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<h2> CHAPTER VII. How a dwarf reproved Balin for the death of Lanceor, and how King Mark of Cornwall found them, and made a tomb over them. </h2>
<p>Now go we hence, said Balin, and well be we met. The meanwhile as they
talked, there came a dwarf from the city of Camelot on horseback, as much
as he might; and found the dead bodies, wherefore he made great dole, and
pulled out his hair for sorrow, and said, Which of you knights have done
this deed? Whereby askest thou it? said Balan. For I would wit it, said
the dwarf. It was I, said Balin, that slew this knight in my defence, for
hither he came to chase me, and either I must slay him or he me; and this
damosel slew herself for his love, which repenteth me, and for her sake I
shall owe all women the better love. Alas, said the dwarf, thou hast done
great damage unto thyself, for this knight that is here dead was one of
the most valiantest men that lived, and trust well, Balin, the kin of this
knight will chase you through the world till they have slain you. As for
that, said Balin, I fear not greatly, but I am right heavy that I have
displeased my lord King Arthur, for the death of this knight. So as they
talked together, there came a king of Cornwall riding, the which hight
King Mark. And when he saw these two bodies dead, and understood how they
were dead, by the two knights above said, then made the king great sorrow
for the true love that was betwixt them, and said, I will not depart till
I have on this earth made a tomb, and there he pight his pavilions and
sought through all the country to find a tomb, and in a church they found
one was fair and rich, and then the king let put them both in the earth,
and put the tomb upon them, and wrote the names of them both on the tomb.
How here lieth Lanceor the king's son of Ireland, that at his own request
was slain by the hands of Balin; and how his lady, Colombe, and paramour,
slew herself with her love's sword for dole and sorrow.</p>
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<h2> CHAPTER VIII. How Merlin prophesied that two the best knights of the world should fight there, which were Sir Lancelot and Sir Tristram. </h2>
<p>THE meanwhile as this was a-doing, in came Merlin to King Mark, and seeing
all his doing, said, Here shall be in this same place the greatest battle
betwixt two knights that was or ever shall be, and the truest lovers, and
yet none of them shall slay other. And there Merlin wrote their names upon
the tomb with letters of gold that should fight in that place, whose names
were Launcelot de Lake, and Tristram. Thou art a marvellous man, said King
Mark unto Merlin, that speakest of such marvels, thou art a boistous man
and an unlikely to tell of such deeds. What is thy name? said King Mark.
At this time, said Merlin, I will not tell, but at that time when Sir
Tristram is taken with his sovereign lady, then ye shall hear and know my
name, and at that time ye shall hear tidings that shall not please you.
Then said Merlin to Balin, Thou hast done thyself great hurt, because that
thou savest not this lady that slew herself, that might have saved her an
thou wouldest. By the faith of my body, said Balin, I might not save her,
for she slew herself suddenly. Me repenteth, said Merlin; because of the
death of that lady thou shalt strike a stroke most dolorous that ever man
struck, except the stroke of our Lord, for thou shalt hurt the truest
knight and the man of most worship that now liveth, and through that
stroke three kingdoms shall be in great poverty, misery and wretchedness
twelve years, and the knight shall not be whole of that wound for many
years. Then Merlin took his leave of Balin. And Balin said, If I wist it
were sooth that ye say I should do such a perilous deed as that, I would
slay myself to make thee a liar. Therewith Merlin vanished away suddenly.
And then Balan and his brother took their leave of King Mark. First, said
the king, tell me your name. Sir, said Balan, ye may see he beareth two
swords, thereby ye may call him the Knight with the Two Swords. And so
departed King Mark unto Camelot to King Arthur, and Balin took the way
toward King Rience; and as they rode together they met with Merlin
disguised, but they knew him not. Whither ride you? said Merlin. We have
little to do, said the two knights, to tell thee. But what is thy name?
said Balin. At this time, said Merlin, I will not tell it thee. It is evil
seen, said the knights, that thou art a true man that thou wilt not tell
thy name. As for that, said Merlin, be it as it be may, I can tell you
wherefore ye ride this way, for to meet King Rience; but it will not avail
you without ye have my counsel. Ah! said Balin, ye are Merlin; we will be
ruled by your counsel. Come on, said Merlin, ye shall have great worship,
and look that ye do knightly, for ye shall have great need. As for that,
said Balin, dread you not, we will do what we may.</p>
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<h2> CHAPTER IX. How Balin and his brother, by the counsel of Merlin, took King Rience and brought him to King Arthur. </h2>
<p>THEN Merlin lodged them in a wood among leaves beside the highway, and
took off the bridles of their horses and put them to grass and laid them
down to rest them till it was nigh midnight. Then Merlin bade them rise,
and make them ready, for the king was nigh them, that was stolen away from
his host with a three score horses of his best knights, and twenty of them
rode to-fore to warn the Lady de Vance that the king was coming; for that
night King Rience should have lain with her. Which is the king? said
Balin. Abide, said Merlin, here in a strait way ye shall meet with him;
and therewith he showed Balin and his brother where he rode.</p>
<p>Anon Balin and his brother met with the king, and smote him down, and
wounded him fiercely, and laid him to the ground; and there they slew on
the right hand and the left hand, and slew more than forty of his men, and
the remnant fled. Then went they again to King Rience and would have slain
him had he not yielded him unto their grace. Then said he thus: Knights
full of prowess, slay me not, for by my life ye may win, and by my death
ye shall win nothing. Then said these two knights, Ye say sooth and truth,
and so laid him on a horse-litter. With that Merlin was vanished, and came
to King Arthur aforehand, and told him how his most enemy was taken and
discomfited. By whom? said King Arthur. By two knights, said Merlin, that
would please your lordship, and to-morrow ye shall know what knights they
are. Anon after came the Knight with the Two Swords and Balan his brother,
and brought with them King Rience of North Wales, and there delivered him
to the porters, and charged them with him; and so they two returned again
in the dawning of the day. King Arthur came then to King Rience, and said,
Sir king, ye are welcome: by what adventure come ye hither? Sir, said King
Rience, I came hither by an hard adventure. Who won you? said King Arthur.
Sir, said the king, the Knight with the Two Swords and his brother, which
are two marvellous knights of prowess. I know them not, said Arthur, but
much I am beholden to them. Ah, said Merlin, I shall tell you: it is Balin
that achieved the sword, and his brother Balan, a good knight, there
liveth not a better of prowess and of worthiness, and it shall be the
greatest dole of him that ever I knew of knight, for he shall not long
endure. Alas, said King Arthur, that is great pity; for I am much beholden
unto him, and I have ill deserved it unto him for his kindness. Nay, said
Merlin, he shall do much more for you, and that shall ye know in haste.
But, sir, are ye purveyed, said Merlin, for to-morn the host of Nero, King
Rience's brother, will set on you or noon with a great host, and therefore
make you ready, for I will depart from you.</p>
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<h2> CHAPTER X. How King Arthur had a battle against Nero and King Lot of Orkney, and how King Lot was deceived by Merlin, and how twelve kings were slain. </h2>
<p>THEN King Arthur made ready his host in ten battles and Nero was ready in
the field afore the Castle Terrabil with a great host, and he had ten
battles, with many more people than Arthur had. Then Nero had the vanguard
with the most part of his people, and Merlin came to King Lot of the Isle
of Orkney, and held him with a tale of prophecy, till Nero and his people
were destroyed. And there Sir Kay the seneschal did passingly well, that
the days of his life the worship went never from him; and Sir Hervis de
Revel did marvellous deeds with King Arthur, and King Arthur slew that day
twenty knights and maimed forty. At that time came in the Knight with the
Two Swords and his brother Balan, but they two did so marvellously that
the king and all the knights marvelled of them, and all they that beheld
them said they were sent from heaven as angels, or devils from hell; and
King Arthur said himself they were the best knights that ever he saw, for
they gave such strokes that all men had wonder of them.</p>
<p>In the meanwhile came one to King Lot, and told him while he tarried there
Nero was destroyed and slain with all his people. Alas, said King Lot, I
am ashamed, for by my default there is many a worshipful man slain, for an
we had been together there had been none host under the heaven that had
been able for to have matched with us; this faiter with his prophecy hath
mocked me. All that did Merlin, for he knew well that an King Lot had been
with his body there at the first battle, King Arthur had been slain, and
all his people destroyed; and well Merlin knew that one of the kings
should be dead that day, and loath was Merlin that any of them both should
be slain; but of the twain, he had liefer King Lot had been slain than
King Arthur. Now what is best to do? said King Lot of Orkney; whether is
me better to treat with King Arthur or to fight, for the greater part of
our people are slain and destroyed? Sir, said a knight, set on Arthur for
they are weary and forfoughten and we be fresh. As for me, said King Lot,
I would every knight would do his part as I would do mine. And then they
advanced banners and smote together and all to-shivered their spears; and
Arthur's knights, with the help of the Knight with the Two Swords and his
brother Balan put King Lot and his host to the worse. But always King Lot
held him in the foremost front, and did marvellous deeds of arms, for all
his host was borne up by his hands, for he abode all knights. Alas he
might not endure, the which was great pity, that so worthy a knight as he
was one should be overmatched, that of late time afore had been a knight
of King Arthur's, and wedded the sister of King Arthur; and for King
Arthur lay by King Lot's wife, the which was Arthur's sister, and gat on
her Mordred, therefore King Lot held against Arthur. So there was a knight
that was called the Knight with the Strange Beast, and at that time his
right name was called Pellinore, the which was a good man of prowess, and
he smote a mighty stroke at King Lot as he fought with all his enemies,
and he failed of his stroke, and smote the horse's neck, that he fell to
the ground with King Lot. And therewith anon Pellinore smote him a great
stroke through the helm and head unto the brows. And then all the host of
Orkney fled for the death of King Lot, and there were slain many mothers'
sons. But King Pellinore bare the wite of the death of King Lot, wherefore
Sir Gawaine revenged the death of his father the tenth year after he was
made knight, and slew King Pellinore with his own hands. Also there were
slain at that battle twelve kings on the side of King Lot with Nero, and
all were buried in the Church of Saint Stephen's in Camelot, and the
remnant of knights and of others were buried in a great rock.</p>
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<h2> CHAPTER XI. Of the interment of twelve kings, and of the prophecy of Merlin, and how Balin should give the dolorous stroke. </h2>
<p>SO at the interment came King Lot's wife Margawse with her four sons,
Gawaine, Agravaine, Gaheris, and Gareth. Also there came thither King
Uriens, Sir Ewaine's father, and Morgan le Fay his wife that was King
Arthur's sister. All these came to the interment. But of all these twelve
kings King Arthur let make the tomb of King Lot passing richly, and made
his tomb by his own; and then Arthur let make twelve images of latten and
copper, and over-gilt it with gold, in the sign of twelve kings, and each
one of them held a taper of wax that burnt day and night; and King Arthur
was made in sign of a figure standing above them with a sword drawn in his
hand, and all the twelve figures had countenance like unto men that were
overcome. All this made Merlin by his subtle craft, and there he told the
king, When I am dead these tapers shall burn no longer, and soon after the
adventures of the Sangreal shall come among you and be achieved. Also he
told Arthur how Balin the worshipful knight shall give the dolorous
stroke, whereof shall fall great vengeance. Oh, where is Balin and Balan
and Pellinore? said King Arthur. As for Pellinore, said Merlin, he will
meet with you soon; and as for Balin he will not be long from you; but the
other brother will depart, ye shall see him no more. By my faith, said
Arthur, they are two marvellous knights, and namely Balin passeth of
prowess of any knight that ever I found, for much beholden am I unto him;
would God he would abide with me. Sir, said Merlin, look ye keep well the
scabbard of Excalibur, for ye shall lose no blood while ye have the
scabbard upon you, though ye have as many wounds upon you as ye may have.
So after, for great trust, Arthur betook the scabbard to Morgan le Fay his
sister, and she loved another knight better than her husband King Uriens
or King Arthur, and she would have had Arthur her brother slain, and
therefore she let make another scabbard like it by enchantment, and gave
the scabbard Excalibur to her love; and the knight's name was called
Accolon, that after had near slain King Arthur. After this Merlin told
unto King Arthur of the prophecy that there should be a great battle
beside Salisbury, and Mordred his own son should be against him. Also he
told him that Bagdemegus was his cousin, and germain unto King Uriens.</p>
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<h2> CHAPTER XII. How a sorrowful knight came before Arthur, and how Balin fetched him, and how that knight was slain by a knight invisible. </h2>
<p>WITHIN a day or two King Arthur was somewhat sick, and he let pitch his
pavilion in a meadow, and there he laid him down on a pallet to sleep, but
he might have no rest. Right so he heard a great noise of an horse, and
therewith the king looked out at the porch of the pavilion, and saw a
knight coming even by him, making great dole. Abide, fair sir, said
Arthur, and tell me wherefore thou makest this sorrow. Ye may little amend
me, said the knight, and so passed forth to the castle of Meliot. Anon
after there came Balin, and when he saw King Arthur he alighted off his
horse, and came to the King on foot, and saluted him. By my head, said
Arthur, ye be welcome. Sir, right now came riding this way a knight making
great mourn, for what cause I cannot tell; wherefore I would desire of you
of your courtesy and of your gentleness to fetch again that knight either
by force or else by his good will. I will do more for your lordship than
that, said Balin; and so he rode more than a pace, and found the knight
with a damosel in a forest, and said, Sir knight, ye must come with me
unto King Arthur, for to tell him of your sorrow. That will I not, said
the knight, for it will scathe me greatly, and do you none avail. Sir,
said Balin, I pray you make you ready, for ye must go with me, or else I
must fight with you and bring you by force, and that were me loath to do.
Will ye be my warrant, said the knight, an I go with you? Yea, said Balin,
or else I will die therefore. And so he made him ready to go with Balin,
and left the damosel still. And as they were even afore King Arthur's
pavilion, there came one invisible, and smote this knight that went with
Balin throughout the body with a spear. Alas, said the knight, I am slain
under your conduct with a knight called Garlon; therefore take my horse
that is better than yours, and ride to the damosel, and follow the quest
that I was in as she will lead you, and revenge my death when ye may. That
shall I do, said Balin, and that I make vow unto knighthood; and so he
departed from this knight with great sorrow. So King Arthur let bury this
knight richly, and made a mention on his tomb, how there was slain Herlews
le Berbeus, and by whom the treachery was done, the knight Garlon. But
ever the damosel bare the truncheon of the spear with her that Sir Herlews
was slain withal.</p>
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<h2> CHAPTER XIII. How Balin and the damosel met with a knight which was in likewise slain, and how the damosel bled for the custom of a castle. </h2>
<p>So Balin and the damosel rode into a forest, and there met with a knight
that had been a-hunting, and that knight asked Balin for what cause he
made so great sorrow. Me list not to tell you, said Balin. Now, said the
knight, an I were armed as ye be I would fight with you. That should
little need, said Balin, I am not afeard to tell you, and told him all the
cause how it was. Ah, said the knight, is this all? here I ensure you by
the faith of my body never to depart from you while my life lasteth. And
so they went to the hostelry and armed them, and so rode forth with Balin.
And as they came by an hermitage even by a churchyard, there came the
knight Garlon invisible, and smote this knight, Perin de Mountbeliard,
through the body with a spear. Alas, said the knight, I am slain by this
traitor knight that rideth invisible. Alas, said Balin, it is not the
first despite he hath done me; and there the hermit and Balin buried the
knight under a rich stone and a tomb royal. And on the morn they found
letters of gold written, how Sir Gawaine shall revenge his father's death,
King Lot, on the King Pellinore. Anon after this Balin and the damosel
rode till they came to a castle, and there Balin alighted, and he and the
damosel went to go into the castle, and anon as Balin came within the
castle's gate the portcullis fell down at his back, and there fell many
men about the damosel, and would have slain her. When Balin saw that, he
was sore aggrieved, for he might not help the damosel. Then he went up
into the tower, and leapt over walls into the ditch, and hurt him not; and
anon he pulled out his sword and would have foughten with them. And they
all said nay, they would not fight with him, for they did nothing but the
old custom of the castle; and told him how their lady was sick, and had
lain many years, and she might not be whole but if she had a dish of
silver full of blood of a clean maid and a king's daughter; and therefore
the custom of this castle is, there shall no damosel pass this way but she
shall bleed of her blood in a silver dish full. Well, said Balin, she
shall bleed as much as she may bleed, but I will not lose the life of her
whiles my life lasteth. And so Balin made her to bleed by her good will,
but her blood helped not the lady. And so he and she rested there all
night, and had there right good cheer, and on the morn they passed on
their ways. And as it telleth after in the Sangreal, that Sir Percivale's
sister helped that lady with her blood, whereof she was dead.</p>
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