bernardo's fairest craft.

Astamor
What workmanship!

Geraint
Aye, see this, Astamor.
Come, Lanval, tell us.

Lanval
How had I these arms?
I had them of the fairest hands. — No more
Can I forget so soon. I may not speak.

Astamor
Thou dost but edge our interest —

Lanval
I am
In honour bound.

Astamor
But surely we may hear
Some outline of the tale.

Lanval
E'en now
I speak too much.

Geraint
This is not gentle.

Lanval
No;
But still, Geraint, I have been put in bonds
For silence.

Geraint
Then thou hast the right of it.
A knight may hold his peace if he so please,
And a word pledged is better worth than all
Our wondering. Keep silence if you will;
I'll not regret it. For myself one word —
I pledged myself to find you and return
To Carduel.

Lanval
And wherefore?

Geraint
I admit
My purpose would look fairer if I said,
I sought you in pure friendship; but the case
Deals more with hate than love.

Lanval
What, then?

Geraint
I swore myself to prove thy worthiness,
And staked sufficient value in thy power
To make me hot to see it shown.

Lanval
'Twas kind
To so uphold me.

Geraint
I'm no flatterer,
But even honest with myself at times;
So the belief which I have held in you
I put at issue. (He hesitates.)

Astamor
Come, be short, Geraint,
The sun is high.

Geraint
I so upheld your cause
That I have pledged you to the closèd field,
And our twin honours are at stake. I claim
This service of you.

Lanval
Gladly I accept
Such terms of service.

Astamor
We do linger here
While war's abroad.

Geraint
I was too hot, perhaps,
Thou wilt forgive me that I staked thy life.

Lanval
Geraint, I thank thee; I am heartened now
To try another cast with fortune. I am glad
To meet occasion that my fate may bring,
If I may gather honour.

Geraint
We shall speak
More of this later. Now to horse and war.
God, how I hate this forest and its peace!
I hate all peace and worship only change —
Save in man's mind. For we have been becalmed,
Lain stript and idle on the burnished sea
Of dull existence, but the winds are up;
Soon all our lives like labouring cogs shall dance
Through trough and ridge of fortune to our port,
With every rush of the torn restless waves
To sharpen us. Our horses, Gyfert.


Geraint and Astamor go to back and call for their horses.

Lanval
So
The stream's in flood, I must plunge into it,
And be borne deathward. There are mysteries
Which ring our purpose, flex our aims, and drape
Our subsequence. But I have seen so much
That I am baffled with strange lights. The course
Of one unknowing is so simple clean,
His quiet pleasure in an end achieved,
His certainty of honour and his faith
In gentle doings, I knew all of them.
But I am meshed in a strange web of dreams,
Limed to the thread of thoughts yet unconceived,
And faced by Nature, the grim spider form,
Who traps and spares not. O God, curse the hour
I ever saw her! No, all gods be thanked
That led me to it. Better it is to see
And be a madman than to keep one's sense
And happily be blind. But I am wrecked
In all my hopes, for I, like any fool,
Stand staked for ever on the motionless
High rocks of love. All visions shift and veer,
But there's a phantom stands beside my path
Both loved and feared.


The horses are led on at the back.

Geraint
Sound us a rally.


The man-at-arms sounds a call.

Lanval
Life!
I think too much. My soul's a sanctuary
For every folly: to accomplishment
I lend my being.


Lanval rises and goes towards Geraint and Astamor.

Charcoal-burner 1

Let him not come near. There's some devil gotten into his shape, and such company may be fit for knights, but it's o'er warm for us.


Lanval stops at the charcoal-burners, who shrink away from him.

Lanval
Why, 'tis the same. My old night-fearing friends
Still in unease. Well, I do owe you much.
Ye were the heralds of those fateful hours,
Truly quaint guardians for the gates of night;
But ye shall share my fortunes.
(Throwing them a purse.)

Geraint
Lanval, come,
We've far to ride.



Exeunt all except the charcoal-burners.

Charcoal-burner 1

Let the purse be, man; it's fairy gold, and turns ashes: aye, and brings ill luck with it.

Charcoal-burner 2

I would all our ashes were the same solid stuff.

Charcoal-burner 1

The half is mine.

Charcoal-burner 2

Nay, friend, ye can still think it's ashes. A very kindly devil it is. Think you they'll lose any more knights? It is a smooth, profitable business.

Charcoal-burner 1

I came near hanging in it.

Charcoal-burner 2

Well, I'm thinking I'd risk hanging once a year for this profit.

Charcoal-burner 1

I'm glad we're clear of 'em. The forest's ours again. Where's our stack. I'll follow you.

Charcoal-burner 2

Lead you for to-day. I'd rather see your back than show you my own.



The 1st charcoal-burner goes off sullenly.

Charcoal-burner 2

Sure, some of them might be lost for charity to poor men, and no great harm. At least, the Saints be praised for a fair dawn.



Curtain

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