|
|
|
|
(3, 3) 2324 |
I shall need three days. |
|
|
(3, 3) 2326 |
Thy pardon, Sire, I had not thought |
(3, 3) 2327 |
That this occasion could have grown so swift. |
(3, 3) 2328 |
My men were weary with long services, |
(3, 3) 2329 |
And well deserved a little space of ease. |
(3, 3) 2330 |
If there be blame, I trust it may be mine. |
|
|
(3, 3) 2345 |
But the Anglian hosts |
(3, 3) 2346 |
Are numerous, well armed and grimly wrought. |
(3, 3) 2347 |
The Scots and Picts are but fierce savages |
(3, 3) 2348 |
Whose wild invasion has no cause or aim, |
(3, 3) 2349 |
But bloody instinct bids them burn and slay |
(3, 3) 2350 |
Like a disease. These we can cure in time, |
(3, 3) 2351 |
But the white Angles have a dangerous end; |
(3, 3) 2352 |
They mean our conquest and have interest in |
(3, 3) 2353 |
Our whole destruction. |
|
|
(3, 3) 2363 |
I serve you still. |
|
|
(3, 3) 2366 |
I hear it. |
|
|
(3, 3) 2370 |
The tower is high. |
|
|
(3, 3) 2380 |
Nay, Sire, this poor despondency |
(3, 3) 2381 |
Befits you not. |
|
|
(3, 3) 2387 |
I am still the same. |
|
|
(3, 3) 2395 |
What can I say? |
|
|
(3, 3) 2399 |
You look too far. As like as not this realm |
(3, 3) 2400 |
Is doomed! |
|
|
(3, 3) 2402 |
Let it be. The end |
(3, 3) 2403 |
Is no great matter; it provides a phase |
(3, 3) 2404 |
Of pleasant action and sweet enterprise: |
(3, 3) 2405 |
If we are old, this ominous strange hour |
(3, 3) 2406 |
Should give us pleasure: we can round our lives |
(3, 3) 2407 |
With a fine end. Man lives too easily: |
(3, 3) 2408 |
His birth concerns him not; his youth |
(3, 3) 2409 |
Is spent in learning; often all his life |
(3, 3) 2410 |
Is waste incarnate. Therefore he is glad |
(3, 3) 2411 |
To make his end a picture and a grace |
(3, 3) 2412 |
He lacked before; so we'll end worthily |
(3, 3) 2413 |
And drag the mass in spite of them to act, |
(3, 3) 2414 |
Make cowards heroes, common men high souls: |
(3, 3) 2415 |
Thus shall we do more service to the world |
(3, 3) 2416 |
Than conquerors — |
|
|
(3, 3) 2418 |
My King, be strong! |
|
|
(3, 3) 2433 |
I do understand. |
|
|
(3, 3) 2436 |
I'll take Lanval, then: |
(3, 3) 2437 |
After Mount Badon he served under me, |
(3, 3) 2438 |
And I was holpen better than I dared |
(3, 3) 2439 |
Expect of him. |
|
|
(3, 3) 2444 |
For his nobility |
(3, 3) 2445 |
And all his virtues, whatsoe'er they are, |
(3, 3) 2446 |
I do not care. He has an eye for ground, |
(3, 3) 2447 |
The trick of leading and the qualities |
(3, 3) 2448 |
Which make a soldier. He may have as well |
(3, 3) 2449 |
A hundred traits most notable and fair. |
(3, 3) 2450 |
But virtues never won a battle yet, |
(3, 3) 2451 |
And noble thoughts are but poor armoury |
(3, 3) 2452 |
When steel's in question. |
|
|
(3, 3) 2467 |
Pardon, Sire. |
|
|
(4, 1) 2951 |
In a little time |
(4, 1) 2952 |
We shall decide it. |
|
|
(4, 1) 2955 |
Go, disturb us not. |
|
|
(4, 1) 2958 |
Geraint, he has confessed. |
(4, 1) 2959 |
He did compare some paramour of his |
(4, 1) 2960 |
To Guinevere: maintained her fairer far |
(4, 1) 2961 |
Than any damsel of the court. How then |
(4, 1) 2962 |
Shall I believe this taunt was unprovoked |
(4, 1) 2963 |
By some denial? |
|
|
(4, 1) 2966 |
This is no time to play with subtlety. |
(4, 1) 2967 |
I would have saved him were it possible. |
(4, 1) 2968 |
He loved some woman. It is hers to save, |
(4, 1) 2969 |
At least to prove that vile malignity |
(4, 1) 2970 |
Bred not his words; and where can she be found? |
(4, 1) 2971 |
Prove her existence! |
|
|
(4, 1) 2974 |
Will not Sir Lanval tell |
(4, 1) 2975 |
Her name and habit? |
|
|
(4, 1) 2979 |
I greatly fear this woman never lived. |
(4, 1) 2980 |
Hast thou, Gawain, heard aught of his desires? |
|
|
(4, 1) 2983 |
Dost thou know, Owain? |
|
|
(4, 1) 2985 |
How can I doubt? His guilt is evident. |
|
|
(4, 1) 2993 |
I, as well as thou, |
(4, 1) 2994 |
Know Lanval's worth. But I will not offend |
(4, 1) 2995 |
The King I serve to save nobility. |
(4, 1) 2996 |
True, it is folly to destroy a soul |
(4, 1) 2997 |
For following nature. True, I cannot tell |
(4, 1) 2998 |
If he be guilty or most innocent. |
(4, 1) 2999 |
True, we shall lose a man of some account; |
(4, 1) 3000 |
But I'll not risk disunion in our arms, |
(4, 1) 3001 |
The King's suspicion, and the thousand ills |
(4, 1) 3002 |
That have their birth in idle clemency. |
|
|
(4, 1) 3004 |
Care I if it's not? |
(4, 1) 3005 |
I judge this case for plain commodity. |
(4, 1) 3006 |
We are too near the savagery of war |
(4, 1) 3007 |
To let one life prevent our purposes. |
(4, 1) 3008 |
Justice itself is but a luxury |
(4, 1) 3009 |
That states which stand beyond their neighbour's hopes |
(4, 1) 3010 |
Can well afford. One can do wrong, Geraint, |
(4, 1) 3011 |
Sobeit action does not foul the wheels |
(4, 1) 3012 |
Of man's intention. |
|
|
(4, 1) 3017 |
What matters innocence? |
(4, 1) 3018 |
You have a liking for the man, I know; |
(4, 1) 3019 |
Not without cause. For you he is a shape |
(4, 1) 3020 |
Bright in our shadows with the light he draws |
(4, 1) 3021 |
From your affection. We, indifferent, |
(4, 1) 3022 |
See but a motion irksome, irritant |
(4, 1) 3023 |
In our estate. |
|
|
(4, 1) 3025 |
I never wished a harm to any man |
(4, 1) 3026 |
In all my workings. But in nature's course |
(4, 1) 3027 |
I have wrecked many. See, Owain is wroth, |
(4, 1) 3028 |
And the grim chariot of our life rolls on. |
|
|
(4, 1) 3038 |
Patience, good Owain. |
(4, 1) 3039 |
Let not the presence of this movement mar |
(4, 1) 3040 |
Our graver judgment. |
|
|
(4, 1) 3083 |
Agravaine, our time |
(4, 1) 3084 |
Brooks not such hindrance. |
|
|
(4, 1) 3099 |
This address |
(4, 1) 3100 |
Will do your man small service. |
|
|
(4, 1) 3104 |
I see small cause for it. |
|
|
(4, 1) 3118 |
Must I be judge as well |
(4, 1) 3119 |
Of our opinions on each other's fame? |
(4, 1) 3120 |
Drink in this vile detraction while our arms |
(4, 1) 3121 |
Await their leaders? Ye do much mistake |
(4, 1) 3122 |
The office ye fulfil. We'll speak |
(4, 1) 3123 |
Only of this which lies before us now. |
(4, 1) 3124 |
No more, Geraint, I know your arguments. |
(4, 1) 3125 |
Our task is simple. We have but to prove |
(4, 1) 3126 |
The value, measure, and extent of ill. |
(4, 1) 3127 |
Is folly sin? I think this man's more fool |
(4, 1) 3128 |
Than traitorous. |
|
|
(4, 1) 3133 |
Aye, so it is. I value it myself |
(4, 1) 3134 |
As just a charm to school souls passionate, |
(4, 1) 3135 |
But not a custom whose infraction needs |
(4, 1) 3136 |
Dread penalties. |
|
|
(4, 1) 3140 |
'Tis true. |
(4, 1) 3141 |
Well, now, to finish: for some foolish speech, |
(4, 1) 3142 |
And still more foolish action, we condemn |
(4, 1) 3143 |
The likeliest leader who served under me. |
(4, 1) 3144 |
How punish him? |
|
|
(4, 1) 3147 |
And thou, Owain? |
|
|
(4, 1) 3155 |
What say'st thou, Geraint? |
|
|
(4, 1) 3163 |
I like it not. This man |
(4, 1) 3164 |
Deserves not death, for we must not use laws |
(4, 1) 3165 |
To lop our trunk of its most worthy limbs. |
(4, 1) 3166 |
Upon the basis of some idle words |
(4, 1) 3167 |
Shall we build scaffolds? |
|
|
(4, 1) 3180 |
If it must be death — |
|
|
(4, 1) 3209 |
I know well, Geraint, |
(4, 1) 3210 |
We cannot spare thee. Yet it is ill done |
(4, 1) 3211 |
If thou dost seek from out our poverty |
(4, 1) 3212 |
To force acquaintance of a natural crime. |
|
|
(4, 1) 3214 |
Am I a vampire then, |
(4, 1) 3215 |
Who gluts himself upon the blood of man? |
(4, 1) 3216 |
Come, let us reason. We must needs condemn. |
(4, 1) 3217 |
Were we to quit him, could our King believe |
(4, 1) 3218 |
That we who held his honour in such scorn |
(4, 1) 3219 |
Were true and faithful! Would he not suspect? |
(4, 1) 3220 |
And God! the need is heavy on us now |
(4, 1) 3221 |
Of confidence. I wish this man no ill, |
(4, 1) 3222 |
Dost thou, Owain? |
|
|
(4, 1) 3224 |
And thou? |
|
|
(4, 1) 3227 |
See thou, Geraint, we seek |
(4, 1) 3228 |
His condemnation not of our own selves, |
(4, 1) 3229 |
But of the flood wherein our persons merge. |
(4, 1) 3230 |
Did not occasion so constrain our ends, |
(4, 1) 3231 |
We'd soon acquit him; so he'd live again, |
(4, 1) 3232 |
Chastened of sorrow, to redeem his fault, |
(4, 1) 3233 |
And future deeds do penance for all hurt. |
|
|
(4, 1) 3235 |
There is no future now, |
(4, 1) 3236 |
But only present. |
|
|
(4, 1) 3239 |
I do wish he could. |
(4, 1) 3240 |
Most wrongs are deeds in idleness conceived, |
(4, 1) 3241 |
Which have the fashion of true worth in them |
(4, 1) 3242 |
Born at ill times. |
|
|
(4, 1) 3258 |
Ask us not, Geraint, |
(4, 1) 3259 |
To shrink from judgment! |
|
|
(4, 1) 3283 |
What say'st thou, Gawain? |
|
|
(4, 1) 3287 |
Enough, the King is here. |
|
|
(4, 1) 3290 |
Sire, we agree. |
|
|
(4, 1) 3292 |
We three |
(4, 1) 3293 |
Have thus determined — that Sir Lanval leave |
(4, 1) 3294 |
This court for ever, having been proclaimed |
(4, 1) 3295 |
Unworthy of true men's respect. His name |
(4, 1) 3296 |
To be unknown among us. |
|
|
(4, 2) 4034 |
Yet, Astamor, I think |
(4, 2) 4035 |
I know that shape. |