<h2><SPAN name="THE_TRIALS_OF_SIR_ISUMBRAS" id="THE_TRIALS_OF_SIR_ISUMBRAS"></SPAN>THE TRIALS OF SIR ISUMBRAS.</h2>
<p class="h5">(<i>From Ellis' Abridgment of the MS. in Caius College.</i>)</p>
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<p class="minus"><span class="hide">O</span><b>NCE</b>
upon a time there lived a knight so handsome,
so rich, and so valiant that all eyes
were turned upon him. His name was Isumbras,
and fortune had given him everything that the
heart of man could wish for. He had a splendid castle,
surrounded by vast forests, where every day he went
hunting or hawking; and so generous he was with his
wealth that the poor flocked to him from every quarter
and never went away empty-handed.</p>
<p>Sir Isumbras had a beautiful wife and three lovely<span class="pagenum">[283]</span>
sons to share the blessings of his lot; but one thing he
had not, and that was an humble spirit. He forgot to
own the Giver of good things, and took it as a matter
of course that his life should flow on in ease and luxury.</p>
<p>One day when mounted on his favorite steed, surrounded
by his dogs, and having his hawk on fist, Sir
Isumbras cast up his eyes to the sky, and there saw an
angel, who reproached him with his pride, announcing
that Heaven had in store for him a speedy punishment.</p>
<p>Sir Isumbras fell to his knees in prayer; but hardly
had the angel vanished from his sight when, on remounting
his horse, the noble creature fell dead beneath
him; the hawk dropped lifeless from his fist; and the
faithful hounds expired in agonies at his feet. Hastening
on foot to his castle, he was met by a servant,
who informed him his horses and oxen had been suddenly
struck dead by lightning, and that his fowls had
all been stung to death by adders. Next came forward
a page, who told him the castle was burned to
the ground, many of his servants had perished, and
that his wife and children had taken refuge, half
naked, in a thorn-bush close at hand. Sir Isumbras
hastened to the aid of his beloved family, stripping
himself of his scarlet mantle and his surcoat to clothe<span class="pagenum">[284]</span>
them. He embraced them fondly, and thanked heaven
that, though all the rest of his treasures were taken,
these remained. He then proposed to his wife that, as
a sign of repentance for their sins, they should all go
on foot to the holy city, Jerusalem, begging their
bread from land to land. He cut with his knife upon
his bare shoulder the pilgrim's sign of the cross, and
then the afflicted family set forth on their travels.</p>
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<p>Long they journeyed, eating crusts when they could<span class="pagenum">[285]</span>
beg them, or berries from wayside bushes, until, faint
and weary, they reached a broad but shallow stream.
Taking his eldest son in his arms, Sir Isumbras bore
him across the river, and placed him beneath a bush
of broom-plant, bidding him play with the blossoms
until his father's return. Scarcely had the knight left
his son, when an enormous lion burst from a neighboring
thicket and bore away the child. In like manner the
second son became the prey of a fierce leopard; and
the poor mother, who saw them so cruelly torn from
her sight, fainted away, with her baby on her breast.
Sir Isumbras bowed to the will of God; and when his
wife revived they journeyed on to the shore of the
Greek sea. Here they stood, and, through eyes that
were full of tears, saw a great fleet of three hundred
ships coming toward them. This was the navy of a
famous heathen king, and no sooner had he landed
than the travellers, who had not touched bread or meat
for seven days, hastened to implore his charity. The
king soon observed the robust limbs and tall stature
of the husband; and perceived he was a knight in disguise,
and that the wife, whose beauty was as "bright as
blossoms upon tree," was, in spite of her ragged clothes,
a lady of high degree. So, affecting to treat the poor<span class="pagenum">[286]</span>
couple with respect, he offered them gold and treasure
if the knight would renounce Christianity and consent
to fight under the Saracen banners. This offer
was at once declined, and the angry king made up his
mind to revenge himself by carrying away the knight's
wife. So, upon an order to the attendants, a purse of
gold was pressed into the knight's hand, his infant son
was put into his arms, he was hurried ashore, cruelly
beaten by the king's servants, and, when he recovered
himself, saw a heathen ship, with his wife on board,
set sail for Africa.</p>
<p>Sir Isumbras clasped his only remaining treasure to
his heart, and followed the vessel with his eyes until it
vanished from sight. Night found him still there, until
father and babe fell asleep upon the bare ground,
too weary to keep awake. Sir Isumbras had laid the
fatal present of the heathen king, the purse of gold,
in the scarlet mantle which he wrapped around his
child. Scarcely had the next day's sun risen upon the
earth, when an eagle, attracted by the red cloth, darted
down, carrying off mantle, child, and purse in his talons.</p>
<p>The poor knight was at last in utter despair. He
fell on his knees, and offered what remained of his life
to the God he had offended. Just then he heard the<span class="pagenum">[287]</span>
noise of a blacksmith's forge, and saw, not far off, some
men at work. They took pity on him and fed him.
He entered their service, and bound himself for seven
long years to learn their trade. During this time he
forged a complete suit of armor for himself, being
determined at the first opportunity to take up arms
against the Saracens, whose king had not only done him
such a cruel wrong, but was oppressing God's people.</p>
<p>At length his opportunity came. The Christian army
was to fight the Saracens on a field not far from the
forge. Sir Isumbras buckled on his awkward armor
and, mounting a horse that had been used by the smith
to carry coals, proceeded to the field of battle.</p>
<p>His heart beat with wild joy when he saw the foe
before him. Uttering a fervent prayer, he dashed into
the thick of the combat, attracting all eyes at first by
his sorry steed and rough armor, and again by the
splendid skill and courage of his charge. Early in the
action his horse was killed under him, and the Christian
chiefs made haste to present him another one,
also a suit of armor more worthy of the heroic soldier
he had proved himself to be. All that day the battle
raged.</p>
<p>By nightfall Sir Isumbras, single-handed, had killed<span class="pagenum">[288]</span>
the heathen king and many of his followers. But he
was himself sorely wounded, and when brought for reward
before the Christian king, and asked his name,
could hardly falter out, "I am a smith's man, sire." The
king swore a great oath to make a knight of this valiant
"smith's man"; and, with all honor and tenderness,
Sir Isumbras was carried into a nunnery, where the
good sisters nursed him until he recovered from his
many wounds.</p>
<p>Sir Isumbras was not satisfied to remain quiet long,
though he had slain the heathen king. He went to
the Holy Land, and for seven years wandered about a
pilgrim, as before, sleeping upon the ground by night,
and vainly seeking tidings of his wife by day. Once,
during this time, when he was starving upon the banks
of a stream, there appeared to him a cheering visitor.</p>
<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">And as he sat, about midnight,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">There came angel fair and bright,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">And brought him bread and wine.<br/></span>
<span class="i0">He said, "Palmer, well thou be!<br/></span>
<span class="i0">The King of Heaven greeteth well thee;<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Forgiven is sin thine."<br/></span></div>
</div>
<p>Very soon after this miraculous event Sir Isumbras
found his wife, who had dwelt, holy and charitable, in a<span class="pagenum">[289]</span>
secluded castle, where she had been shut up by the
Saracen king. She welcomed him with rapture, and
together they shed many tears over their lost children.
They lived together for some years, until Sir Isumbras
was again summoned to do battle with the Saracens,
who had determined at all cost to kill him. The fight
was again hot and long, and just when Sir Isumbras
was about to be overpowered by numbers of the enemy,
three new champions appeared in the field, declaring
themselves on the side of the Christians. These were
three splendid knights, the first mounted upon a lion,
the second upon a leopard, and the third upon an eagle.
The Saracen cavalry, terror-stricken at sight of them,
dispersed in all directions. But flight was in vain;
three and twenty thousand unbelievers were soon laid
dead upon the plain by the lion, leopard, and eagle,
fighting with tireless fury, and driving all before them,
until the entire heathen army was utterly put to rout.
Then, coming back to Sir Isumbras, the three champions
knelt before him, announcing themselves his
long lost sons, mercifully protected and befriended by
the savage creatures by whom they had been carried
off. Sir Isumbras embraced his valiant sons, and led
them to their mother. The Christian king enriched<span class="pagenum">[290]</span>
the entire family, restoring them to their former rank.
And now wealth, titles, honors, and all that he had lost,
came back to Sir Isumbras, and the remainder of his
days was spent in blessed peace.</p>
<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">"They lived and died in good intent;<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Unto heaven their souls went,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">When that they dead were.<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Jesu Christ, heaven's king,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Give us, aye, his blessing,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">And shield us from care!"<br/></span></div>
</div>
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<p><span class="pagenum">[291]</span></p>
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