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<h2> CHAPTER XXIII. How Sir Pelleas loved no more Ettard by means of the Damosel of the Lake, whom he loved ever after. </h2>
<p>SIR KNIGHT PELLEAS, said the Damosel of the Lake, take your horse and come
forth with me out of this country, and ye shall love a lady that shall
love you. I will well, said Sir Pelleas, for this Lady Ettard hath done me
great despite and shame, and there he told her the beginning and ending,
and how he had purposed never to have arisen till that he had been dead.
And now such grace God hath sent me, that I hate her as much as ever I
loved her, thanked be our Lord Jesus! Thank me, said the Damosel of the
Lake. Anon Sir Pelleas armed him, and took his horse, and commanded his
men to bring after his pavilions and his stuff where the Damosel of the
Lake would assign. So the Lady Ettard died for sorrow, and the Damosel of
the Lake rejoiced Sir Pelleas, and loved together during their life days.</p>
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<h2> CHAPTER XXIV. How Sir Marhaus rode with the damosel, and how he came to the Duke of the South Marches. </h2>
<p>NOW turn we unto Sir Marhaus, that rode with the damosel of thirty winter
of age, southward. And so they came into a deep forest, and by fortune
they were nighted, and rode long in a deep way, and at the last they came
unto a courtelage, and there they asked harbour. But the man of the
courtelage would not lodge them for no treatise that they could treat, but
thus much the good man said, An ye will take the adventure of your
lodging, I shall bring you where ye shall be lodged. What adventure is
that that I shall have for my lodging? said Sir Marhaus. Ye shall wit when
ye come there, said the good man. Sir, what adventure so it be, bring me
thither I pray thee, said Sir Marhaus; for I am weary, my damosel, and my
horse. So the good man went and opened the gate, and within an hour he
brought him unto a fair castle, and then the poor man called the porter,
and anon he was let into the castle, and so he told the lord how he
brought him a knight errant and a damosel that would be lodged with him.
Let him in, said the lord, it may happen he shall repent that they took
their lodging here.</p>
<p>So Sir Marhaus was let in with torchlight, and there was a goodly sight of
young men that welcomed him. And then his horse was led into the stable,
and he and the damosel were brought into the hall, and there stood a
mighty duke and many goodly men about him. Then this lord asked him what
he hight, and from whence he came, and with whom he dwelt. Sir, he said, I
am a knight of King Arthur's and knight of the Table Round, and my name is
Sir Marhaus, and born I am in Ireland. And then said the duke to him, That
me sore repenteth: the cause is this, for I love not thy lord nor none of
thy fellows of the Table Round; and therefore ease thyself this night as
well as thou mayest, for as to-morn I and my six sons shall match with
you. Is there no remedy but that I must have ado with you and your six
sons at once? said Sir Marhaus. No, said the duke, for this cause I made
mine avow, for Sir Gawaine slew my seven sons in a recounter, therefore I
made mine avow, there should never knight of King Arthur's court lodge
with me, or come thereas I might have ado with him, but that I would have
a revenging of my sons' death. What is your name? said Sir Marhaus; I
require you tell me, an it please you. Wit thou well I am the Duke of
South Marches. Ah, said Sir Marhaus, I have heard say that ye have been
long time a great foe unto my lord Arthur and to his knights. That shall
ye feel to-morn, said the duke. Shall I have ado with you? said Sir
Marhaus. Yea, said the duke, thereof shalt thou not choose, and therefore
take you to your chamber, and ye shall have all that to you longeth. So
Sir Marhaus departed and was led to a chamber, and his damosel was led
unto her chamber. And on the morn the duke sent unto Sir Marhaus and bade
make him ready. And so Sir Marhaus arose and armed him, and then there was
a mass sung afore him, and brake his fast, and so mounted on horseback in
the court of the castle where they should do the battle. So there was the
duke all ready on horseback, clean armed, and his six sons by him, and
everych had a spear in his hand, and so they encountered, whereas the duke
and his two sons brake their spears upon him, but Sir Marhaus held up his
spear and touched none of them.</p>
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<h2> CHAPTER XXV. How Sir Marhaus fought with the duke and his four sons and made them to yield them. </h2>
<p>THEN came the four sons by couple, and two of them brake their spears, and
so did the other two. And all this while Sir Marhaus touched them not.
Then Sir Marhaus ran to the duke, and smote him with his spear that horse
and man fell to the earth, and so he served his sons; and then Sir Marhaus
alighted down and bade the duke yield him or else he would slay him. And
then some of his sons recovered, and would have set upon Sir Marhaus; then
Sir Marhaus said to the duke, Cease thy sons, or else I will do the
uttermost to you all. Then the duke saw he might not escape the death, he
cried to his sons, and charged them to yield them to Sir Marhaus; and they
kneeled all down and put the pommels of their swords to the knight, and so
he received them. And then they helped up their father, and so by their
cominal assent promised to Sir Marhaus never to be foes unto King Arthur,
and thereupon at Whitsuntide after to come, he and his sons, and put them
in the king's grace.</p>
<p>Then Sir Marhaus departed, and within two days his damosel brought him
whereas was a great tournament that the Lady de Vawse had cried. And who
that did best should have a rich circlet of gold worth a thousand besants.
And there Sir Marhaus did so nobly that he was renowned, and had sometime
down forty knights, and so the circlet of gold was rewarded him. Then he
departed from them with great worship; and so within seven nights his
damosel brought him to an earl's place, his name was the Earl Fergus, that
after was Sir Tristram's knight; and this earl was but a young man, and
late come into his lands, and there was a giant fast by him that hight
Taulurd, and he had another brother in Cornwall that hight Taulas, that
Sir Tristram slew when he was out of his mind. So this earl made his
complaint unto Sir Marhaus, that there was a giant by him that destroyed
all his lands, and how he durst nowhere ride nor go for him. Sir, said the
knight, whether useth he to fight on horseback or on foot? Nay, said the
earl, there may no horse bear him. Well, said Sir Marhaus, then will I
fight with him on foot; so on the morn Sir Marhaus prayed the earl that
one of his men might bring him whereas the giant was; and so he was, for
he saw him sit under a tree of holly, and many clubs of iron and gisarms
about him. So this knight dressed him to the giant, putting his shield
afore him, and the giant took an iron club in his hand, and at the first
stroke he clave Sir Marhaus' shield in two pieces. And there he was in
great peril, for the giant was a wily fighter, but at last Sir Marhaus
smote off his right arm above the elbow.</p>
<p>Then the giant fled and the knight after him, and so he drove him into a
water, but the giant was so high that he might not wade after him. And
then Sir Marhaus made the Earl Fergus' man to fetch him stones, and with
those stones the knight gave the giant many sore knocks, till at the last
he made him fall down into the water, and so was he there dead. Then Sir
Marhaus went unto the giant's castle, and there he delivered twenty-four
ladies and twelve knights out of the giant's prison, and there he had
great riches without number, so that the days of his life he was never
poor man. Then he returned to the Earl Fergus, the which thanked him
greatly, and would have given him half his lands, but he would none take.
So Sir Marhaus dwelled with the earl nigh half a year, for he was sore
bruised with the giant, and at the last he took his leave. And as he rode
by the way, he met with Sir Gawaine and Sir Uwaine, and so by adventure he
met with four knights of Arthur's court, the first was Sir Sagramore le
Desirous, Sir Osanna, Sir Dodinas le Savage, and Sir Felot of Listinoise;
and there Sir Marhaus with one spear smote down these four knights, and
hurt them sore. So he departed to meet at his day aforeset.</p>
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<h2> CHAPTER XXVI. How Sir Uwaine rode with the damosel of sixty year of age, and how he gat the prize at tourneying. </h2>
<p>NOW turn we unto Sir Uwaine, that rode westward with his damosel of three
score winter of age, and she brought him thereas was a tournament nigh the
march of Wales. And at that tournament Sir Uwaine smote down thirty
knights, therefore was given him the prize, and that was a gerfalcon, and
a white steed trapped with cloth of gold. So then Sir Uwaine did many
strange adventures by the means of the old damosel, and so she brought him
to a lady that was called the Lady of the Rock, the which was much
courteous. So there were in the country two knights that were brethren,
and they were called two perilous knights, the one knight hight Sir Edward
of the Red Castle, and the other Sir Hue of the Red Castle; and these two
brethren had disherited the Lady of the Rock of a barony of lands by their
extortion. And as this knight was lodged with this lady she made her
complaint to him of these two knights.</p>
<p>Madam, said Sir Uwaine, they are to blame, for they do against the high
order of knighthood, and the oath that they made; and if it like you I
will speak with them, because I am a knight of King Arthur's, and I will
entreat them with fairness; and if they will not, I shall do battle with
them, and in the defence of your right. Gramercy said the lady, and
thereas I may not acquit you, God shall. So on the morn the two knights
were sent for, that they should come thither to speak with the Lady of the
Rock, and wit ye well they failed not, for they came with an hundred
horse. But when this lady saw them in this manner so big, she would not
suffer Sir Uwaine to go out to them upon no surety nor for no fair
language, but she made him speak with them over a tower, but finally these
two brethren would not be entreated, and answered that they would keep
that they had. Well, said Sir Uwaine, then will I fight with one of you,
and prove that ye do this lady wrong. That will we not, said they, for an
we do battle, we two will fight with one knight at once, and therefore if
ye will fight so, we will be ready at what hour ye will assign. And if ye
win us in battle the lady shall have her lands again. Ye say well, said
Sir Uwaine, therefore make you ready so that ye be here to-morn in the
defence of the lady's right.</p>
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<h2> CHAPTER XXVII. How Sir Uwaine fought with two knights and overcame them. </h2>
<p>SO was there sikerness made on both parties that no treason should be
wrought on neither party; so then the knights departed and made them
ready, and that night Sir Uwaine had great cheer. And on the morn he arose
early and heard mass, and brake his fast, and so he rode unto the plain
without the gates, where hoved the two brethren abiding him. So they rode
together passing sore, that Sir Edward and Sir Hue brake their spears upon
Sir Uwaine. And Sir Uwaine smote Sir Edward that he fell over his horse
and yet his spear brast not. And then he spurred his horse and came upon
Sir Hue and overthrew him, but they soon recovered and dressed their
shields and drew their swords and bade Sir Uwaine alight and do his battle
to the uttermost. Then Sir Uwaine devoided his horse suddenly, and put his
shield afore him and drew his sword, and so they dressed together, and
either gave other such strokes, and there these two brethren wounded Sir
Uwaine passing grievously that the Lady of the Rock weened he should have
died. And thus they fought together five hours as men raged out of reason.
And at the last Sir Uwaine smote Sir Edward upon the helm such a stroke
that his sword carved unto his canel bone, and then Sir Hue abated his
courage, but Sir Uwaine pressed fast to have slain him. That saw Sir Hue:
he kneeled down and yielded him to Sir Uwaine. And he of his gentleness
received his sword, and took him by the hand, and went into the castle
together. Then the Lady of the Rock was passing glad, and the other
brother made great sorrow for his brother's death. Then the lady was
restored of all her lands, and Sir Hue was commanded to be at the court of
King Arthur at the next feast of Pentecost. So Sir Uwaine dwelt with the
lady nigh half a year, for it was long or he might be whole of his great
hurts. And so when it drew nigh the term-day that Sir Gawaine, Sir
Marhaus, and Sir Uwaine should meet at the cross-way, then every knight
drew him thither to hold his promise that they had made; and Sir Marhaus
and Sir Uwaine brought their damosels with them, but Sir Gawaine had lost
his damosel, as it is afore rehearsed.</p>
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<h2> CHAPTER XXVIII. How at the year's end all three knights with their three damosels met at the fountain. </h2>
<p>RIGHT so at the twelvemonths' end they met all three knights at the
fountain and their damosels, but the damosel that Sir Gawaine had could
say but little worship of him so they departed from the damosels and rode
through a great forest, and there they met with a messenger that came from
King Arthur, that had sought them well-nigh a twelvemonth throughout all
England, Wales, and Scotland, and charged if ever he might find Sir
Gawaine and Sir Uwaine to bring them to the court again. And then were
they all glad, and so prayed they Sir Marhaus to ride with them to the
king's court. And so within twelve days they came to Camelot, and the king
was passing glad of their coming, and so was all the court. Then the king
made them to swear upon a book to tell him all their adventures that had
befallen them that twelvemonth, and so they did. And there was Sir Marhaus
well known, for there were knights that he had matched aforetime, and he
was named one of the best knights living.</p>
<p>Against the feast of Pentecost came the Damosel of the Lake and brought
with her Sir Pelleas; and at that high feast there was great jousting of
knights, and of all knights that were at that jousts, Sir Pelleas had the
prize, and Sir Marhaus was named the next; but Sir Pelleas was so strong
there might but few knights sit him a buffet with a spear. And at that
next feast Sir Pelleas and Sir Marhaus were made knights of the Table
Round, for there were two sieges void, for two knights were slain that
twelvemonth, and great joy had King Arthur of Sir Pelleas and of Sir
Marhaus. But Pelleas loved never after Sir Gawaine, but as he spared him
for the love of King Arthur; but ofttimes at jousts and tournaments Sir
Pelleas quit Sir Gawaine, for so it rehearseth in the book of French. So
Sir Tristram many days after fought with Sir Marhaus in an island, and
there they did a great battle, but at the last Sir Tristram slew him, so
Sir Tristram was wounded that unnethe he might recover, and lay at a
nunnery half a year. And Sir Pelleas was a worshipful knight, and was one
of the four that achieved the Sangreal, and the Damosel of the Lake made
by her means that never he had ado with Sir Launcelot de Lake, for where
Sir Launcelot was at any jousts or any tournament, she would not suffer
him be there that day, but if it were on the side of Sir Launcelot.</p>
<p>Explicit liber quartus. Incipit liber quintus.</p>
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