<h2><SPAN name="EGLAMOUR_AND_CRYSTABELL" id="EGLAMOUR_AND_CRYSTABELL"></SPAN>EGLAMOUR AND CRYSTABELL.</h2>
<p class="h5">(<i>From Ellis' Abstract of Copy in Garrick Collection.</i>)</p>
<ANTIMG src="images/drop-c.jpg" width-obs="72" height-obs="69" alt="C" title="C" class="split">
<p class="minus"><span class="hide">C</span><b>OUNT</b>
Prinsamour, an independent sovereign
of Artois, was famed for his skill in
training young men in the courtesy and accomplishments
of chivalry. His court was the resort
of all youths who wished to excel in those important
arts. His daughter Crystabell, the heiress of Count
Prinsamour's dominions, was very beautiful and accomplished,
and her father designed to marry her to some
powerful monarch. The tournaments instituted at his
court were in her honor, and for her sake all the
hotheaded young knights in training broke their
lances.</p>
<p>Crystabell herself had no desire to leave her own
country to become the wife of a foreign monarch.
She loved the free and stirring air around her father's<span class="pagenum">[330]</span>
castle, and had, unknown to the count, fallen in love
with a young knight, Sir Eglamour, who was ever
victorious in the numerous tournaments ridden in
her name.</p>
<p>Eglamour, on his side, looked up to the young
countess as to a star. He never dreamed of winning
her love, because he was only a knight, without wealth
or lands, depending upon his sword alone to make his
way through life. At last, one day, something that
Crystabell said made him think that she cared for him
more than for the rest of her followers. Sorely
troubled, and yet strangely happy, the young man
wandered off to think it over. He finally resolved to
ask advice of the chamberlain, who had always stood
his friend. That personage counselled him to give up
all thoughts of the countess, who, he said, was destined
by her father to be the bride of a rich and great king.
Eglamour sighed, and admitted that his friend was
right. But that night, in the solitude of his chamber,
he addressed a prayer to God:</p>
<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">"Lord," he said, "grant me a boon,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">As thou on rood me bought!<br/></span>
<span class="i0">The erle's daughter, fair and free,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">That she may my wife be!<br/></span>
<span class="pagenum">[331]</span></div>
<div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">For she is most in my thought:<br/></span>
<span class="i0">That I may wed her to my wife,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">And in joy to lead our life!<br/></span>
<span class="i0">From care then were I brought."<br/></span></div>
</div>
<p>In those days a true knight thought it no shame to
his manhood to take the burden of his every-day cares
and lay it in all simplicity at the feet of his Maker.
When his devotions were at an end, Sir Eglamour slept
soundly, and awoke in better heart.</p>
<p>After a while, Sir Eglamour fell ill, and the count
desired his daughter, who was skilled in medicine, as
were all great ladies of the time, to attend upon the
invalid. Crystabell, followed by her damsels, went at
once into the sick-room. She found Sir Eglamour
feverish and unhappy, and on bending down to minister
to him, his pulse throbbed so violently at her
touch, that the tears of sympathy came into her eyes.
"I have betrayed my love," thought Sir Eglamour; but
what was his happiness when the lady bent down to
kiss his lips, confessing that the chamberlain had told
her what was the real cause of his malady; and, to
comfort Eglamour, she bid him live for her sake.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i078.jpg" width-obs="562" height-obs="764" alt="Eglamour & Crystabell." title=""> <p class="caption">Eglamour & Crystabell.</p> </div>
<p>After this, Eglamour got well rapidly; but he felt it
right and honorable to inform the count, at once, how<span class="pagenum">[332]</span>
matters stood between the two young people. The
count, who, although a brave knight, was largely governed
by selfish ambition, refused Sir Eglamour with
scorn. Then, after thinking a while, he told the youth
that he would only bestow his daughter upon the
champion who might accomplish three perilous feats
of arms, each one of which would expose the candidate
to the most imminent danger; and that the victor
should not only receive the hand of Crystabell,
but in time inherit the whole territory of Artois.</p>
<p>Overjoyed, Sir Eglamour accepted the conditions
without delay. He declared he was ready to set off
that day or the next upon the enterprise. He did not
suspect the count's real purpose in setting him this
task, which was to destroy the rash knight who presumed
to love his daughter.</p>
<p>"At a little distance to the westward," said the
count, "there is a forest of noble trees belonging to a
most terrible giant, named Maroke. In a part of the
forest shut off for the giant's own hunting ground, are
three deer, famed for their size and speed. To hunt
one of these celebrated animals is, of course, to challenge
an encounter with their owner. Consider whether
you have courage enough for such an enterprise."<span class="pagenum">[333]</span></p>
<p>Sir Eglamour smiled, promised to kill the giant, and
hurried off to tell his lady-love. Crystabell trembled
and wept, but bid her lover God-speed. She told him
that no man ever set forth upon a more arduous journey
in a Christian country, but that she gloried in his
brave spirit. She gave him a good greyhound, from
whom no deer that ever ran had yet escaped—also a
sword, once found in the sea, the only one of the kind
in the world, and which could carve in two any helmet
of steel or iron. Eglamour kissed her farewell,
as he received these gifts, and set out with a light
heart.</p>
<p>Reaching the giant's park, he followed the wall to
a massive gate, burst it open, and entered the wood.
This forest was of huge cypress trees, and Eglamour
had the luck soon to come upon the three
deer grazing quietly. They were the most immense
creatures he had ever seen; and singling out the largest,
he attacked it. With the help of the dun greyhound,
he brought the stag to earth, and set to work
to carve his spoil. Laden with venison, he then approached
the giant's castle, blowing his horn at intervals;
and, when arrived there, he sounded a wild and
merry blast, which roused Maroke from sleep and
brought him in fury to
the gate.</p>
<span class="pagenum">[334]</span>
<div class="i080">
<div class="split" id="i080-1"> </div>
<div class="split" id="i080-2"> </div>
<p>Sir Eglamour
politely asked the monster
to give him leave
to pass through the
grounds with his prey.</p>
<p>The giant, gnashing
his teeth in rage, answered
by aiming a blow
with his club at the
saucy young knight's
head. Sir Eglamour, at
the same moment, drew
Crystabell's
sword, which
shone so brightly
as to dazzle
the eyes of Maroke,
striking
him stone-blind
where he
stood. Then
followed a
mighty combat. Blind as the giant was, he fought<span class="pagenum">[335]</span>
well and skilfully for three entire days. At the end of
the third day, Sir Eglamour rallied all his strength and
drove his sword into the giant's heart, a thrust which
sent Maroke crashing like a forest tree to earth.</p>
<p>Sir Eglamour, having cut off his enemy's head, carried
it, together with the slaughtered stag, back to the
court of his sovereign. The count received him ruefully;
but fair Crystabell laughed and rejoiced, while
the courtiers covered their champion with praises.
After Eglamour was rested and refreshed, the count
hurried him off again. This time he was to journey to
the distant land of Satyn, where his task was to fetch
away the head of a prodigious boar, the terror of that
ill-fated country, half of whose inhabitants the creature
had already eaten up.</p>
<p>To reach the land of Satyn, Sir Eglamour had to
travel a fortnight by sea, a fortnight by land. Arriving
there at nightfall, he thought it prudent to spend
the night in resting on the borders of the forest. At
sunrise next day he approached the den of the horrible
boar, who had just come back from taking his morning
drink in the sea. The animal was a terror to look
upon, having flaming eyes and tusks a yard long. He
lay gnawing some human bones and growling frightfully,<span class="pagenum">[336]</span>
surrounded by dead bodies, many of which were
clad in knightly armor. At once Sir Eglamour dashed
at him with a shout—"For God and Crystabell!" The
boar whetted his long tusks and set upon his adversary,
killing at the first blow Sir Eglamour's noble horse,
his own tough hide remaining unhurt by the spear.
Sir Eglamour now had recourse to his magic sword,
and found to his joy that, wherever he struck, the boar's
hide was cut; although the length of the animal's tusks
made it difficult to close with him. This combat,
like that with the giant, lasted three days, and at the
end Sir Eglamour, by a sudden swift movement, made
a terrible blow at the creature's neck, severing the
head from his body.</p>
<p>Long before the close of this memorable fight, the
boar's snorts of rage and defiance had attracted to the
spot the King of Satyn and fifteen of his knights, who
happened to be hunting in the forest. When the boar
dropped dead, Sir Eglamour fell over him, and lay
there completely exhausted. The king and his men
drew near, showered compliments on the strange
knight's bravery, and told him that the wicked beast
of whom he had rid them had sometimes destroyed as
many as forty men in one day.<span class="pagenum">[337]</span></p>
<p>The king ordered a cloth to be laid upon the grass,
and Sir Eglamour was regaled with venison and rich
wine, which brought strength back to his arm and
hope to his heart. The king's men then attempted
to cut up the boar, but failed, owing to the toughness
of his hide. The sword of Sir Eglamour was put into
requisition, and in a moment the beast was cleft asunder
along the back bone. The meat was distributed
among the knights and men-at-arms, Sir Eglamour
claiming the head alone. The King of Satyn afterward
ordered for the champion a warm bath of certain
sweet-scented herbs that healed his wounds and
in which he rested pleasantly till break of day. Then
the party went on to the king's palace, where Sir Eglamour
was asked to stay and recover from his fatigue.</p>
<p>Now it happened that the boar just slain was an intimate
friend of Manas, a huge and frightful giant, own
brother to Maroke. Manas had fallen in love with the
King of Satyn's daughter, and had vowed to carry her
off. When Manas came prowling around the castle
that evening, and beheld on the point of a spear over
the gateway the head of his friend the boar, he flew
into an awful passion, foaming at the mouth; and as
he looked on that head<span class="pagenum">[338]</span>—</p>
</div>
<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">"Alas!" he cried, "art thou dead?<br/></span>
<span class="i0">My trust was all in thee!<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Now, by the law that I live in,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">My little speckled hoglin,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Dear bought shall thy death be!"<br/></span></div>
</div>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i081.jpg" width-obs="539" height-obs="382" alt="" title=""></div>
<p>Manas beat upon the door and walls of the castle in a
fury, demanding the surrender of the murderer of his
dear little speckled hoglin. Presently, Sir Eglamour,<span class="pagenum">[339]</span>
fully armed and equipped, mounted on a fiery courser,
and with lance in rest, attacked the giant at full speed.</p>
<p>Manas resisted vigorously, and in an instant overthrew
man and horse. The king, the princess, and
the court, who had assembled on the walls of the
castle, began to tremble for the safety of their champion.
But Sir Eglamour, lightly springing to his feet,
drew his invincible sword, and closing with the giant,
cut off his right arm. The monster roared with pain,
but continued to fight, though yelling at intervals as
loudly as ever, till near sunset, when the patient
knight, who had hitherto suffered him to exhaust himself
by his own efforts, suddenly rushed forward and
completed the victory! The boar and Manas being
dead, Eglamour now took his leave of the grateful
King of Satyn and his court, who rejoiced greatly
over the death of their two adversaries. The heads of
the boar and the giant Manas were carefully packed
up, and in due time Eglamour laid them at the feet of
his faithful Crystabell.</p>
<p>Count Prinsamour, secretly disgusted at his knight's
success, at once sent him off on another enterprise,
more dangerous than the two preceding ones. Eglamour
and Crystabell, now seeing that the false count<span class="pagenum">[340]</span>
was determined to prevent their marriage, parted from
each other with many tears. But Crystabell vowed to
marry him, with or without her father's leave, so soon as
he should return, if ever he did, from the present journey.</p>
<p>The third mission was to kill a tremendous dragon, at
that time desolating the country around the gates of
Rome. After sundry adventures by the way, Eglamour
encountered the beast, and fought it long and valiantly.
He succeeded in cutting off its wings, tail, and head;
but at last he fell himself, exhausted by his wounds
and poisoned by the dragon's sting, and was carried
from the field.</p>
<p>When Crystabell heard that her brave lover was
lying at the point of death in Rome, she left her father
and journeyed to the knight's bedside, where, to make
him happy before he died, she consented to marry
him on the spot.</p>
<p>Eglamour rallied under the care of his beloved Crystabell;
but, after they had spent some happy months
together, Count Prinsamour found out his daughter's
place of retreat, and carried her off from her husband,
abusing him as a vile thief and imposter.</p>
<p>Crystabell cried and lamented continually for her
lost husband. After a while, a son was born to her,<span class="pagenum">[341]</span>
which made the count more angry than before. He
took the unfortunate mother and child, put them, without
food, into an open boat, and set them adrift upon
the sea. The boat drifted for five days, and at last
reached the shores of a country whose king proved to
be the brother of Crystabell's own mother. He took
the wayfarers under his care, and devoted himself to
bringing up the boy, named Degrabell, to be a valiant
knight.</p>
<p>After a time, Eglamour travelled to Artois, and
entering the count's hall by force, confronted his cruel
father-in-law in the presence of all the knights and
squires. He had heard of the fate of his wife and
child, and his wrath was terrible to see. He cast the
dragon's head, wings, and tail before the count, reminded
him that his daughter had been fairly won,
and called down God's judgment upon the unnatural
father who had bereaved Eglamour of all he held dear
in life. The count retreated to his strongest citadel in
fear before the righteous anger of this mighty champion;
but Eglamour seized the property of his late
master, divided it among the count's worthy and needy
subjects, and ordering masses to be sung in all the
churches for the soul of his lost Crystabell, departed<span class="pagenum">[342]</span>
for the Holy Land, where, during many years, he distinguished
himself both in battle and in tournament
against the Saracens.</p>
<p>When her son, Sir Degrabell, had reached the age of
eighteen, Crystabell was more beautiful than ever, and
the king, her uncle, resolved to marry her to some
knight who might make happy the remainder of her
days. Crystabell, who still cherished the memory of
her lost Sir Eglamour, begged her son to help her in
this emergency. Sir Degrabell went to the king and
insisted that all of the knights aspiring to his mother's
hand should first meet him in the lists, and that only
the one who should overthrow him might claim the
princess as a wife.</p>
<p>The king smiled at the pretentions of this beardless
youth, and gave his consent. A tournament was announced,
and to it came from all parts of the country
persons of high rank seeking adventure. Knight
after knight presented himself in the lists, and was
swiftly unhorsed by the gallant Degrabell. At length
the boy, flushed with conquest, turned to a stranger
of distinguished appearance who stood gazing at the
spectacle, without seeming to take any great interest
in it, and asked if he too had a mind to break a lance.<span class="pagenum">[343]</span>
The stranger knight hesitated, then said that, to amuse
himself, he would do so. Mounting his horse, he
rode with the speed of a lightning flash against Degrabell,
who was borne to the earth on the spot.
Princess Crystabell had been watching the tourney
with pride, but screamed aloud at her son's overthrow,
and rushed into the arena, throwing herself on her
knees before the stranger and imploring him to spare
her boy. Trembling, she looked upon the victor's
shield, and there saw depicted a rude device of a
golden boat containing a lady and a child about to
perish in the waves.</p>
<p>On his side, the knight gazed at the lady in trembling,
then bending his knee before her, revealed himself
the long-lost Eglamour. Crystabell would have
swooned for joy, had not her husband caught her in
his arms. Eglamour, equally astonished and delighted,
had still in store for him the rapture of recognizing in
his brave young antagonist the son so worthy of his sire.</p>
<p>Sir Eglamour and Lady Crystabell, thus happily
reunited, lived together for the remainder of their
days in prosperity. Degrabell became a famous
champion. The old Count Prinsamour broke his neck
by falling from his tower; and so, my tale is told!</p>
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