<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<p id="id00008" style="margin-top: 4em">Produced by Douglas B. Killings and R. J. Maley.</p>
<p id="id00009" style="margin-top: 8em">The Song of Roland</p>
<p id="id00010">Translated by C. K. [Charles Kenneth] Moncreiff</p>
<p id="id00011" style="margin-top: 4em">Anonymous Old French epic, dating perhaps as early as the middle
11th century.</p>
<h3 id="id00012" style="margin-top: 3em"> I</h3>
<p id="id00013"> Charles the King, our Lord and Sovereign,<br/>
Full seven years hath sojourned in Spain,<br/>
Conquered the land, and won the western main,<br/>
Now no fortress against him doth remain,<br/>
No city walls are left for him to gain,<br/>
Save Sarraguce, that sits on high mountain.<br/>
Marsile its King, who feareth not God's name,<br/>
Mahumet's man, he invokes Apollin's aid,<br/>
Nor wards off ills that shall to him attain.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h4 id="id00014" style="margin-top: 2em"> II</h4>
<p id="id00015"> King Marsilies he lay at Sarraguce,<br/>
Went he his way into an orchard cool;<br/>
There on a throne he sate, of marble blue,<br/>
Round him his men, full twenty thousand, stood.<br/>
Called he forth then his counts, also his dukes:<br/>
"My Lords, give ear to our impending doom:<br/>
That Emperour, Charles of France the Douce,<br/>
Into this land is come, us to confuse.<br/>
I have no host in battle him to prove,<br/>
Nor have I strength his forces to undo.<br/>
Counsel me then, ye that are wise and true;<br/>
Can ye ward off this present death and dule?"<br/>
What word to say no pagan of them knew,<br/>
Save Blancandrin, of th' Castle of Val Funde.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00016"> III</h5>
<p id="id00017"> Blancandrins was a pagan very wise,<br/>
In vassalage he was a gallant knight,<br/>
First in prowess, he stood his lord beside.<br/>
And thus he spoke: "Do not yourself affright!<br/>
Yield to Carlun, that is so big with pride,<br/>
Faithful service, his friend and his ally;<br/>
Lions and bears and hounds for him provide,<br/>
Thousand mewed hawks, sev'n hundred camelry;<br/>
Silver and gold, four hundred mules load high;<br/>
Fifty wagons his wrights will need supply,<br/>
Till with that wealth he pays his soldiery.<br/>
War hath he waged in Spain too long a time,<br/>
To Aix, in France, homeward he will him hie.<br/>
Follow him there before Saint Michael's tide,<br/>
You shall receive and hold the Christian rite;<br/>
Stand honour bound, and do him fealty.<br/>
Send hostages, should he demand surety,<br/>
Ten or a score, our loyal oath to bind;<br/>
Send him our sons, the first-born of our wives;—<br/>
An he be slain, I'll surely furnish mine.<br/>
Better by far they go, though doomed to die,<br/>
Than that we lose honour and dignity,<br/>
And be ourselves brought down to beggary."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00018"> IV</h5>
<p id="id00019"> Says Blancandrins: "By my right hand, I say,<br/>
And by this beard, that in the wind doth sway,<br/>
The Frankish host you'll see them all away;<br/>
Franks will retire to France their own terrain.<br/>
When they are gone, to each his fair domain,<br/>
In his Chapelle at Aix will Charles stay,<br/>
High festival will hold for Saint Michael.<br/>
Time will go by, and pass the appointed day;<br/>
Tidings of us no Frank will hear or say.<br/>
Proud is that King, and cruel his courage;<br/>
From th' hostage he'll slice their heads away.<br/>
Better by far their heads be shorn away,<br/>
Than that ourselves lose this clear land of Spain,<br/>
Than that ourselves do suffer grief and pain."<br/>
"That is well said. So be it." the pagans say.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00020"> V</h5>
<p id="id00021"> The council ends, and that King Marsilie<br/>
Calleth aside Clarun of Balaguee,<br/>
Estramarin and Eudropin his peer,<br/>
And Priamun and Guarlan of the beard,<br/>
And Machiner and his uncle Mahee,<br/>
With Jouner, Malbien from over sea,<br/>
And Blancandrin, good reason to decree:<br/>
Ten hath he called, were first in felony.<br/>
"Gentle Barons, to Charlemagne go ye;<br/>
He is in siege of Cordres the city.<br/>
In your right hands bear olive-branches green<br/>
Which signify Peace and Humility.<br/>
If you by craft contrive to set me free,<br/>
Silver and gold, you'll have your fill of me,<br/>
Manors and fiefs, I'll give you all your need."<br/>
"We have enough," the pagans straight agree.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00022"> VI</h5>
<p id="id00023"> King Marsilies, his council finishing,<br/>
Says to his men: "Go now, my lords, to him,<br/>
Olive-branches in your right hands bearing;<br/>
Bid ye for me that Charlemagne, the King,<br/>
In his God's name to shew me his mercy;<br/>
Ere this new moon wanes, I shall be with him;<br/>
One thousand men shall be my following;<br/>
I will receive the rite of christening,<br/>
Will be his man, my love and faith swearing;<br/>
Hostages too, he'll have, if so he will."<br/>
Says Blancandrins: "Much good will come of this."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00024"> VII</h5>
<p id="id00025"> Ten snow-white mules then ordered Marsilie,<br/>
Gifts of a King, the King of Suatilie.<br/>
Bridled with gold, saddled in silver clear;<br/>
Mounted them those that should the message speak,<br/>
In their right hands were olive-branches green.<br/>
Came they to Charle, that holds all France in fee,<br/>
Yet cannot guard himself from treachery.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00026"> VIII</h5>
<p id="id00027"> Merry and bold is now that Emperour,<br/>
Cordres he holds, the walls are tumbled down,<br/>
His catapults have battered town and tow'r.<br/>
Great good treasure his knights have placed in pound,<br/>
Silver and gold and many a jewelled gown.<br/>
In that city there is no pagan now<br/>
But he been slain, or takes the Christian vow.<br/>
The Emperour is in a great orchard ground<br/>
Where Oliver and Rollant stand around,<br/>
Sansun the Duke and Anseis the proud,<br/>
Gefreid d'Anjou, that bears his gonfaloun;<br/>
There too Gerin and Geriers are found.<br/>
Where they are found, is seen a mighty crowd,<br/>
Fifteen thousand, come out of France the Douce.<br/>
On white carpets those knights have sate them down,<br/>
At the game-boards to pass an idle hour;—<br/>
Chequers the old, for wisdom most renowned,<br/>
While fence the young and lusty bachelours.<br/>
Beneath a pine, in eglantine embow'red,<br/>
l Stands a fald-stool, fashioned of gold throughout;<br/>
There sits the King, that holds Douce France in pow'r;<br/>
White is his beard, and blossoming-white his crown,<br/>
Shapely his limbs, his countenance is proud.<br/>
Should any seek, no need to point him out.<br/>
The messengers, on foot they get them down,<br/>
And in salute full courteously they lout.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00028"> IX</h5>
<p id="id00029"> The foremost word of all Blancandrin spake,<br/>
And to the King: "May God preserve you safe,<br/>
The All Glorious, to Whom ye're bound to pray!<br/>
Proud Marsilies this message bids me say:<br/>
Much hath he sought to find salvation's way;<br/>
Out of his wealth meet presents would he make,<br/>
Lions and bears, and greyhounds leashed on chain,<br/>
Thousand mewed hawks, sev'n hundred dromedrays,<br/>
Four hundred mules his silver shall convey,<br/>
Fifty wagons you'll need to bear away<br/>
Golden besants, such store of proved assay,<br/>
Wherewith full tale your soldiers you can pay.<br/>
Now in this land you've been too long a day<br/>
Hie you to France, return again to Aix;<br/>
Thus saith my Lord, he'll follow too that way."<br/>
That Emperour t'wards God his arms he raised<br/>
Lowered his head, began to meditate.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00030"> X</h5>
<p id="id00031"> That Emperour inclined his head full low;<br/>
Hasty in speech he never was, but slow:<br/>
His custom was, at his leisure he spoke.<br/>
When he looks up, his face is very bold,<br/>
He says to them: "Good tidings have you told.<br/>
King Marsilies hath ever been my foe.<br/>
These very words you have before me told,<br/>
In what measure of faith am I to hold?"<br/>
That Sarrazin says, "Hostages he'll show;<br/>
Ten shall you take, or fifteen or a score.<br/>
Though he be slain, a son of mine shall go,<br/>
Any there be you'll have more nobly born.<br/>
To your palace seigneurial when you go,<br/>
At Michael's Feast, called in periculo;<br/>
My Lord hath said, thither will he follow<br/>
Ev'n to your baths, that God for you hath wrought;<br/>
There is he fain the Christian faith to know."<br/>
Answers him Charles: "Still may he heal his soul."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00032"> XI</h5>
<p id="id00033"> Clear shone the sun in a fair even-tide;<br/>
Those ten men's mules in stall he bade them tie.<br/>
Also a tent in the orchard raise on high,<br/>
Those messengers had lodging for the night;<br/>
Dozen serjeants served after them aright.<br/>
Darkling they lie till comes the clear daylight.<br/>
That Emperour does with the morning rise;<br/>
Matins and Mass are said then in his sight.<br/>
Forth goes that King, and stays beneath a pine;<br/>
Barons he calls, good counsel to define,<br/>
For with his Franks he's ever of a mind.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00034"> XII</h5>
<p id="id00035"> That Emperour, beneath a pine he sits,<br/>
Calls his barons, his council to begin:<br/>
Oger the Duke, that Archbishop Turpin,<br/>
Richard the old, and his nephew Henry,<br/>
From Gascony the proof Count Acolin,<br/>
Tedbald of Reims and Milun his cousin:<br/>
With him there were Gerers, also Gerin,<br/>
And among them the Count Rollant came in,<br/>
And Oliver, so proof and so gentil.<br/>
Franks out of France, a thousand chivalry;<br/>
Guenes came there, that wrought the treachery.<br/>
The Council then began, which ended ill.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00036"> XIII</h5>
<p id="id00037"> "My Lords Barons," says the Emperour then, Charles,<br/>
"King Marsilies hath sent me his messages;<br/>
Out of his wealth he'll give me weighty masses.<br/>
Greyhounds on leash and bears and lions also,<br/>
Thousand mewed hawks and seven hundred camels,<br/>
Four hundred mules with gold Arabian charged,<br/>
Fifty wagons, yea more than fifty drawing.<br/>
But into France demands he my departure;<br/>
He'll follow me to Aix, where is my Castle;<br/>
There he'll receive the law of our Salvation:<br/>
Christian he'll be, and hold from me his marches.<br/>
But I know not what purpose in his heart is."<br/>
Then say the Franks: "Beseems us act with caution!"<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00038"> XIV</h5>
<p id="id00039"> That Emperour hath ended now his speech.<br/>
The Count Rollanz, he never will agree,<br/>
Quick to reply, he springs upon his feet;<br/>
And to the King, "Believe not Marsilie.<br/>
Seven years since, when into Spain came we,<br/>
I conquer'd you Noples also Commibles,<br/>
And took Valterne, and all the land of Pine,<br/>
And Balaguet, and Tuele, and Sezilie.<br/>
Traitor in all his ways was Marsilies;<br/>
Of his pagans he sent you then fifteen,<br/>
Bearing in hand their olive-branches green:<br/>
Who, ev'n as now, these very words did speak.<br/>
You of your Franks a Council did decree,<br/>
Praised they your words that foolish were in deed.<br/>
Two of your Counts did to the pagan speed,<br/>
Basan was one, and the other Basilie:<br/>
Their heads he took on th' hill by Haltilie.<br/>
War have you waged, so on to war proceed,<br/>
To Sarraguce lead forth your great army.<br/>
All your life long, if need be, lie in siege,<br/>
Vengeance for those the felon slew to wreak."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00040"> XV</h5>
<p id="id00041"> That Emperour he sits with lowering front,<br/>
He clasps his chin, his beard his fingers tug,<br/>
Good word nor bad, his nephew not one.<br/>
Franks hold their peace, but only Guenelun<br/>
Springs to his feet, and comes before Carlun;<br/>
Right haughtily his reason he's begun,<br/>
And to the King: "Believe not any one,<br/>
My word nor theirs, save whence your good shall come.<br/>
Since he sends word, that King Marsiliun,<br/>
Homage he'll do, by finger and by thumb;<br/>
Throughout all Spain your writ alone shall run<br/>
Next he'll receive our rule of Christendom<br/>
Who shall advise, this bidding be not done,<br/>
Deserves not death, since all to death must come.<br/>
Counsel of pride is wrong: we've fought enough.<br/>
Leave we the fools, and with the wise be one."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00042"> XVI</h5>
<p id="id00043"> And after him came Neimes out, the third,<br/>
Better vassal there was not in the world;<br/>
And to the King: "Now rightly have you heard<br/>
Guenes the Count, what answer he returned.<br/>
Wisdom was there, but let it well be heard.<br/>
King Marsilies in war is overturned,<br/>
His castles all in ruin have you hurled,<br/>
With catapults his ramparts have you burst,<br/>
Vanquished his men, and all his cities burned;<br/>
Him who entreats your pity do not spurn,<br/>
Sinners were they that would to war return;<br/>
With hostages his faith he would secure;<br/>
Let this great war no longer now endure."<br/>
"Well said the Duke." Franks utter in their turn.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00044"> XVII</h5>
<p id="id00045"> "My lords barons, say whom shall we send up<br/>
To Sarraguce, to King Marsiliun?"<br/>
Answers Duke Neimes: "I'll go there for your love;<br/>
Give me therefore the wand, also the glove."<br/>
Answers the King: "Old man of wisdom pruff;<br/>
By this white beard, and as these cheeks are rough,<br/>
You'll not this year so far from me remove;<br/>
Go sit you down, for none hath called you up."<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00046"> XVIII</h5>
<p id="id00047"> "My lords barons, say whom now can we send<br/>
To th' Sarrazin that Sarraguce defends?"<br/>
Answers Rollanz: "I might go very well."<br/>
"Certes, you'll not," says Oliver his friend,<br/>
"For your courage is fierce unto the end,<br/>
I am afraid you would misapprehend.<br/>
If the King wills it I might go there well."<br/>
Answers the King: "Be silent both on bench;<br/>
Your feet nor his, I say, shall that way wend.<br/>
Nay, by this beard, that you have seen grow blench,<br/>
The dozen peers by that would stand condemned.<br/>
Franks hold their peace; you'd seen them all silent.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00048"> XIX</h5>
<p id="id00049"> Turpins of Reins is risen from his rank,<br/>
Says to the King: "In peace now leave your Franks.<br/>
For seven years you've lingered in this land<br/>
They have endured much pain and sufferance.<br/>
Give, Sire, to me the clove, also the wand,<br/>
I will seek out the Spanish Sarazand,<br/>
For I believe his thoughts I understand."<br/>
That Emperour answers intolerant:<br/>
"Go, sit you down on yonder silken mat;<br/>
And speak no more, until that I command."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00050"> XX</h5>
<p id="id00051"> "Franks, chevaliers," says the Emperour then, Charles,<br/>
"Choose ye me out a baron from my marches,<br/>
To Marsilie shall carry back my answer."<br/>
Then says Rollanz: "There's Guenes, my goodfather."<br/>
Answer the Franks: "For he can wisely manage;<br/>
So let him go, there's none you should send rather."<br/>
And that count Guenes is very full of anguish;<br/>
Off from his neck he flings the pelts of marten,<br/>
And on his feet stands clear in silken garment.<br/>
Proud face he had, his eyes with colour, sparkled;<br/>
Fine limbs he had, his ribs were broadly arched<br/>
So fair he seemed that all the court regarded.<br/>
Says to Rollant: "Fool, wherefore art so wrathful?<br/>
All men know well that I am thy goodfather;<br/>
Thou hast decreed, to Marsiliun I travel.<br/>
Then if God grant that I return hereafter,<br/>
I'll follow thee with such a force of passion<br/>
That will endure so long as life may last thee."<br/>
Answers Rollanz: "Thou'rt full of pride and madness.<br/>
All men know well, I take no thought for slander;<br/>
But some wise man, surely, should bear the answer;<br/>
If the King will, I'm ready to go rather."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00052"> XXI</h5>
<p id="id00053"> Answers him Guene: "Thou shalt not go for me.<br/>
Thou'rt not my man, nor am I lord of thee.<br/>
Charles commnds that I do his decree,<br/>
To Sarraguce going to Marsilie;<br/>
There I will work a little trickery,<br/>
This mighty wrath of mine I'll thus let free."<br/>
When Rollanz heard, began to laugh for glee.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00054"> XXII</h5>
<p id="id00055"> When Guenes sees that Rollant laughs at it,<br/>
Such grief he has, for rage he's like to split,<br/>
A little more, and he has lost his wit:<br/>
Says to that count: "I love you not a bit;<br/>
A false judgement you bore me when you chid.<br/>
Right Emperour, you see me where you sit,<br/>
I will your word accomplish, as you bid.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00056"> XXIII</h5>
<p id="id00057"> "To Sarraguce I must repair, 'tis plain;<br/>
Whence who goes there returns no more again.<br/>
Your sister's hand in marriage have I ta'en;<br/>
And I've a son, there is no prettier swain:<br/>
Baldwin, men say he shews the knightly strain.<br/>
To him I leave my honours and domain.<br/>
Care well for him; he'll look for me in vain."<br/>
Answers him Charles: "Your heart is too humane.<br/>
When I command, time is to start amain."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00058"> XXIV</h5>
<p id="id00059"> Then says the King: "Guenes, before me stand;<br/>
And take from me the glove, also the wand.<br/>
For you have heard, you're chosen by the Franks,"<br/>
"Sire," answers Guenes, "all this is from Rollanz;<br/>
I'll not love him, so long as I'm a man,<br/>
Nor Oliver, who goes at his right hand;<br/>
The dozen peers, for they are of his band,<br/>
All I defy, as in your sight I stand."<br/>
Then says the King: "Over intolerant.<br/>
Now certainly you go when I command."<br/>
"And go I can; yet have I no warrant<br/>
Basile had none nor his brother Basant."<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00060"> XXV</h5>
<p id="id00061"> His right hand glove that Emperour holds out;<br/>
But the count Guenes elsewhere would fain be found;<br/>
When he should take, it falls upon the ground.<br/>
Murmur the Franks: "God! What may that mean now?<br/>
By this message great loss shall come about."<br/>
"Lordings," says Guene, "You'll soon have news enow."<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00062"> XXVI</h5>
<p id="id00063"> "Now," Guenes said, "give me your orders, Sire;<br/>
Since I must go, why need I linger, I?"<br/>
Then said the King "In Jesu's Name and mine!"<br/>
With his right hand he has absolved and signed,<br/>
Then to his care the wand and brief confides.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00064"> XXVII</h5>
<p id="id00065"> Guenes the count goes to his hostelry,<br/>
Finds for the road his garments and his gear,<br/>
All of the best he takes that may appear:<br/>
Spurs of fine gold he fastens on his feet,<br/>
And to his side Murgles his sword of steel.<br/>
On Tachebrun, his charger, next he leaps,<br/>
His uncle holds the stirrup, Guinemere.<br/>
Then you had seen so many knights to weep,<br/>
Who all exclaim: "Unlucky lord, indeed!<br/>
In the King's court these many years you've been,<br/>
Noble vassal, they say that have you seen.<br/>
He that for you this journey has decreed<br/>
King Charlemagne will never hold him dear.<br/>
The Count Rollant, he should not so have deemed,<br/>
Knowing you were born of very noble breed."<br/>
After they say: "Us too, Sire, shall he lead."<br/>
Then answers Guenes: "Not so, the Lord be pleased!<br/>
Far better one than many knights should bleed.<br/>
To France the Douce, my lords, you soon shall speed,<br/>
On my behalf my gentle wife you'll greet,<br/>
And Pinabel, who is my friend and peer,<br/>
And Baldewin, my son, whom you have seen;<br/>
His rights accord and help him in his need."<br/>
—Rides down the road, and on his way goes he.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00066"> XXVIII</h5>
<p id="id00067"> Guenes canters on, and halts beneath a tree;<br/>
Where Sarrazins assembled he may see,<br/>
With Blancandrins, who abides his company.<br/>
Cunning and keen they speak then, each to each,<br/>
Says Blancandrins: "Charles, what a man is he,<br/>
Who conquered Puille and th'whole of Calabrie;<br/>
Into England he crossed the bitter sea,<br/>
To th' Holy Pope restored again his fee.<br/>
What seeks he now of us in our country?"<br/>
Then answers Guene "So great courage hath he;<br/>
Never was man against him might succeed."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00068"> XXIX</h5>
<p id="id00069"> Says Blancandrins "Gentle the Franks are found;<br/>
Yet a great wrong these dukes do and these counts<br/>
Unto their lord, being in counsel proud;<br/>
Him and themselves they harry and confound."<br/>
Guenes replies: "There is none such, without<br/>
Only Rollanz, whom shame will yet find out.<br/>
Once in the shade the King had sate him down;<br/>
His nephew came, in sark of iron brown,<br/>
Spoils he had won, beyond by Carcasoune,<br/>
Held in his hand an apple red and round.<br/>
"Behold, fair Sire," said Rollanz as he bowed,<br/>
"Of all earth's kings I bring you here the crowns."<br/>
His cruel pride must shortly him confound,<br/>
Each day t'wards death he goes a little down,<br/>
When he be slain, shall peace once more abound."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00070"> XXX</h5>
<p id="id00071"> Says Blancandrins: "A cruel man, Rollant,<br/>
That would bring down to bondage every man,<br/>
And challenges the peace of every land.<br/>
With what people takes he this task in hand?"<br/>
And answers Guene: "The people of the Franks;<br/>
They love him so, for men he'll never want.<br/>
Silver and gold he show'rs upon his band,<br/>
Chargers and mules, garments and silken mats.<br/>
The King himself holds all by his command;<br/>
From hence to the East he'll conquer sea and land."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00072"> XXXI</h5>
<p id="id00073"> Cantered so far then Blancandrins and Guene<br/>
Till each by each a covenant had made<br/>
And sought a plan, how Rollant might be slain.<br/>
Cantered so far by valley and by plain<br/>
To Sarraguce beneath a cliff they came.<br/>
There a fald-stool stood in a pine-tree's shade,<br/>
Enveloped all in Alexandrin veils;<br/>
There was the King that held the whole of Espain,<br/>
Twenty thousand of Sarrazins his train;<br/>
Nor was there one but did his speech contain,<br/>
Eager for news, till they might hear the tale.<br/>
Haste into sight then Blancandrins and Guene.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00074"> XXXII</h5>
<p id="id00075"> Blancandrin comes before Marsiliun,<br/>
Holding the hand of county Guenelun;<br/>
Says to the King "Lord save you, Sire, Mahum<br/>
And Apollin, whose holy laws here run!<br/>
Your message we delivered to Charlun,<br/>
Both his two hands he raised against the sun,<br/>
Praising his God, but answer made he none.<br/>
He sends you here his noblest born barun,<br/>
Greatest in wealth, that out of France is come;<br/>
From him you'll hear if peace shall be, or none."<br/>
"Speak," said Marsile: "We'll hear him, every one."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00076"> XXXIII</h5>
<p id="id00077"> But the count Guenes did deeply meditate;<br/>
Cunning and keen began at length, and spake<br/>
Even as one that knoweth well the way;<br/>
And to the King: "May God preserve you safe,<br/>
The All Glorious, to whom we're bound to pray<br/>
Proud Charlemagne this message bids me say:<br/>
You must receive the holy Christian Faith,<br/>
And yield in fee one half the lands of Spain.<br/>
If to accord this tribute you disdain,<br/>
Taken by force and bound in iron chain<br/>
You will be brought before his throne at Aix;<br/>
Judged and condemned you'll be, and shortly slain,<br/>
Yes, you will die in misery and shame."<br/>
King Marsilies was very sore afraid,<br/>
Snatching a dart, with golden feathers gay,<br/>
He made to strike: they turned aside his aim.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00078"> XXXIV</h5>
<p id="id00079"> King Marsilies is turn'ed white with rage,<br/>
His feathered dart he brandishes and shakes.<br/>
Guenes beholds: his sword in hand he takes,<br/>
Two fingers' width from scabbard bares the blade;<br/>
And says to it: "O clear and fair and brave;<br/>
Before this King in court we'll so behave,<br/>
That the Emperour of France shall never say<br/>
In a strange land I'd thrown my life away<br/>
Before these chiefs thy temper had essayed."<br/>
"Let us prevent this fight:" the pagans say.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00080"> XXXV</h5>
<p id="id00081"> Then Sarrazins implored him so, the chiefs,<br/>
On the faldstoel Marsillies took his seat.<br/>
"Greatly you harm our cause," says the alcaliph:<br/>
"When on this Frank your vengeance you would wreak;<br/>
Rather you should listen to hear him speak."<br/>
"Sire," Guenes says, "to suffer I am meek.<br/>
I will not fail, for all the gold God keeps,<br/>
Nay, should this land its treasure pile in heaps,<br/>
But I will tell, so long as I be free,<br/>
What Charlemagne, that Royal Majesty,<br/>
Bids me inform his mortal enemy."<br/>
Guenes had on a cloke of sable skin,<br/>
And over it a veil Alexandrin;<br/>
These he throws down, they're held by Blancandrin;<br/>
But not his sword, he'll not leave hold of it,<br/>
In his right hand he grasps the golden hilt.<br/>
The pagans say. "A noble baron, this."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00082"> XXXVI</h5>
<p id="id00083"> Before the King's face Guenes drawing near<br/>
Says to him "Sire, wherefore this rage and fear?<br/>
Seeing you are, by Charles, of Franks the chief,<br/>
Bidden to hold the Christians' right belief.<br/>
One half of Spain he'll render as your fief<br/>
The rest Rollanz, his nephew, shall receive,<br/>
Proud parcener in him you'll have indeed.<br/>
If you will not to Charles this tribute cede,<br/>
To you he'll come, and Sarraguce besiege;<br/>
Take you by force, and bind you hands and feet,<br/>
Bear you outright ev'n unto Aix his seat.<br/>
You will not then on palfrey nor on steed,<br/>
Jennet nor mule, come cantering in your speed;<br/>
Flung you will be on a vile sumpter-beast;<br/>
Tried there and judged, your head you will not keep.<br/>
Our Emperour has sent you here this brief."<br/>
He's given it into the pagan's nief.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00084"> XXXVII</h5>
<p id="id00085"> Now Marsilies, is turn'ed white with ire,<br/>
He breaks the seal and casts the wax aside,<br/>
Looks in the brief, sees what the King did write:<br/>
"Charles commands, who holds all France by might,<br/>
I bear in mind his bitter grief and ire;<br/>
'Tis of Basan and 's brother Basilye,<br/>
Whose heads I took on th' hill by Haltilye.<br/>
If I would save my body now alive,<br/>
I must despatch my uncle the alcalyph,<br/>
Charles will not love me ever otherwise."<br/>
After, there speaks his son to Marsilye,<br/>
Says to the King: "In madness spoke this wight.<br/>
So wrong he was, to spare him were not right;<br/>
Leave him to me, I will that wrong requite."<br/>
When Guenes hears, he draws his sword outright,<br/>
Against the trunk he stands, beneath that pine.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00086"> XXXVIII</h5>
<p id="id00087"> The King is gone into that orchard then;<br/>
With him he takes the best among his men;<br/>
And Blancandrins there shews his snowy hair,<br/>
And Jursalet, was the King's son and heir,<br/>
And the alcaliph, his uncle and his friend.<br/>
Says Blancandrins: "Summon the Frank again,<br/>
In our service his faith to me he's pledged."<br/>
Then says the King: "So let him now be fetched."<br/>
He's taken Guenes by his right finger-ends,<br/>
And through the orchard straight to the King they wend.<br/>
Of treason there make lawless parliament.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00088"> XXXIX</h5>
<p id="id00089"> "Fair Master Guenes," says then King Marsilie,<br/>
"I did you now a little trickery,<br/>
Making to strike, I shewed my great fury.<br/>
These sable skins take as amends from me,<br/>
Five hundred pounds would not their worth redeem.<br/>
To-morrow night the gift shall ready be."<br/>
Guene answers him: "I'll not refuse it, me.<br/>
May God be pleased to shew you His mercy."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00090"> XL</h5>
<p id="id00091"> Then says Marsile "Guenes, the truth to ken,<br/>
Minded I am to love you very well.<br/>
Of Charlemagne I wish to hear you tell,<br/>
He's very old, his time is nearly spent,<br/>
Two hundred years he's lived now, as 'tis said.<br/>
Through many lands his armies he has led,<br/>
So many blows his buckled shield has shed,<br/>
And so rich kings he's brought to beg their bread;<br/>
What time from war will he draw back instead?"<br/>
And answers Guenes: "Not so was Charles bred.<br/>
There is no man that sees and knows him well<br/>
But will proclaim the Emperour's hardihead.<br/>
Praise him as best I may, when all is said,<br/>
Remain untold, honour and goodness yet.<br/>
His great valour how can it be counted?<br/>
Him with such grace hath God illumined,<br/>
Better to die than leave his banneret."<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00092"> XLI</h5>
<p id="id00093"> The pagan says: "You make me marvel sore<br/>
At Charlemagne, who is so old and hoar;<br/>
Two hundred years, they say, he's lived and more.<br/>
So many lands he's led his armies o'er,<br/>
So many blows from spears and lances borne,<br/>
And so rich kings brought down to beg and sorn,<br/>
When will time come that he draws back from war?"<br/>
"Never," says Guenes, "so long as lives his nephew;<br/>
No such vassal goes neath the dome of heaven;<br/>
And proof also is Oliver his henchman;<br/>
The dozen peers, whom Charl'es holds so precious,<br/>
These are his guards, with other thousands twenty.<br/>
Charles is secure, he holds no man in terror."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00094"> XLII</h5>
<p id="id00095"> Says Sarrazin: "My wonder yet is grand<br/>
At Charlemagne, who hoary is and blanched.<br/>
Two hundred years and more, I understand,<br/>
He has gone forth and conquered many a land,<br/>
Such blows hath borne from many a trenchant lance,<br/>
Vanquished and slain of kings so rich a band,<br/>
When will time come that he from war draws back?"<br/>
"Never," says Guene, "so long as lives Rollanz,<br/>
From hence to the East there is no such vassal;<br/>
And proof also, Oliver his comrade;<br/>
The dozen peers he cherishes at hand,<br/>
These are his guard, with twenty thousand Franks.<br/>
Charles is secure, he fears no living man."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00096"> XLIII</h5>
<p id="id00097"> "Fair Master Guenes," says Marsilies the King,<br/>
"Such men are mine, fairer than tongue can sing,<br/>
Of knights I can four hundred thousand bring<br/>
So I may fight with Franks and with their King."<br/>
Answers him Guenes: "Not on this journeying<br/>
Save of pagans a great loss suffering.<br/>
Leave you the fools, wise counsel following;<br/>
To the Emperour such wealth of treasure give<br/>
That every Frank at once is marvelling.<br/>
For twenty men that you shall now send in<br/>
To France the Douce he will repair, that King;<br/>
In the rereward will follow after him<br/>
Both his nephew, count Rollant, as I think,<br/>
And Oliver, that courteous paladin;<br/>
Dead are the counts, believe me if you will.<br/>
Charles will behold his great pride perishing,<br/>
For battle then he'll have no more the skill.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00098"> XLIV</h5>
<p id="id00099"> Fair Master Guene," says then King Marsilie,<br/>
"Shew the device, how Rollant slain may be."<br/>
Answers him Guenes: "That will I soon make clear<br/>
The King will cross by the good pass of Size,<br/>
A guard he'll set behind him, in the rear;<br/>
His nephew there, count Rollant, that rich peer,<br/>
And Oliver, in whom he well believes;<br/>
Twenty thousand Franks in their company<br/>
Five score thousand pagans upon them lead,<br/>
Franks unawares in battle you shall meet,<br/>
Bruised and bled white the race of Franks shall be;<br/>
I do not say, but yours shall also bleed.<br/>
Battle again deliver, and with speed.<br/>
So, first or last, from Rollant you'll be freed.<br/>
You will have wrought a high chivalrous deed,<br/>
Nor all your life know war again, but peace.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00100"> XLV</h5>
<p id="id00101"> "Could one achieve that Rollant's life was lost,<br/>
Charle's right arm were from his body torn;<br/>
Though there remained his marvellous great host,<br/>
He'ld not again assemble in such force;<br/>
Terra Major would languish in repose."<br/>
Marsile has heard, he's kissed him on the throat;<br/>
Next he begins to undo his treasure-store.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00102"> XLVI</h5>
<p id="id00103"> Said Marsilie—but now what more said they?—<br/>
"No faith in words by oath unbound I lay;<br/>
Swear me the death of Rollant on that day."<br/>
Then answered Guene: "So be it, as you say."<br/>
On the relics, are in his sword Murgles,<br/>
Treason he's sworn, forsworn his faith away.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00104"> XLVII</h5>
<p id="id00105"> Was a fald-stool there, made of olifant.<br/>
A book thereon Marsilies bade them plant,<br/>
In it their laws, Mahum's and Tervagant's.<br/>
He's sworn thereby, the Spanish Sarazand,<br/>
In the rereward if he shall find Rollant,<br/>
Battle to himself and all his band,<br/>
And verily he'll slay him if he can.<br/>
And answered Guenes: "So be it, as you command!"<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00106"> XLVIII</h5>
<p id="id00107"> In haste there came a pagan Valdabrun,<br/>
Warden had been to King Marsiliun,<br/>
Smiling and clear, he's said to Guenelun,<br/>
"Take now this sword, and better sword has none;<br/>
Into the hilt a thousand coins are run.<br/>
To you, fair sir, I offer it in love;<br/>
Give us your aid from Rollant the barun,<br/>
That in rereward against him we may come."<br/>
Guenes the count answers: "It shall-be done."<br/>
Then, cheek and chin, kissed each the other one.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00108"> XLIX</h5>
<p id="id00109"> After there came a pagan, Climorins,<br/>
Smiling and clear to Guenelun begins:<br/>
"Take now my helm, better is none than this;<br/>
But give us aid, on Rollant the marquis,<br/>
By what device we may dishonour bring."<br/>
"It shall be done." Count Guenes answered him;<br/>
On mouth and cheek then each the other kissed.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00110"> L</h5>
<p id="id00111"> In haste there came the Queen forth, Bramimound;<br/>
"I love you well, sir," said she to the count,<br/>
"For prize you dear my lord and all around;<br/>
Here for your wife I have two brooches found,<br/>
Amethysts and jacynths in golden mount;<br/>
More worth are they than all the wealth of Roum;<br/>
Your Emperour has none such, I'll be bound."<br/>
He's taken them, and in his hosen pouched.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00112"> LI</h5>
<p id="id00113"> The King now calls Malduiz, that guards his treasure.<br/>
"Tribute for Charles, say, is it now made ready?"<br/>
He answers him: "Ay, Sire, for here is plenty<br/>
Silver and gold on hundred camels seven,<br/>
And twenty men, the gentlest under heaven."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00114"> LII</h5>
<p id="id00115"> Marsilie's arm Guene's shoulder doth enfold;<br/>
He's said to him: "You are both wise and bold.<br/>
Now, by the law that you most sacred hold,<br/>
Let not your heart in our behalf grow cold!<br/>
Out of my store I'll give you wealth untold,<br/>
Charging ten mules with fine Arabian gold;<br/>
I'll do the same for you, new year and old.<br/>
Take then the keys of this city so large,<br/>
This great tribute present you first to Charles,<br/>
Then get me placed Rollanz in the rereward.<br/>
If him I find in valley or in pass,<br/>
Battle I'll give him that shall be the last."<br/>
Answers him Guenes: "My time is nearly past."<br/>
His charger mounts, and on his journey starts.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00116"> LIII</h5>
<p id="id00117"> That Emperour draws near to his domain,<br/>
He is come down unto the city Gailne.<br/>
The Count Rollanz had broken it and ta'en,<br/>
An hundred years its ruins shall remain.<br/>
Of Guenelun the King for news is fain,<br/>
And for tribute from the great land of Spain.<br/>
At dawn of day, just as the light grows plain,<br/>
Into their camp is come the county Guene.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00118"> LIV</h5>
<p id="id00119"> In morning time is risen the Emperere,<br/>
Mattins and Mass he's heard, and made his prayer;<br/>
On the green grass before the tent his chair,<br/>
Where Rollant stood and that bold Oliver,<br/>
Neimes the Duke, and many others there.<br/>
Guenes arrived, the felon perjurer,<br/>
Begins to speak, with very cunning air,<br/>
Says to the King: "God keep you, Sire, I swear!<br/>
Of Sarraguce the keys to you I bear,<br/>
Tribute I bring you, very great and rare,<br/>
And twenty men; look after them with care.<br/>
Proud Marsilies bade me this word declare<br/>
That alcaliph, his uncle, you must spare.<br/>
My own eyes saw four hundred thousand there,<br/>
In hauberks dressed, closed helms that gleamed in the air,<br/>
And golden hilts upon their swords they bare.<br/>
They followed him, right to the sea they'll fare;<br/>
Marsile they left, that would their faith forswear,<br/>
For Christendom they've neither wish nor care.<br/>
But the fourth league they had not compassed, ere<br/>
Brake from the North tempest and storm in the air;<br/>
Then were they drowned, they will no more appear.<br/>
Were he alive, I should have brought him here.<br/>
The pagan king, in truth, Sire, bids you hear,<br/>
Ere you have seen one month pass of this year<br/>
He'll follow you to France, to your Empire,<br/>
He will accept the laws you hold and fear;<br/>
Joining his hands, will do you homage there,<br/>
Kingdom of Spain will hold as you declare."<br/>
Then says the King: "Now God be praised, I swear!<br/>
Well have you wrought, and rich reward shall wear."<br/>
Bids through the host a thousand trumpets blare.<br/>
Franks leave their lines; the sumpter-beasts are yare<br/>
T'wards France the Douce all on their way repair.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00120"> LV</h5>
<p id="id00121"> Charles the Great that land of Spain had wasted,<br/>
Her castles ta'en, her cities violated.<br/>
Then said the King, his war was now abated.<br/>
Towards Douce France that Emperour has hasted.<br/>
Upon a lance Rollant his ensign raised,<br/>
High on a cliff against the sky 'twas placed;<br/>
The Franks in camp through all that country baited.<br/>
Cantered pagans, through those wide valleys raced,<br/>
Hauberks they wore and sarks with iron plated,<br/>
Swords to their sides were girt, their helms were laced,<br/>
Lances made sharp, escutcheons newly painted:<br/>
There in the mists beyond the peaks remained<br/>
The day of doom four hundred thousand waited.<br/>
God! what a grief. Franks know not what is fated.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00122"> LVI</h5>
<p id="id00123"> Passes the day, the darkness is grown deep.<br/>
That Emperour, rich Charles, lies asleep;<br/>
Dreams that he stands in the great pass of Size,<br/>
In his two hands his ashen spear he sees;<br/>
Guenes the count that spear from him doth seize,<br/>
Brandishes it and twists it with such ease,<br/>
That flown into the sky the flinders seem.<br/>
Charles sleeps on nor wakens from his dream.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00124"> LVII</h5>
<p id="id00125"> And after this another vision saw,<br/>
In France, at Aix, in his Chapelle once more,<br/>
That his right arm an evil bear did gnaw;<br/>
Out of Ardennes he saw a leopard stalk,<br/>
His body dear did savagely assault;<br/>
But then there dashed a harrier from the hall,<br/>
Leaping in the air he sped to Charles call,<br/>
First the right ear of that grim bear he caught,<br/>
And furiously the leopard next he fought.<br/>
Of battle great the Franks then seemed to talk,<br/>
Yet which might win they knew not, in his thought.<br/>
Charles sleeps on, nor wakens he for aught.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00126"> LVIII</h5>
<p id="id00127"> Passes the night and opens the clear day;<br/>
That Emperour canters in brave array,<br/>
Looks through the host often and everyway;<br/>
"My lords barons," at length doth Charles say,<br/>
"Ye see the pass along these valleys strait,<br/>
Judge for me now, who shall in rereward wait."<br/>
"There's my good-son, Rollanz," then answers Guenes,<br/>
"You've no baron whose valour is as great."<br/>
When the King hears, he looks upon him straight,<br/>
And says to him: "You devil incarnate;<br/>
Into your heart is come a mortal hate.<br/>
And who shall go before me in the gate?"<br/>
"Oger is here, of Denmark;" answers Guenes,<br/>
"You've no baron were better in that place."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00128"> LIX</h5>
<p id="id00129"> The count Rollanz hath heard himself decreed;<br/>
Speaks then to Guenes by rule of courtesy:<br/>
"Good-father, Sir, I ought to hold you dear,<br/>
Since the rereward you have for me decreed.<br/>
Charles the King will never lose by me,<br/>
As I know well, nor charger nor palfrey,<br/>
Jennet nor mule that canter can with speed,<br/>
Nor sumpter-horse will lose, nor any steed;<br/>
But my sword's point shall first exact their meed."<br/>
Answers him Guenes: "I know; 'tis true in-deed."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00130"> LX</h5>
<p id="id00131"> When Rollant heard that he should be rerewarden<br/>
Furiously he spoke to his good-father:<br/>
"Aha! culvert; begotten of a bastard.<br/>
Thinkest the glove will slip from me hereafter,<br/>
As then from thee the wand fell before Charles?"<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00132"> LXI</h5>
<p id="id00133"> "Right Emperour," says the baron Rollanz,<br/>
"Give me the bow you carry in your hand;<br/>
Neer in reproach, I know, will any man<br/>
Say that it fell and lay upon the land,<br/>
As Guenes let fall, when he received the wand."<br/>
That Emperour with lowered front doth stand,<br/>
He tugs his beard, his chin is in his hand<br/>
Tears fill his eyes, he cannot them command.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00134"> LXII</h5>
<p id="id00135"> And after that is come duke Neimes furth,<br/>
(Better vassal there was not upon earth)<br/>
Says to the King: "Right well now have you heard<br/>
The count Rollanz to bitter wrath is stirred,<br/>
For that on him the rereward is conferred;<br/>
No baron else have you, would do that work.<br/>
Give him the bow your hands have bent, at first;<br/>
Then find him men, his company are worth."<br/>
Gives it, the King, and Rollant bears it furth.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00136"> LXIII</h5>
<p id="id00137"> That Emperour, Rollanz then calleth he:<br/>
"Fair nephew mine, know this in verity;<br/>
Half of my host I leave you presently;<br/>
Retain you them; your safeguard this shall be."<br/>
Then says the count: "I will not have them, me I<br/>
Confound me God, if I fail in the deed!<br/>
Good valiant Franks, a thousand score I'll keep.<br/>
Go through the pass in all security,<br/>
While I'm alive there's no man you need fear."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00138"> LXIV</h5>
<p id="id00139"> The count Rollanz has mounted his charger.<br/>
Beside him came his comrade Oliver,<br/>
Also Gerins and the proud count Geriers,<br/>
And Otes came, and also Berengiers,<br/>
Old Anseis, and Sansun too came there;<br/>
Gerart also of Rossillon the fierce,<br/>
And there is come the Gascon Engeliers.<br/>
"Now by my head I'll go!" the Archbishop swears.<br/>
"And I'm with you," says then the count Gualtiers,<br/>
"I'm Rollant's man, I may not leave him there."<br/>
A thousand score they choose of chevaliers.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00140"> LXV</h5>
<p id="id00141"> Gualter del Hum he calls, that Count Rollanz;<br/>
"A thousand Franks take, out of France our land;<br/>
Dispose them so, among ravines and crags,<br/>
That the Emperour lose not a single man."<br/>
Gualter replies: "I'll do as you command."<br/>
A thousand Franks, come out of France their land,<br/>
At Gualter's word they scour ravines and crags;<br/>
They'll not come down, howe'er the news be bad,<br/>
Ere from their sheaths swords seven hundred flash.<br/>
King Almaris, Belserne for kingdom had,<br/>
On the evil day he met them in combat.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00142"> LXVI</h5>
<p id="id00143"> High are the peaks, the valleys shadowful,<br/>
Swarthy the rocks, the narrows wonderful.<br/>
Franks passed that day all very sorrowful,<br/>
Fifteen leagues round the rumour of them grew.<br/>
When they were come, and Terra Major knew,<br/>
Saw Gascony their land and their seigneur's,<br/>
Remembering their fiefs and their honours,<br/>
Their little maids, their gentle wives and true;<br/>
There was not one that shed not tears for rue.<br/>
Beyond the rest Charles was of anguish full,<br/>
In Spanish Pass he'd left his dear nephew;<br/>
Pity him seized; he could but weep for rue.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00144"> LXVII</h5>
<p id="id00145"> The dozen peers are left behind in Spain,<br/>
Franks in their band a thousand score remain,<br/>
No fear have these, death hold they in disdain.<br/>
That Emperour goes into France apace;<br/>
Under his cloke he fain would hide his face.<br/>
Up to his side comes cantering Duke Neimes,<br/>
Says to the King: "What grief upon you weighs?"<br/>
Charles answers him: "He's wrong that question makes.<br/>
So great my grief I cannot but complain.<br/>
France is destroyed, by the device of Guene:<br/>
This night I saw, by an angel's vision plain,<br/>
Between my hands he brake my spear in twain;<br/>
Great fear I have, since Rollant must remain:<br/>
I've left him there, upon a border strange.<br/>
God! If he's lost, I'll not outlive that shame."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00146"> LXVIII</h5>
<p id="id00147"> Charles the great, he cannot but deplore.<br/>
And with him Franks an hundred thousand mourn,<br/>
Who for Rollanz have marvellous remorse.<br/>
The felon Guenes had treacherously wrought;<br/>
From pagan kin has had his rich reward,<br/>
Silver and gold, and veils and silken cloths,<br/>
Camels, lions, with many a mule and horse.<br/>
Barons from Spain King Marsilies hath called,<br/>
Counts and viscounts and dukes and almacours,<br/>
And the admirals, and cadets nobly born;<br/>
Within three days come hundreds thousands four.<br/>
In Sarraguce they sound the drums of war;<br/>
Mahum they raise upon their highest tow'r,<br/>
Pagan is none, that does not him adore.<br/>
They canter then with great contention<br/>
Through Certeine land, valleys and mountains, on,<br/>
Till of the Franks they see the gonfalons,<br/>
Being in rereward those dozen companions;<br/>
They will not fail battle to do anon.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00148"> LXIX</h5>
<p id="id00149"> Marsile's nephew is come before the band,<br/>
Riding a mule, he goads it with a wand,<br/>
Smiling and clear, his uncle's ear demands:<br/>
"Fair Lord and King, since, in your service, glad,<br/>
I have endured sorrow and sufferance,<br/>
Have fought in field, and victories have had.<br/>
Give me a fee: the right to smite Rollanz!<br/>
I'll slay him clean with my good trenchant lance,<br/>
If Mahumet will be my sure warrant;<br/>
Spain I'll set free, deliver all her land<br/>
From Pass of Aspre even unto Durestant.<br/>
Charles will grow faint, and recreant the Franks;<br/>
There'll be no war while you're a living man."<br/>
Marsilie gives the glove into his hand.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00150"> LXX</h5>
<p id="id00151"> Marsile's nephew, holding in hand the glove,<br/>
His uncle calls, with reason proud enough:<br/>
"Fair Lord and King, great gift from you I've won.<br/>
Choose now for me eleven more baruns,<br/>
So I may fight those dozen companions."<br/>
First before all there answers Falfarun;<br/>
—Brother he was to King Marsiliun—<br/>
"Fair sir nephew, go you and I at once<br/>
Then verily this battle shall be done;<br/>
The rereward of the great host of Carlun,<br/>
It is decreed we deal them now their doom."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00152"> LXXI</h5>
<p id="id00153"> King Corsablis is come from the other part,<br/>
Barbarian, and steeped in evil art.<br/>
He's spoken then as fits a good vassal,<br/>
For all God's gold he would not seem coward.<br/>
Hastes into view Malprimis of Brigal,<br/>
Faster than a horse, upon his feet can dart,<br/>
Before Marsile he cries with all his heart:<br/>
"My body I will shew at Rencesvals;<br/>
Find I Rollanz, I'll slay him without fault."<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00154"> LXXII</h5>
<p id="id00155"> An admiral is there of Balaguet;<br/>
Clear face and proud, and body nobly bred;<br/>
Since first he was upon his horse mounted,<br/>
His arms to bear has shewn great lustihead;<br/>
In vassalage he is well famoused;<br/>
Christian were he, he'd shewn good baronhead.<br/>
Before Marsile aloud has he shouted:<br/>
"To Rencesvals my body shall be led;<br/>
Find I Rollanz, then is he surely dead,<br/>
And Oliver, and all the other twelve;<br/>
Franks shall be slain in grief and wretchedness.<br/>
Charles the great is old now and doted,<br/>
Weary will be and make no war again;<br/>
Spain shall be ours, in peace and quietness."<br/>
King Marsilies has heard and thanks him well.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00156"> LXXIII</h5>
<p id="id00157"> An almacour is there of Moriane,<br/>
More felon none in all the land of Spain.<br/>
Before Marsile his vaunting boast hath made:<br/>
"To Rencesvals my company I'll take,<br/>
A thousand score, with shields and lances brave.<br/>
Find I Rollanz, with death I'll him acquaint;<br/>
Day shall not dawn but Charles will make his plaint."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00158"> LXXIV</h5>
<p id="id00159"> From the other part, Turgis of Turtelose,<br/>
He was a count, that city was his own;<br/>
Christians he would them massacre, every one.<br/>
Before Marsile among the rest is gone,<br/>
Says to the King: "Let not dismay be shewn!<br/>
Mahum's more worth than Saint Peter of Rome;<br/>
Serve we him well, then fame in field we'll own.<br/>
To Rencesvals, to meet Rollanz I'll go,<br/>
From death he'll find his warranty in none.<br/>
See here my sword, that is both good and long<br/>
With Durendal I'll lay it well across;<br/>
Ye'll hear betimes to which the prize is gone.<br/>
Franks shall be slain, whom we descend upon,<br/>
Charles the old will suffer grief and wrong,<br/>
No more on earth his crown will he put on."<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00160"> LXXV</h5>
<p id="id00161"> From the other part, Escremiz of Valtrenne,<br/>
A Sarrazin, that land was his as well.<br/>
Before Marsile he cries amid the press:<br/>
"To Rencesvals I go, pride to make less;<br/>
Find I Rollanz, he'll not bear thence his head,<br/>
Nor Oliver that hath the others led,<br/>
The dozen peers condemned are to death;<br/>
Franks shall be slain, and France lie deserted.<br/>
Of good vassals will Charles be richly bled."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00162"> LXXVI</h5>
<p id="id00163"> From the other part, a pagan Esturganz;<br/>
Estramariz also, was his comrade;<br/>
Felons were these, and traitors miscreant.<br/>
Then said Marsile: "My Lords, before me stand!<br/>
Into the pass ye'll go to Rencesvals,<br/>
Give me your aid, and thither lead my band."<br/>
They answer him: "Sire, even as you command.<br/>
We will assault Olivier and Rollant,<br/>
The dozen peers from death have no warrant,<br/>
For these our swords are trusty and trenchant,<br/>
In scalding blood we'll dye their blades scarlat.<br/>
Franks shall be slain, and Chares be right sad.<br/>
Terra Major we'll give into your hand;<br/>
Come there, Sir King, truly you'll see all that<br/>
Yea, the Emperour we'll give into your hand."<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00164"> LXXVII</h5>
<p id="id00165"> Running there came Margariz of Sibile,<br/>
Who holds the land by Cadiz, to the sea.<br/>
For his beauty the ladies hold him dear;<br/>
Who looks on him, with him her heart is pleased,<br/>
When she beholds, she can but smile for glee.<br/>
Was no pagan of such high chivalry.<br/>
Comes through the press, above them all cries he,<br/>
"Be not at all dismayed, King Marsilie!<br/>
To Rencesvals I go, and Rollanz, he<br/>
Nor Oliver may scape alive from me;<br/>
The dozen peers are doomed to martyry.<br/>
See here the sword, whose hilt is gold indeed,<br/>
I got in gift from the admiral of Primes;<br/>
In scarlat blood I pledge it shall be steeped.<br/>
Franks shall be slain, and France abased be.<br/>
To Charles the old, with his great blossoming beard,<br/>
Day shall not dawn but brings him rage and grief,<br/>
Ere a year pass, all France we shall have seized,<br/>
Till we can lie in th' burgh of Saint Denise."<br/>
The pagan king has bowed his head down deep.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<p id="id00166"> LXXVIII<br/>
From the other part, Chemubles of Muneigre.<br/>
Right to the ground his hair swept either way;<br/>
He for a jest would bear a heavier weight<br/>
Than four yoked mules, beneath their load that strain.<br/>
That land he had, God's curse on it was plain.<br/>
No sun shone there, nor grew there any grain,<br/>
No dew fell there, nor any shower of rain,<br/>
The very stones were black upon that plain;<br/>
And many say that devils there remain.<br/>
Says Chemubles "My sword is in its place,<br/>
At Rencesvals scarlat I will it stain;<br/>
Find I Rollanz the proud upon my way,<br/>
I'll fall on him, or trust me not again,<br/>
And Durendal I'll conquer with this blade,<br/>
Franks shall be slain, and France a desert made."<br/>
The dozen peers are, at this word, away,<br/>
Five score thousand of Sarrazins they take;<br/>
Who keenly press, and on to battle haste;<br/>
In a fir-wood their gear they ready make.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00167"> LXXIX</h5>
<p id="id00168"> Ready they make hauberks Sarrazinese,<br/>
That folded are, the greater part, in three;<br/>
And they lace on good helms Sarragucese;<br/>
Gird on their swords of tried steel Viennese;<br/>
Fine shields they have, and spears Valentinese,<br/>
And white, blue, red, their ensigns take the breeze,<br/>
They've left their mules behind, and their palfreys,<br/>
Their chargers mount, and canter knee by knee.<br/>
Fair shines the sun, the day is bright and clear,<br/>
Light bums again from all their polished gear.<br/>
A thousand horns they sound, more proud to seem;<br/>
Great is the noise, the Franks its echo hear.<br/>
Says Oliver: "Companion, I believe,<br/>
Sarrazins now in battle must we meet."<br/>
Answers Rollanz: "God grant us then the fee!<br/>
For our King's sake well must we quit us here;<br/>
Man for his lord should suffer great disease,<br/>
Most bitter cold endure, and burning heat,<br/>
His hair and skin should offer up at need.<br/>
Now must we each lay on most hardily,<br/>
So evil songs neer sung of us shall be.<br/>
Pagans are wrong: Christians are right indeed.<br/>
Evil example will never come of me."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00169"> LXXX</h5>
<p id="id00170"> Oliver mounts upon a lofty peak,<br/>
Looks to his right along the valley green,<br/>
The pagan tribes approaching there appear;<br/>
He calls Rollanz, his companion, to see:<br/>
"What sound is this, come out of Spain, we hear,<br/>
What hauberks bright, what helmets these that gleam?<br/>
They'll smite our Franks with fury past belief,<br/>
He knew it, Guenes, the traitor and the thief,<br/>
Who chose us out before the King our chief."<br/>
Answers the count Rollanz: "Olivier, cease.<br/>
That man is my good-father; hold thy peace."<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00171"> LXXXI</h5>
<p id="id00172"> Upon a peak is Oliver mounted,<br/>
Kingdom of Spain he sees before him spread,<br/>
And Sarrazins, so many gathered.<br/>
Their helmets gleam, with gold are jewelled,<br/>
Also their shields, their hauberks orfreyed,<br/>
Also their swords, ensigns on spears fixed.<br/>
Rank beyond rank could not be numbered,<br/>
So many there, no measure could he set.<br/>
In his own heart he's sore astonished,<br/>
Fast as he could, down from the peak hath sped<br/>
Comes to the Franks, to them his tale hath said.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00173"> LXXXII</h5>
<p id="id00174"> Says Oliver: "Pagans from there I saw;<br/>
Never on earth did any man see more.<br/>
Gainst us their shields an hundred thousand bore,<br/>
That laced helms and shining hauberks wore;<br/>
And, bolt upright, their bright brown spearheads shone.<br/>
Battle we'll have as never was before.<br/>
Lords of the Franks, God keep you in valour!<br/>
So hold your ground, we be not overborne!"<br/>
Then say the Franks "Shame take him that goes off:<br/>
If we must die, then perish one and all."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00175"> LXXXIII</h5>
<p id="id00176"> Says Oliver: "Pagans in force abound,<br/>
While of us Franks but very few I count;<br/>
Comrade Rollanz, your horn I pray you sound!<br/>
If Charles hear, he'll turn his armies round."<br/>
Answers Rollanz: "A fool I should be found;<br/>
In France the Douce would perish my renown.<br/>
With Durendal I'll lay on thick and stout,<br/>
In blood the blade, to its golden hilt, I'll drown.<br/>
Felon pagans to th' pass shall not come down;<br/>
I pledge you now, to death they all are bound.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00177"> LXXXIV</h5>
<p id="id00178"> "Comrade Rollanz, sound the olifant, I pray;<br/>
If Charles hear, the host he'll turn again;<br/>
Will succour us our King and baronage."<br/>
Answers Rollanz: "Never, by God, I say,<br/>
For my misdeed shall kinsmen hear the blame,<br/>
Nor France the Douce fall into evil fame!<br/>
Rather stout blows with Durendal I'll lay,<br/>
With my good sword that by my side doth sway;<br/>
Till bloodied o'er you shall behold the blade.<br/>
Felon pagans are gathered to their shame;<br/>
I pledge you now, to death they're doomed to-day."<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00179"> LXXXV</h5>
<p id="id00180"> "Comrade Rollanz, once sound your olifant!<br/>
If Charles hear, where in the pass he stands,<br/>
I pledge you now, they'll turn again, the Franks."<br/>
"Never, by God," then answers him Rollanz,<br/>
"Shall it be said by any living man,<br/>
That for pagans I took my horn in hand!<br/>
Never by me shall men reproach my clan.<br/>
When I am come into the battle grand,<br/>
And blows lay on, by hundred, by thousand,<br/>
Of Durendal bloodied you'll see the brand.<br/>
Franks are good men; like vassals brave they'll stand;<br/>
Nay, Spanish men from death have no warrant."<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00181"> LXXXVI</h5>
<p id="id00182"> Says Oliver: "In this I see no blame;<br/>
I have beheld the Sarrazins of Spain;<br/>
Covered with them, the mountains and the vales,<br/>
The wastes I saw, and all the farthest plains.<br/>
A muster great they've made, this people strange;<br/>
We have of men a very little tale."<br/>
Answers Rollanz: "My anger is inflamed.<br/>
Never, please God His Angels and His Saints,<br/>
Never by me shall Frankish valour fail!<br/>
Rather I'll die than shame shall me attain.<br/>
Therefore strike on, the Emperour's love to gain."<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00183"> LXXXVII</h5>
<p id="id00184"> Pride hath Rollanz, wisdom Olivier hath;<br/>
And both of them shew marvellous courage;<br/>
Once they are horsed, once they have donned their arms,<br/>
Rather they'd die than from the battle pass.<br/>
Good are the counts, and lofty their language.<br/>
Felon pagans come cantering in their wrath.<br/>
Says Oliver: "Behold and see, Rollanz,<br/>
These are right near, but Charles is very far.<br/>
On the olifant deign now to sound a blast;<br/>
Were the King here, we should not fear damage.<br/>
Only look up towards the Pass of Aspre,<br/>
In sorrow there you'll see the whole rereward.<br/>
Who does this deed, does no more afterward."<br/>
Answers Rollanz: "Utter not such outrage!<br/>
Evil his heart that is in thought coward!<br/>
We shall remain firm in our place installed;<br/>
From us the blows shall come, from us the assault."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00185"> LXXXVIII</h5>
<p id="id00186"> When Rollant sees that now must be combat,<br/>
More fierce he's found than lion or leopard;<br/>
The Franks he calls, and Oliver commands:<br/>
"Now say no more, my friends, nor thou, comrade.<br/>
That Emperour, who left us Franks on guard,<br/>
A thousand score stout men he set apart,<br/>
And well he knows, not one will prove coward.<br/>
Man for his lord should suffer with good heart,<br/>
Of bitter cold and great heat bear the smart,<br/>
His blood let drain, and all his flesh be scarred.<br/>
Strike with thy lance, and I with Durendal,<br/>
With my good sword that was the King's reward.<br/>
So, if I die, who has it afterward<br/>
Noble vassal's he well may say it was."<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00187"> LXXXIX</h5>
<p id="id00188"> From the other part is the Archbishop Turpin,<br/>
He pricks his horse and mounts upon a hill;<br/>
Calling the Franks, sermon to them begins:<br/>
"My lords barons, Charles left us here for this;<br/>
He is our King, well may we die for him:<br/>
To Christendom good service offering.<br/>
Battle you'll have, you all are bound to it,<br/>
For with your eyes you see the Sarrazins.<br/>
Pray for God's grace, confessing Him your sins!<br/>
For your souls' health, I'll absolution give<br/>
So, though you die, blest martyrs shall you live,<br/>
Thrones you shall win in the great Paradis."<br/>
The Franks dismount, upon the ground are lit.<br/>
That Archbishop God's Benediction gives,<br/>
For their penance, good blows to strike he bids.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00189"> XC</h5>
<p id="id00190"> The Franks arise, and stand upon their feet,<br/>
They're well absolved, and from their sins made clean,<br/>
And the Archbishop has signed them with God's seal;<br/>
And next they mount upon their chargers keen;<br/>
By rule of knights they have put on their gear,<br/>
For battle all apparelled as is meet.<br/>
The count Rollant calls Oliver, and speaks<br/>
"Comrade and friend, now clearly have you seen<br/>
That Guenelun hath got us by deceit;<br/>
Gold hath he ta'en; much wealth is his to keep;<br/>
That Emperour vengeance for us must wreak.<br/>
King Marsilies hath bargained for us cheap;<br/>
At the sword's point he yet shall pay our meed."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00191"> XCI</h5>
<p id="id00192"> To Spanish pass is Rollanz now going<br/>
On Veillantif, his good steed, galloping;<br/>
He is well armed, pride is in his bearing,<br/>
He goes, so brave, his spear in hand holding,<br/>
He goes, its point against the sky turning;<br/>
A gonfalon all white thereon he's pinned,<br/>
Down to his hand flutters the golden fringe:<br/>
Noble his limbs, his face clear and smiling.<br/>
His companion goes after, following,<br/>
The men of France their warrant find in him.<br/>
Proudly he looks towards the Sarrazins,<br/>
And to the Franks sweetly, himself humbling;<br/>
And courteously has said to them this thing:<br/>
"My lords barons, go now your pace holding!<br/>
Pagans are come great martyrdom seeking;<br/>
Noble and fair reward this day shall bring,<br/>
Was never won by any Frankish King."<br/>
Upon these words the hosts are come touching.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00193"> XCII</h5>
<p id="id00194"> Speaks Oliver: "No more now will I say.<br/>
Your olifant, to sound it do not deign,<br/>
Since from Carlun you'll never more have aid.<br/>
He has not heard; no fault of his, so brave.<br/>
Those with him there are never to be blamed.<br/>
So canter on, with what prowess you may!<br/>
Lords and barons, firmly your ground maintain!<br/>
Be minded well, I pray you in God's Name,<br/>
Stout blows to strike, to give as you shall take.<br/>
Forget the cry of Charles we never may."<br/>
Upon this word the Franks cry out amain.<br/>
Who then had heard them all "Monjoie!" acclaim<br/>
Of vassalage might well recall the tale.<br/>
They canter forth, God! with what proud parade,<br/>
Pricking their spurs, the better speed to gain;<br/>
They go to strike,—what other thing could they?—<br/>
But Sarrazins are not at all afraid.<br/>
Pagans and Franks, you'ld see them now engaged.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00195"> XCIII</h5>
<p id="id00196"> Marsile's nephew, his name is Aelroth,<br/>
First of them all canters before the host,<br/>
Says of our Franks these ill words as he goes:<br/>
"Felons of France, so here on us you close!<br/>
Betrayed you has he that to guard you ought;<br/>
Mad is the King who left you in this post.<br/>
So shall the fame of France the Douce be lost,<br/>
And the right arm from Charles body torn."<br/>
When Rollant hears, what rage he has, by God!<br/>
His steed he spurs, gallops with great effort;<br/>
He goes, that count, to strike with all his force,<br/>
The shield he breaks, the hauberk's seam unsews,<br/>
Slices the heart, and shatters up the bones,<br/>
All of the spine he severs with that blow,<br/>
And with his spear the soul from body throws<br/>
So well he's pinned, he shakes in the air that corse,<br/>
On his spear's hilt he's flung it from the horse:<br/>
So in two halves Aeroth's neck he broke,<br/>
Nor left him yet, they say, but rather spoke:<br/>
"Avaunt, culvert! A madman Charles is not,<br/>
No treachery was ever in his thought.<br/>
Proudly he did, who left us in this post;<br/>
The fame of France the Douce shall not be lost.<br/>
Strike on, the Franks! Ours are the foremost blows.<br/>
For we are right, but these gluttons are wrong."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00197"> XCIV</h5>
<p id="id00198"> A duke there was, his name was Falfarun,<br/>
Brother was he to King Marsiliun,<br/>
He held their land, Dathan's and Abirun's;<br/>
Beneath the sky no more encrimed felun;<br/>
Between his eyes so broad was he in front<br/>
A great half-foot you'ld measure there in full.<br/>
His nephew dead he's seen with grief enough,<br/>
Comes through the press and wildly forth he runs,<br/>
Aloud he shouts their cry the pagans use;<br/>
And to the Franks is right contrarious:<br/>
"Honour of France the Douce shall fall to us!"<br/>
Hears Oliver, he's very furious,<br/>
His horse he pricks with both his golden spurs,<br/>
And goes to strike, ev'n as a baron doth;<br/>
The shield he breaks and through the hauberk cuts,<br/>
His ensign's fringe into the carcass thrusts,<br/>
On his spear's hilt he's flung it dead in dust.<br/>
Looks on the ground, sees glutton lying thus,<br/>
And says to him, with reason proud enough:<br/>
"From threatening, culvert, your mouth I've shut.<br/>
Strike on, the Franks! Right well we'll overcome."<br/>
"Monjoie," he shouts, 'twas the ensign of Carlun.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00199"> XCV</h5>
<p id="id00200"> A king there was, his name was Corsablix,<br/>
Barbarian, and of a strange country,<br/>
He's called aloud to the other Sarrazins:<br/>
"Well may we join battle upon this field,<br/>
For of the Franks but very few are here;<br/>
And those are here, we should account them cheap,<br/>
From Charles not one has any warranty.<br/>
This is the day when they their death shall meet."<br/>
Has heard him well that Archbishop Turpin,<br/>
No man he'ld hate so much the sky beneath;<br/>
Spurs of fine gold he pricks into his steed,<br/>
To strike that king by virtue great goes he,<br/>
The hauberk all unfastens, breaks the shield,<br/>
Thrusts his great spear in through the carcass clean,<br/>
Pins it so well he shakes it in its seat,<br/>
Dead in the road he's flung it from his spear.<br/>
Looks on the ground, that glutton lying sees,<br/>
Nor leaves him yet, they say, but rather speaks:<br/>
"Culvert pagan, you lied now in your teeth,<br/>
Charles my lord our warrant is indeed;<br/>
None of our Franks hath any mind to flee.<br/>
Your companions all on this spot we'll keep,<br/>
I tell you news; death shall ye suffer here.<br/>
Strike on, the Franks! Fail none of you at need!<br/>
Ours the first blow, to God the glory be!"<br/>
"Monjoie!" he cries, for all the camp to hear.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00201"> XCVI</h5>
<p id="id00202"> And Gerins strikes Malprimis of Brigal<br/>
So his good shield is nothing worth at all,<br/>
Shatters the boss, was fashioned of crystal,<br/>
One half of it downward to earth flies off;<br/>
Right to the flesh has through his hauberk torn,<br/>
On his good spear he has the carcass caught.<br/>
And with one blow that pagan downward falls;<br/>
The soul of him Satan away hath borne.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00203"> XCVII</h5>
<p id="id00204"> And his comrade Gerers strikes the admiral,<br/>
The shield he breaks, the hauberk unmetals,<br/>
And his good spear drives into his vitals,<br/>
So well he's pinned him, clean through the carcass,<br/>
Dead on the field he's flung him from his hand.<br/>
Says Oliver: "Now is our battle grand."<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00205"> XCVIII</h5>
<p id="id00206"> Sansun the Duke goes strike that almacour,<br/>
The shield he breaks, with golden flowers tooled,<br/>
That good hauberk for him is nothing proof,<br/>
He's sliced the heart, the lungs and liver through,<br/>
And flung him dead, as well or ill may prove.<br/>
Says the Archbishop: "A baron's stroke, in truth."<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00207"> XCIX</h5>
<p id="id00208"> And Anseis has let his charger run;<br/>
He goes to strike Turgis of Turtelus,<br/>
The shield he breaks, its golden boss above,<br/>
The hauberk too, its doubled mail undoes,<br/>
His good spear's point into the carcass runs,<br/>
So well he's thrust, clean through the whole steel comes,<br/>
And from the hilt he's thrown him dead in dust.<br/>
Then says Rollant: "Great prowess in that thrust."<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00209"> C</h5>
<p id="id00210"> And Engelers the Gascoin of Burdele<br/>
Spurs on his horse, lets fall the reins as well,<br/>
He goes to strike Escremiz of Valtrene,<br/>
The shield he breaks and shatters on his neck,<br/>
The hauberk too, he has its chinguard rent,<br/>
Between the arm-pits has pierced him through the breast,<br/>
On his spear's hilt from saddle throws him dead;<br/>
After he says "So are you turned to hell."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00211"> CI</h5>
<p id="id00212"> And Otes strikes a pagan Estorgant<br/>
Upon the shield, before its leathern band,<br/>
Slices it through, the white with the scarlat;<br/>
The hauberk too, has torn its folds apart,<br/>
And his good spear thrusts clean through the carcass,<br/>
And flings it dead, ev'n as the horse goes past;<br/>
He says: "You have no warrant afterward."<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00213"> CII</h5>
<p id="id00214"> And Berenger, he strikes Estramariz,<br/>
The shield he breaks, the hauberk tears and splits,<br/>
Thrusts his stout spear through's middle, and him flings<br/>
Down dead among a thousand Sarrazins.<br/>
Of their dozen peers ten have now been killed,<br/>
No more than two remain alive and quick,<br/>
Being Chernuble, and the count Margariz.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00215"> CIII</h5>
<p id="id00216"> Margariz is a very gallant knight,<br/>
Both fair and strong, and swift he is and light;<br/>
He spurs his horse, goes Oliver to strike,<br/>
And breaks his shield, by th'golden buckle bright;<br/>
Along his ribs the pagan's spear doth glide;<br/>
God's his warrant, his body has respite,<br/>
The shaft breaks off, Oliver stays upright;<br/>
That other goes, naught stays him in his flight,<br/>
His trumpet sounds, rallies his tribe to fight.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00217"> CIV</h5>
<p id="id00218"> Common the fight is now and marvellous.<br/>
The count Rollanz no way himself secures,<br/>
Strikes with his spear, long as the shaft endures,<br/>
By fifteen blows it is clean broken through<br/>
Then Durendal he bares, his sabre good<br/>
Spurs on his horse, is gone to strike Chemuble,<br/>
The helmet breaks, where bright carbuncles grew,<br/>
Slices the cap and shears the locks in two,<br/>
Slices also the eyes and the features,<br/>
The hauberk white, whose mail was close of woof,<br/>
Down to the groin cuts all his body through<br/>
To the saddle; with beaten gold 'twas tooled.<br/>
Upon the horse that sword a moment stood,<br/>
Then sliced its spine, no join there any knew,<br/>
Dead in the field among thick grass them threw.<br/>
After he said "Culvert, false step you moved,<br/>
From Mahumet your help will not come soon.<br/>
No victory for gluttons such as you."<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00219"> CV</h5>
<p id="id00220"> The count Rollanz, he canters through the field,<br/>
Holds Durendal, he well can thrust and wield,<br/>
Right great damage he's done the Sarrazines<br/>
You'd seen them, one on other, dead in heaps,<br/>
Through all that place their blood was flowing clear!<br/>
In blood his arms were and his hauberk steeped,<br/>
And bloodied o'er, shoulders and neck, his steed.<br/>
And Oliver goes on to strike with speed;<br/>
No blame that way deserve the dozen peers,<br/>
For all the Franks they strike and slay with heat,<br/>
Pagans are slain, some swoon there in their seats,<br/>
Says the Archbishop: "Good baronage indeed!"<br/>
"Monjoie" he cries, the call of Charles repeats.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00221"> CVI</h5>
<p id="id00222"> And Oliver has cantered through the crush;<br/>
Broken his spear, the truncheon still he thrusts;<br/>
Going to strike a pagan Malsarun;<br/>
Flowers and gold, are on the shield, he cuts,<br/>
Out of the head both the two eyes have burst,<br/>
And all the brains are fallen in the dust;<br/>
He flings him dead, sev'n hundred else amongst.<br/>
Then has he slain Turgin and Esturgus;<br/>
Right to the hilt, his spear in flinders flew.<br/>
Then says Rollant: "Companion, what do you?<br/>
In such a fight, there's little strength in wood,<br/>
Iron and steel should here their valour prove.<br/>
Where is your sword, that Halteclere I knew?<br/>
Golden its hilt, whereon a crystal grew."<br/>
Says Oliver: "I had not, if I drew,<br/>
Time left to strike enough good blows and true."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00223"> CVII</h5>
<p id="id00224"> Then Oliver has drawn his mighty sword<br/>
As his comrade had bidden and implored,<br/>
In knightly wise the blade to him has shewed;<br/>
Justin he strikes, that Iron Valley's lord,<br/>
All of his head has down the middle shorn,<br/>
The carcass sliced, the broidered sark has torn,<br/>
The good saddle that was with old adorned,<br/>
And through the spine has sliced that pagan's horse;<br/>
Dead in the field before his feet they fall.<br/>
Says Rollant: "Now my brother I you call;<br/>
He'll love us for such blows, our Emperor."<br/>
On every side "Monjoie" you'ld hear them roar.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00225"> CVIII</h5>
<p id="id00226"> That count Gerins sate on his horse Sorel,<br/>
On Passe-Cerf was Gerers there, his friend;<br/>
They've loosed their reins, together spurred and sped,<br/>
And go to strike a pagan Timozel;<br/>
One on the shield, on hauberk the other fell;<br/>
And their two spears went through the carcass well,<br/>
A fallow field amidst they've thrown him dead.<br/>
I do not know, I never heard it said<br/>
Which of the two was nimbler as they went.<br/>
Esperveris was there, son of Borel,<br/>
And him there slew Engelers of Burdel.<br/>
And the Archbishop, he slew them Siglorel,<br/>
The enchanter, who before had been in hell,<br/>
Where Jupiter bore him by a magic spell.<br/>
Then Turpin says "To us he's forfeited."<br/>
Answers Rollanz: "The culvert is bested.<br/>
Such blows, brother Olivier, I like well."<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00227"> CIX</h5>
<p id="id00228"> The battle grows more hard and harder yet,<br/>
Franks and pagans, with marvellous onset,<br/>
Each other strike and each himself defends.<br/>
So many shafts bloodstained and shattered,<br/>
So many flags and ensigns tattered;<br/>
So many Franks lose their young lustihead,<br/>
Who'll see no more their mothers nor their friends,<br/>
Nor hosts of France, that in the pass attend.<br/>
Charles the Great weeps therefor with regret.<br/>
What profits that? No succour shall they get.<br/>
Evil service, that day, Guenes rendered them,<br/>
To Sarraguce going, his own to sell.<br/>
After he lost his members and his head,<br/>
In court, at Aix, to gallows-tree condemned;<br/>
And thirty more with him, of his kindred,<br/>
Were hanged, a thing they never did expect.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00229"> CX</h5>
<p id="id00230"> Now marvellous and weighty the combat,<br/>
Right well they strike, Olivier and Rollant,<br/>
A thousand blows come from the Archbishop's hand,<br/>
The dozen peers are nothing short of that,<br/>
With one accord join battle all the Franks.<br/>
Pagans are slain by hundred, by thousand,<br/>
Who flies not then, from death has no warrant,<br/>
Will he or nill, foregoes the allotted span.<br/>
The Franks have lost the foremost of their band,<br/>
They'll see no more their fathers nor their clans,<br/>
Nor Charlemagne, where in the pass he stands.<br/>
Torment arose, right marvellous, in France,<br/>
Tempest there was, of wind and thunder black,<br/>
With rain and hail, so much could not be spanned;<br/>
Fell thunderbolts often on every hand,<br/>
And verily the earth quaked in answer back<br/>
From Saint Michael of Peril unto Sanz,<br/>
From Besencun to the harbour of Guitsand;<br/>
No house stood there but straight its walls must crack:<br/>
In full mid-day the darkness was so grand,<br/>
Save the sky split, no light was in the land.<br/>
Beheld these things with terror every man,<br/>
And many said: "We in the Judgement stand;<br/>
The end of time is presently at hand."<br/>
They spake no truth; they did not understand;<br/>
'Twas the great day of mourning for Rollant.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00231"> CXI</h5>
<p id="id00232"> The Franks strike on; their hearts are good and stout.<br/>
Pagans are slain, a thousandfold, in crowds,<br/>
Left of five score are not two thousands now.<br/>
Says the Archbishop: "Our men are very proud,<br/>
No man on earth has more nor better found.<br/>
In Chronicles of Franks is written down,<br/>
What vassalage he had, our Emperour."<br/>
Then through the field they go, their friends seek out,<br/>
And their eyes weep with grief and pain profound<br/>
For kinsmen dear, by hearty friendship bound.<br/>
King Marsilies and his great host draw round.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00233"> CXII</h5>
<p id="id00234"> King Marsilies along a valley led<br/>
The mighty host that he had gathered.<br/>
Twenty columns that king had numbered.<br/>
With gleaminag gold their helms were jewelled.<br/>
Shone too their shields and sarks embroidered.<br/>
Sounded the charge seven thousand trumpets,<br/>
Great was the noise through all that country went.<br/>
Then said Rollanz: "Olivier, brother, friend,<br/>
That felon Guenes hath sworn to achieve our death;<br/>
For his treason no longer is secret.<br/>
Right great vengeance our Emperour will get.<br/>
Battle we'll have, both long and keenly set,<br/>
Never has man beheld such armies met.<br/>
With Durendal my sword I'll strike again,<br/>
And, comrade, you shall strike with Halteclere.<br/>
These swords in lands so many have we held,<br/>
Battles with them so many brought to end,<br/>
No evil song shall e'er be sung or said."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00235"> CXIII</h5>
<p id="id00236"> When the Franks see so many there, pagans,<br/>
On every side covering all the land,<br/>
Often they call Olivier and Rollant,<br/>
The dozen peers, to be their safe warrant.<br/>
And the Archbishop speaks to them, as he can:<br/>
"My lords barons, go thinking nothing bad!<br/>
For God I pray you fly not hence but stand,<br/>
Lest evil songs of our valour men chant!<br/>
Far better t'were to perish in the van.<br/>
Certain it is, our end is near at hand,<br/>
Beyond this day shall no more live one man;<br/>
But of one thing I give you good warrant:<br/>
Blest Paradise to you now open stands,<br/>
By the Innocents your thrones you there shall have."<br/>
Upon these words grow bold again the Franks;<br/>
There is not one but he "Monjoie" demands.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00237"> CXIV</h5>
<p id="id00238"> A Sarrazin was there, of Sarraguce,<br/>
Of that city one half was his by use,<br/>
'Twas Climborins, a man was nothing proof;<br/>
By Guenelun the count an oath he took,<br/>
And kissed his mouth in amity and truth,<br/>
Gave him his sword and his carbuncle too.<br/>
Terra Major, he said, to shame he'ld put,<br/>
From the Emperour his crown he would remove.<br/>
He sate his horse, which he called Barbamusche,<br/>
Never so swift sparrow nor swallow flew,<br/>
He spurred him well, and down the reins he threw,<br/>
Going to strike Engelier of Gascune;<br/>
Nor shield nor sark him any warrant proved,<br/>
The pagan spear's point did his body wound,<br/>
He pinned him well, and all the steel sent through,<br/>
From the hilt flung him dead beneath his foot.<br/>
After he said: "Good are they to confuse.<br/>
Pagans, strike on, and so this press set loose!"<br/>
"God!" say the Franks, "Grief, such a man to lose!"<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00239"> CXV</h5>
<p id="id00240"> The count Rollanz called upon Oliver:<br/>
"Sir companion, dead now is Engeler;<br/>
Than whom we'd no more valiant chevalier."<br/>
Answered that count: "God, let me him avenge!"<br/>
Spurs of fine gold into his horse drove then,<br/>
Held Halteclere, with blood its steel was red,<br/>
By virtue great to strike that pagan went,<br/>
Brandished his blade, the Sarrazin upset;<br/>
The Adversaries of God his soul bare thence.<br/>
Next he has slain the duke Alphaien,<br/>
And sliced away Escababi his head,<br/>
And has unhorsed some seven Arabs else;<br/>
No good for those to go to war again.<br/>
Then said Rollanz: "My comrade shews anger,<br/>
So in my sight he makes me prize him well;<br/>
More dear by Charles for such blows are we held."<br/>
Aloud he's cried: "Strike on, the chevaliers!"<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00241"> CXVI</h5>
<p id="id00242"> From the other part a pagan Valdabron.<br/>
Warden he'd been to king Marsilion,<br/>
And lord, by sea, of four hundred dromonds;<br/>
No sailor was but called his name upon;<br/>
Jerusalem he'd taken by treason,<br/>
Violated the Temple of Salomon,<br/>
The Partiarch had slain before the fonts.<br/>
He'd pledged his oath by county Guenelon,<br/>
Gave him his sword, a thousand coins thereon.<br/>
He sate his horse, which he called Gramimond,<br/>
Never so swift flew in the air falcon;<br/>
He's pricked him well, with sharp spurs he had on,<br/>
Going to strike e'en that rich Duke, Sanson;<br/>
His shield has split, his hauberk has undone,<br/>
The ensign's folds have through his body gone,<br/>
Dead from the hilt out of his seat he's dropt:<br/>
"Pagans, strike on, for well we'll overcome!"<br/>
"God!" say the Franks, "Grief for a brave baron!"<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00243"> CXVII</h5>
<p id="id00244"> The count Rollanz, when Sansun dead he saw,<br/>
You may believe, great grief he had therefor.<br/>
His horse he spurs, gallops with great effort,<br/>
Wields Durendal, was worth fine gold and more,<br/>
Goes as he may to strike that baron bold<br/>
Above the helm, that was embossed with gold,<br/>
Slices the head, the sark, and all the corse,<br/>
The good saddle, that was embossed with gold,<br/>
And cuts deep through the backbone of his horse;<br/>
He's slain them both, blame him for that or laud.<br/>
The pagans say: "'Twas hard on us, that blow."<br/>
Answers Rollanz: "Nay, love you I can not,<br/>
For on your side is arrogance and wrong."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00245"> CXVIII</h5>
<p id="id00246"> Out of Affrike an Affrican was come,<br/>
'Twas Malquiant, the son of king Malcud;<br/>
With beaten gold was all his armour done,<br/>
Fore all men's else it shone beneath the sun.<br/>
He sate his horse, which he called Salt-Perdut,<br/>
Never so swift was any beast could run.<br/>
And Anseis upon the shield he struck,<br/>
The scarlat with the blue he sliced it up,<br/>
Of his hauberk he's torn the folds and cut,<br/>
The steel and stock has through his body thrust.<br/>
Dead is that count, he's no more time to run.<br/>
Then say the Franks: "Baron, an evil luck!"<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00247"> CXIX</h5>
<p id="id00248"> Swift through the field Turpin the Archbishop passed;<br/>
Such shaven-crown has never else sung Mass<br/>
Who with his limbs such prowess might compass;<br/>
To th'pagan said "God send thee all that's bad!<br/>
One thou hast slain for whom my heart is sad."<br/>
So his good horse forth at his bidding ran,<br/>
He's struck him then on his shield Toledan,<br/>
Until he flings him dead on the green grass.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00249"> CXX</h5>
<p id="id00250"> From the other part was a pagan Grandones,<br/>
Son of Capuel, the king of Capadoce.<br/>
He sate his horse, the which he called Marmore,<br/>
Never so swift was any bird in course;<br/>
He's loosed the reins, and spurring on that horse<br/>
He's gone to strike Gerin with all his force;<br/>
The scarlat shield from's neck he's broken off,<br/>
And all his sark thereafter has he torn,<br/>
The ensign blue clean through his body's gone,<br/>
Until he flings him dead, on a high rock;<br/>
His companion Gerer he's slain also,<br/>
And Berenger, and Guiun of Santone;<br/>
Next a rich duke he's gone to strike, Austore,<br/>
That held Valence and the Honour of the Rhone;<br/>
He's flung him dead; great joy the pagans shew.<br/>
Then say the Franks: "Of ours how many fall."<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00251"> CXXI</h5>
<p id="id00252"> The count Rollanz, his sword with blood is stained,<br/>
Well has he heard what way the Franks complained;<br/>
Such grief he has, his heart would split in twain:<br/>
To the pagan says: "God send thee every shame!<br/>
One hast thou slain that dearly thou'lt repay."<br/>
He spurs his horse, that on with speed doth strain;<br/>
Which should forfeit, they both together came.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00253"> CXXII</h5>
<p id="id00254"> Grandonie was both proof and valiant,<br/>
And virtuous, a vassal combatant.<br/>
Upon the way there, he has met Rollant;<br/>
He'd never seen, yet knew him at a glance,<br/>
By the proud face and those fine limbs he had,<br/>
By his regard, and by his contenance;<br/>
He could not help but he grew faint thereat,<br/>
He would escape, nothing avail he can.<br/>
Struck him the count, with so great virtue, that<br/>
To the nose-plate he's all the helmet cracked,<br/>
Sliced through the nose and mouth and teeth he has,<br/>
Hauberk close-mailed, and all the whole carcass,<br/>
Saddle of gold, with plates of silver flanked,<br/>
And of his horse has deeply scarred the back;<br/>
He's slain them both, they'll make no more attack:<br/>
The Spanish men in sorrow cry, "Alack!"<br/>
Then say the Franks: "He strikes well, our warrant."<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00255"> CXXIII</h5>
<p id="id00256"> Marvellous is the battle in its speed,<br/>
The Franks there strike with vigour and with heat,<br/>
Cutting through wrists and ribs and chines in-deed,<br/>
Through garments to the lively flesh beneath;<br/>
On the green grass the clear blood runs in streams.<br/>
The pagans say: "No more we'll suffer, we.<br/>
Terra Major, Mahummet's curse on thee!<br/>
Beyond all men thy people are hardy!"<br/>
There was not one but cried then: "Marsilie,<br/>
Canter, O king, thy succour now we need!"<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00257"> CXXIV</h5>
<p id="id00258"> Marvellous is the battle now and grand,<br/>
The Franks there strike, their good brown spears in hand.<br/>
Then had you seen such sorrowing of clans,<br/>
So many a slain, shattered and bleeding man!<br/>
Biting the earth, or piled there on their backs!<br/>
The Sarrazins cannot such loss withstand.<br/>
Will they or nill, from off the field draw back;<br/>
By lively force chase them away the Franks.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00259"> CXXV</h5>
<p id="id00260"> Their martyrdom, his men's, Marsile has seen,<br/>
So he bids sound his horns and his buccines;<br/>
Then canters forth with all his great army.<br/>
Canters before a Sarrazin, Abisme,<br/>
More felon none was in that company;<br/>
Cankered with guile and every felony,<br/>
He fears not God, the Son of Saint Mary;<br/>
Black is that man as molten pitch that seethes;<br/>
Better he loves murder and treachery<br/>
Than to have all the gold of Galicie;<br/>
Never has man beheld him sport for glee;<br/>
Yet vassalage he's shown, and great folly,<br/>
So is he dear to th' felon king Marsile;<br/>
Dragon he bears, to which his tribe rally.<br/>
That Archbishop could never love him, he;<br/>
Seeing him there, to strike he's very keen,<br/>
Within himself he says all quietly:<br/>
"This Sarrazin great heretick meseems,<br/>
Rather I'ld die, than not slay him clean,<br/>
Neer did I love coward nor cowardice."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00261"> CXXVI</h5>
<p id="id00262"> That Archbishop begins the fight again,<br/>
Sitting the horse which he took from Grossaille<br/>
—That was a king he had in Denmark slain;—<br/>
That charger is swift and of noble race;<br/>
Fine are his hooves, his legs are smooth and straight,<br/>
Short are his thighs, broad crupper he displays,<br/>
Long are his ribs, aloft his spine is raised,<br/>
White is his tail and yellow is his mane,<br/>
Little his ears, and tawny all his face;<br/>
No beast is there, can match him in a race.<br/>
That Archbishop spurs on by vassalage,<br/>
He will not pause ere Abisme he assail;<br/>
So strikes that shield, is wonderfully arrayed,<br/>
Whereon are stones, amethyst and topaze,<br/>
Esterminals and carbuncles that blaze;<br/>
A devil's gift it was, in Val Metase,<br/>
Who handed it to the admiral Galafes;<br/>
So Turpin strikes, spares him not anyway;<br/>
After that blow, he's worth no penny wage;<br/>
The carcass he's sliced, rib from rib away,<br/>
So flings him down dead in an empty place.<br/>
Then say the Franks: "He has great vassalage,<br/>
With the Archbishop, surely the Cross is safe."<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00263"> CXXVII</h5>
<p id="id00264"> The count Rollanz calls upon Oliver:<br/>
"Sir companion, witness you'll freely bear,<br/>
The Archbishop is a right good chevalier,<br/>
None better is neath Heaven anywhere;<br/>
Well can he strike with lance and well with spear."<br/>
Answers that count: "Support to him we'll bear!"<br/>
Upon that word the Franks again make yare;<br/>
Hard are the blows, slaughter and suffering there,<br/>
For Christians too, most bitter grief and care.<br/>
Who could had seen Rollanz and Oliver<br/>
With their good swords to strike and to slaughter!<br/>
And the Archbishop lays on there with his spear.<br/>
Those that are dead, men well may hold them dear.<br/>
In charters and in briefs is written clear,<br/>
Four thousand fell, and more, the tales declare.<br/>
Gainst four assaults easily did they fare,<br/>
But then the fifth brought heavy griefs to bear.<br/>
They all are slain, those Frankish chevaliers;<br/>
Only three-score, whom God was pleased to spare,<br/>
Before these die, they'll sell them very dear.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00265"> CXXVIII</h5>
<p id="id00266"> The count Rollant great loss of his men sees,<br/>
His companion Olivier calls, and speaks:<br/>
"Sir and comrade, in God's Name, That you keeps,<br/>
Such good vassals you see lie here in heaps;<br/>
For France the Douce, fair country, may we weep,<br/>
Of such barons long desolate she'll be.<br/>
Ah! King and friend, wherefore are you not here?<br/>
How, Oliver, brother, can we achieve?<br/>
And by what means our news to him repeat?"<br/>
Says Oliver: "I know not how to seek;<br/>
Rather I'ld die than shame come of this feat."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00267"> CXXIX</h5>
<p id="id00268"> Then says Rollanz: "I'll wind this olifant,<br/>
If Charles hear, where in the pass he stands,<br/>
I pledge you now they will return, the Franks."<br/>
Says Oliver: "Great shame would come of that<br/>
And a reproach on every one, your clan,<br/>
That shall endure while each lives in the land,<br/>
When I implored, you would not do this act;<br/>
Doing it now, no raise from me you'll have:<br/>
So wind your horn but not by courage rash,<br/>
Seeing that both your arms with blood are splashed."<br/>
Answers that count: "Fine blows I've struck them back."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00269"> CXXX</h5>
<p id="id00270"> Then says Rollant: "Strong it is now, our battle;<br/>
I'll wind my horn, so the King hears it, Charles."<br/>
Says Oliver: "That act were not a vassal's.<br/>
When I implored you, comrade, you were wrathful.<br/>
Were the King here, we had not borne such damage.<br/>
Nor should we blame those with him there, his army."<br/>
Says Oliver: "Now by my beard, hereafter<br/>
If I may see my gentle sister Alde,<br/>
She in her arms, I swear, shall never clasp you."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00271"> CXXXI</h5>
<p id="id00272"> Then says Rollanz: "Wherefore so wroth with me?"<br/>
He answers him: "Comrade, it was your deed:<br/>
Vassalage comes by sense, and not folly;<br/>
Prudence more worth is than stupidity.<br/>
Here are Franks dead, all for your trickery;<br/>
No more service to Carlun may we yield.<br/>
My lord were here now, had you trusted me,<br/>
And fought and won this battle then had we,<br/>
Taken or slain were the king Marsilie.<br/>
In your prowess, Rollanz, no good we've seen!<br/>
Charles the great in vain your aid will seek—<br/>
None such as he till God His Judgement speak;—<br/>
Here must you die, and France in shame be steeped;<br/>
Here perishes our loyal company,<br/>
Before this night great severance and grief."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00273"> CXXXII</h5>
<p id="id00274"> That Archbishop has heard them, how they spoke,<br/>
His horse he pricks with his fine spurs of gold,<br/>
Coming to them he takes up his reproach:<br/>
"Sir Oliver, and you, Sir Rollant, both,<br/>
For God I pray, do not each other scold!<br/>
No help it were to us, the horn to blow,<br/>
But, none the less, it may be better so;<br/>
The King will come, with vengeance that he owes;<br/>
These Spanish men never away shall go.<br/>
Our Franks here, each descending from his horse,<br/>
Will find us dead, and limb from body torn;<br/>
They'll take us hence, on biers and litters borne;<br/>
With pity and with grief for us they'll mourn;<br/>
They'll bury each in some old minster-close;<br/>
No wolf nor swine nor dog shall gnaw our bones."<br/>
Answers Rollant: "Sir, very well you spoke."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00275"> CXXXIII</h5>
<p id="id00276"> Rollant hath set the olifant to his mouth,<br/>
He grasps it well, and with great virtue sounds.<br/>
High are those peaks, afar it rings and loud,<br/>
Thirty great leagues they hear its echoes mount.<br/>
So Charles heard, and all his comrades round;<br/>
Then said that King: "Battle they do, our counts!"<br/>
And Guenelun answered, contrarious:<br/>
"That were a lie, in any other mouth."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00277"> CXXIV</h5>
<p id="id00278"> The Count Rollanz, with sorrow and with pangs,<br/>
And with great pain sounded his olifant:<br/>
Out of his mouth the clear blood leaped and ran,<br/>
About his brain the very temples cracked.<br/>
Loud is its voice, that horn he holds in hand;<br/>
Charles hath heard, where in the pass he stands,<br/>
And Neimes hears, and listen all the Franks.<br/>
Then says the King: "I hear his horn, Rollant's;<br/>
He'ld never sound, but he were in combat."<br/>
Answers him Guenes "It is no battle, that.<br/>
Now are you old, blossoming white and blanched,<br/>
Yet by such words you still appear infant.<br/>
You know full well the great pride of Rollant<br/>
Marvel it is, God stays so tolerant.<br/>
Noples he took, not waiting your command;<br/>
Thence issued forth the Sarrazins, a band<br/>
With vassalage had fought against Rollant;<br/>
A He slew them first, with Durendal his brand,<br/>
Then washed their blood with water from the land;<br/>
So what he'd done might not be seen of man.<br/>
He for a hare goes all day, horn in hand;<br/>
Before his peers in foolish jest he brags.<br/>
No race neath heav'n in field him dare attack.<br/>
So canter on! Nay, wherefore hold we back?<br/>
Terra Major is far away, our land."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00279"> CXXXV</h5>
<p id="id00280"> The count Rollanz, though blood his mouth doth stain,<br/>
And burst are both the temples of his brain,<br/>
His olifant he sounds with grief and pain;<br/>
Charles hath heard, listen the Franks again.<br/>
"That horn," the King says, "hath a mighty strain!"<br/>
Answers Duke Neimes: "A baron blows with pain!<br/>
Battle is there, indeed I see it plain,<br/>
He is betrayed, by one that still doth feign.<br/>
Equip you, sir, cry out your old refrain,<br/>
That noble band, go succour them amain!<br/>
Enough you've heard how Rollant doth complain."<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00281"> CXXVI</h5>
<p id="id00282"> That Emperour hath bid them sound their horns.<br/>
The Franks dismount, and dress themselves for war,<br/>
Put hauberks on, helmets and golden swords;<br/>
Fine shields they have, and spears of length and force<br/>
Scarlat and blue and white their ensigns float.<br/>
His charger mounts each baron of the host;<br/>
They spur with haste as through the pass they go.<br/>
Nor was there one but thus to 's neighbour spoke:<br/>
"Now, ere he die, may we see Rollant, so<br/>
Ranged by his side we'll give some goodly blows."<br/>
But what avail? They've stayed too long below.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00283"> CCXXXVII</h5>
<p id="id00284"> That even-tide is light as was the day;<br/>
Their armour shines beneath the sun's clear ray,<br/>
Hauberks and helms throw off a dazzling flame,<br/>
And blazoned shields, flowered in bright array,<br/>
Also their spears, with golden ensigns gay.<br/>
That Emperour, he canters on with rage,<br/>
And all the Franks with wonder and dismay;<br/>
There is not one can bitter tears restrain,<br/>
And for Rollant they're very sore afraid.<br/>
The King has bid them seize that county Guene,<br/>
And charged with him the scullions of his train;<br/>
The master-cook he's called, Besgun by name:<br/>
"Guard me him well, his felony is plain,<br/>
Who in my house vile treachery has made."<br/>
He holds him, and a hundred others takes<br/>
From the kitchen, both good and evil knaves;<br/>
Then Guenes beard and both his cheeks they shaved,<br/>
And four blows each with their closed fists they gave,<br/>
They trounced him well with cudgels and with staves,<br/>
And on his neck they clasped an iron chain;<br/>
So like a bear enchained they held him safe,<br/>
On a pack-mule they set him in his shame:<br/>
Kept him till Charles should call for him again.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00285"> CXXXVIII</h5>
<p id="id00286"> High were the peaks and shadowy and grand,<br/>
The valleys deep, the rivers swiftly ran.<br/>
Trumpets they blew in rear and in the van,<br/>
Till all again answered that olifant.<br/>
That Emperour canters with fury mad,<br/>
And all the Franks dismay and wonder have;<br/>
There is not one but weeps and waxes sad<br/>
And all pray God that He will guard Rollant<br/>
Till in the field together they may stand;<br/>
There by his side they'll strike as well they can.<br/>
But what avail? No good there is in that;<br/>
They're not in time; too long have they held back.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00287"> CXXXIX</h5>
<p id="id00288"> In his great rage on canters Charlemagne;<br/>
Over his sark his beard is flowing plain.<br/>
Barons of France, in haste they spur and strain;<br/>
There is not one that can his wrath contain<br/>
That they are not with Rollant the Captain,<br/>
Whereas he fights the Sarrazins of Spain.<br/>
If he be struck, will not one soul remain.<br/>
—God! Sixty men are all now in his train!<br/>
Never a king had better Capitains.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00289"> CXL</h5>
<p id="id00290"> Rollant regards the barren mountain-sides;<br/>
Dead men of France, he sees so many lie,<br/>
And weeps for them as fits a gentle knight:<br/>
"Lords and barons, may God to you be kind!<br/>
And all your souls redeem for Paradise!<br/>
And let you there mid holy flowers lie!<br/>
Better vassals than you saw never I.<br/>
Ever you've served me, and so long a time,<br/>
By you Carlon hath conquered kingdoms wide;<br/>
That Emperour reared you for evil plight!<br/>
Douce land of France, o very precious clime,<br/>
Laid desolate by such a sour exile!<br/>
Barons of France, for me I've seen you die,<br/>
And no support, no warrant could I find;<br/>
God be your aid, Who never yet hath lied!<br/>
I must not fail now, brother, by your side;<br/>
Save I be slain, for sorrow shall I die.<br/>
Sir companion, let us again go strike!"<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00291"> CXLI</h5>
<p id="id00292"> The count Rollanz, back to the field then hieing<br/>
Holds Durendal, and like a vassal striking<br/>
Faldrun of Pui has through the middle sliced,<br/>
With twenty-four of all they rated highest;<br/>
Was never man, for vengeance shewed such liking.<br/>
Even as a stag before the hounds goes flying,<br/>
Before Rollanz the pagans scatter, frightened.<br/>
Says the Archbishop: "You deal now very wisely!<br/>
Such valour should he shew that is bred knightly,<br/>
And beareth arms, and a good charger rideth;<br/>
In battle should be strong and proud and sprightly;<br/>
Or otherwise he is not worth a shilling,<br/>
Should be a monk in one of those old minsters,<br/>
Where, day, by day, he'ld pray for us poor sinners."<br/>
Answers Rollant: "Strike on; no quarter give them!"<br/>
Upon these words Franks are again beginning;<br/>
Very great loss they suffer then, the Christians.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00293"> CXLII</h5>
<p id="id00294"> The man who knows, for him there's no prison,<br/>
In such a fight with keen defence lays on;<br/>
Wherefore the Franks are fiercer than lions.<br/>
Marsile you'd seen go as a brave baron,<br/>
Sitting his horse, the which he calls Gaignon;<br/>
He spurs it well, going to strike Bevon,<br/>
That was the lord of Beaune and of Dijon,<br/>
His shield he breaks, his hauberk has undone,<br/>
So flings him dead, without condition;<br/>
Next he hath slain Yvoerie and Ivon,<br/>
Also with them Gerard of Russillon.<br/>
The count Rollanz, being not far him from,<br/>
To th'pagan says: "Confound thee our Lord God!<br/>
So wrongfully you've slain my companions,<br/>
A blow you'll take, ere we apart be gone,<br/>
And of my sword the name I'll bid you con."<br/>
He goes to strike him, as a brave baron,<br/>
And his right hand the count clean slices off;<br/>
Then takes the head of Jursaleu the blond;<br/>
That was the son of king Marsilion.<br/>
Pagans cry out "Assist us now, Mahom!<br/>
God of our race, avenge us on Carlon!<br/>
Into this land he's sent us such felons<br/>
That will not leave the fight before they drop."<br/>
Says each to each: "Nay let us fly!" Upon<br/>
That word, they're fled, an hundred thousand gone;<br/>
Call them who may, they'll never more come on.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00295"> CXLIII</h5>
<p id="id00296"> But what avail? Though fled be Marsilies,<br/>
He's left behind his uncle, the alcaliph<br/>
Who holds Alferne, Kartagene, Garmalie,<br/>
And Ethiope, a cursed land indeed;<br/>
The blackamoors from there are in his keep,<br/>
Broad in the nose they are and flat in the ear,<br/>
Fifty thousand and more in company.<br/>
These canter forth with arrogance and heat,<br/>
Then they cry out the pagans' rallying-cheer;<br/>
And Rollant says: "Martyrdom we'll receive;<br/>
Not long to live, I know it well, have we;<br/>
Felon he's named that sells his body cheap!<br/>
Strike on, my lords, with burnished swords and keen;<br/>
Contest each inch your life and death between,<br/>
That neer by us Douce France in shame be steeped.<br/>
When Charles my lord shall come into this field,<br/>
Such discipline of Sarrazins he'll see,<br/>
For one of ours he'll find them dead fifteen;<br/>
He will not fail, but bless us all in peace."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00297"> CXLIV</h5>
<p id="id00298"> When Rollant sees those misbegotten men,<br/>
Who are more black than ink is on the pen<br/>
With no part white, only their teeth except,<br/>
Then says that count: "I know now very well<br/>
That here to die we're bound, as I can tell.<br/>
Strike on, the Franks! For so I recommend."<br/>
Says Oliver: "Who holds back, is condemned!"<br/>
Upon those words, the Franks to strike again.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00299"> CXLV</h5>
<p id="id00300"> Franks are but few; which, when the pagans know,<br/>
Among themselves comfort and pride they shew;<br/>
Says each to each: "Wrong was that Emperor."<br/>
Their alcaliph upon a sorrel rode,<br/>
And pricked it well with both his spurs of gold;<br/>
Struck Oliver, behind, on the back-bone,<br/>
His hauberk white into his body broke,<br/>
Clean through his breast the thrusting spear he drove;<br/>
After he said: "You've borne a mighty blow.<br/>
Charles the great should not have left you so;<br/>
He's done us wrong, small thanks to him we owe;<br/>
I've well avenged all ours on you alone."<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00301"> CXLVI</h5>
<p id="id00302"> Oliver feels that he to die is bound,<br/>
Holds Halteclere, whose steel is rough and brown,<br/>
Strikes the alcaliph on his helm's golden mount;<br/>
Flowers and stones fall clattering to the ground,<br/>
Slices his head, to th'small teeth in his mouth;<br/>
So brandishes his blade and flings him down;<br/>
After he says: "Pagan, accurst be thou!<br/>
Thou'lt never say that Charles forsakes me now;<br/>
Nor to thy wife, nor any dame thou'st found,<br/>
Thou'lt never boast, in lands where thou wast crowned,<br/>
One pennyworth from me thou'st taken out,<br/>
Nor damage wrought on me nor any around."<br/>
After, for aid, "Rollant!" he cries aloud.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00303"> CXLVII</h5>
<p id="id00304"> Oliver feels that death is drawing nigh;<br/>
To avenge himself he hath no longer time;<br/>
Through the great press most gallantly he strikes,<br/>
He breaks their spears, their buckled shields doth slice,<br/>
Their feet, their fists, their shoulders and their sides,<br/>
Dismembers them: whoso had seen that sigh,<br/>
Dead in the field one on another piled,<br/>
Remember well a vassal brave he might.<br/>
Charles ensign he'll not forget it quite;<br/>
Aloud and clear "Monjoie" again he cries.<br/>
To call Rollanz, his friend and peer, he tries:<br/>
"My companion, come hither to my side.<br/>
With bitter grief we must us now divide."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00305"> CXLVIII</h5>
<p id="id00306"> Then Rollant looked upon Olivier's face;<br/>
Which was all wan and colourless and pale,<br/>
While the clear blood, out of his body sprayed,<br/>
Upon the ground gushed forth and ran away.<br/>
"God!" said that count, "What shall I do or say?<br/>
My companion, gallant for such ill fate!<br/>
Neer shall man be, against thee could prevail.<br/>
Ah! France the Douce, henceforth art thou made waste<br/>
Of vassals brave, confounded and disgraced!<br/>
Our Emperour shall suffer damage great."<br/>
And with these words upon his horse he faints.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00307"> CXLIX</h5>
<p id="id00308"> You'd seen Rollant aswoon there in his seat,<br/>
And Oliver, who unto death doth bleed,<br/>
So much he's bled, his eyes are dim and weak;<br/>
Nor clear enough his vision, far or near,<br/>
To recognise whatever man he sees;<br/>
His companion, when each the other meets,<br/>
Above the helm jewelled with gold he beats,<br/>
Slicing it down from there to the nose-piece,<br/>
But not his head; he's touched not brow nor cheek.<br/>
At such a blow Rollant regards him keen,<br/>
And asks of him, in gentle tones and sweet:<br/>
"To do this thing, my comrade, did you mean?<br/>
This is Rollanz, who ever held you dear;<br/>
And no mistrust was ever us between."<br/>
Says Oliver: "Now can I hear you speak;<br/>
I see you not: may the Lord God you keep!<br/>
I struck you now: and for your pardon plead."<br/>
Answers Rollanz: "I am not hurt, indeed;<br/>
I pardon you, before God's Throne and here."<br/>
Upon these words, each to the other leans;<br/>
And in such love you had their parting seen.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00309"> CL</h5>
<p id="id00310"> Oliver feels death's anguish on him now;<br/>
And in his head his two eyes swimming round;<br/>
Nothing he sees; he hears not any sound;<br/>
Dismounting then, he kneels upon the ground,<br/>
Proclaims his sins both firmly and aloud,<br/>
Clasps his two hands, heavenwards holds them out,<br/>
Prays God himself in Paradise to allow;<br/>
Blessings on Charles, and on Douce France he vows,<br/>
And his comrade, Rollanz, to whom he's bound.<br/>
Then his heart fails; his helmet nods and bows;<br/>
Upon the earth he lays his whole length out:<br/>
And he is dead, may stay no more, that count.<br/>
Rollanz the brave mourns him with grief profound;<br/>
Nowhere on earth so sad a man you'd found.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00311"> CLI</h5>
<p id="id00312"> So Rollant's friend is dead whom when he sees<br/>
Face to the ground, and biting it with's teeth,<br/>
Begins to mourn in language very sweet:<br/>
"Unlucky, friend, your courage was indeed!<br/>
Together we have spent such days and years;<br/>
No harmful thing twixt thee and me has been.<br/>
Now thou art dead, and all my life a grief."<br/>
And with these words again he swoons, that chief,<br/>
Upon his horse, which he calls Veillantif;<br/>
Stirrups of gold support him underneath;<br/>
He cannot fall, whichever way he lean.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00313"> CLII</h5>
<p id="id00314"> Soon as Rollant his senses won and knew,<br/>
Recovering and turning from that swoon.<br/>
Bitter great loss appeared there in his view:<br/>
Dead are the Franks; he'd all of them to lose,<br/>
Save the Archbishop, and save Gualter del Hum;<br/>
He is come down out of the mountains, who<br/>
Gainst Spanish men made there a great ado;<br/>
Dead are his men, for those the pagans slew;<br/>
Will he or nill, along the vales he flew,<br/>
And called Rollant, to bring him succour soon:<br/>
"Ah! Gentle count, brave soldier, where are you?<br/>
For By thy side no fear I ever knew.<br/>
Gualter it is, who conquered Maelgut,<br/>
And nephew was to hoary old Drouin;<br/>
My vassalage thou ever thoughtest good.<br/>
Broken my spear, and split my shield in two;<br/>
Gone is the mail that on my hauberk grew;<br/>
This body of mine eight lances have gone through;<br/>
I'm dying. Yet full price for life I took."<br/>
Rollant has heard these words and understood,<br/>
Has spurred his horse, and on towards him drew.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00315"> CLIII</h5>
<p id="id00316"> Grief gives Rollanz intolerance and pride;<br/>
Through the great press he goes again to strike;<br/>
To slay a score of Spaniards he contrives,<br/>
Gualter has six, the Archbishop other five.<br/>
The pagans say: "Men, these, of felon kind!<br/>
Lordings, take care they go not hence alive!<br/>
Felon he's named that does not break their line,<br/>
Recreant, who lets them any safety find!"<br/>
And so once more begin the hue and cry,<br/>
From every part they come to break the line.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00317"> CLI</h5>
<p id="id00318"> Count Rollant is a noble and brave soldier,<br/>
Gualter del Hum's a right good chevalier,<br/>
That Archbishop hath shewn good prowess there;<br/>
None of them falls behind the other pair;<br/>
Through the great press, pagans they strike again.<br/>
Come on afoot a thousand Sarrazens,<br/>
And on horseback some forty thousand men.<br/>
But well I know, to approach they never dare;<br/>
Lances and spears they poise to hurl at them,<br/>
Arrows, barbs, darts and javelins in the air.<br/>
With the first flight they've slain our Gualtier;<br/>
Turpin of Reims has all his shield broken,<br/>
And cracked his helm; he's wounded in the head,<br/>
From his hauberk the woven mail they tear,<br/>
In his body four spear-wounds doth he bear;<br/>
Beneath him too his charger's fallen dead.<br/>
Great grief it was, when that Archbishop fell.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00319"> CLV</h5>
<p id="id00320"> Turpin of Reims hath felt himself undone,<br/>
Since that four spears have through his body come;<br/>
Nimble and bold upon his feet he jumps;<br/>
Looks for Rollant, and then towards him runs,<br/>
Saying this word: "I am not overcome.<br/>
While life remains, no good vassal gives up."<br/>
He's drawn Almace, whose steel was brown and rough,<br/>
Through the great press a thousand blows he's struck:<br/>
As Charles said, quarter he gave to none;<br/>
He found him there, four hundred else among,<br/>
Wounded the most, speared through the middle some,<br/>
Also there were from whom the heads he'd cut:<br/>
So tells the tale, he that was there says thus,<br/>
The brave Saint Giles, whom God made marvellous,<br/>
Who charters wrote for th' Minster at Loum;<br/>
Nothing he's heard that does not know this much.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00321"> CLVI</h5>
<p id="id00322"> The count Rollanz has nobly fought and well,<br/>
But he is hot, and all his body sweats;<br/>
Great pain he has, and trouble in his head,<br/>
His temples burst when he the horn sounded;<br/>
But he would know if Charles will come to them,<br/>
Takes the olifant, and feebly sounds again.<br/>
That Emperour stood still and listened then:<br/>
"My lords," said he, "Right evilly we fare!<br/>
This day Rollanz, my nephew shall be dead:<br/>
I hear his horn, with scarcely any breath.<br/>
Nimbly canter, whoever would be there!<br/>
Your trumpets sound, as many as ye bear!"<br/>
Sixty thousand so loud together blare,<br/>
The mountains ring, the valleys answer them.<br/>
The pagans hear, they think it not a jest;<br/>
Says each to each: "Carlum doth us bestead."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00323"> CLVII</h5>
<p id="id00324"> The pagans say: "That Emperour's at hand,<br/>
We hear their sound, the trumpets of the Franks;<br/>
If Charles come, great loss we then shall stand,<br/>
And wars renewed, unless we slay Rollant;<br/>
All Spain we'll lose, our own clear father-land."<br/>
Four hundred men of them in helmets stand;<br/>
The best of them that might be in their ranks<br/>
Make on Rollanz a grim and fierce attack;<br/>
Gainst these the count had well enough in hand.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00325"> CLVIII</h5>
<p id="id00326"> The count Rollanz, when their approach he sees<br/>
Is grown so bold and manifest and fierce<br/>
So long as he's alive he will not yield.<br/>
He sits his horse, which men call Veillantif,<br/>
Pricking him well with golden spurs beneath,<br/>
Through the great press he goes, their line to meet,<br/>
And by his side is the Archbishop Turpin.<br/>
"Now, friend, begone!" say pagans, each to each;<br/>
"These Frankish men, their horns we plainly hear<br/>
Charle is at hand, that King in Majesty."<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00327"> CLIX</h5>
<p id="id00328"> The count Rollanz has never loved cowards,<br/>
Nor arrogant, nor men of evil heart,<br/>
Nor chevalier that was not good vassal.<br/>
That Archbishop, Turpins, he calls apart:<br/>
"Sir, you're afoot, and I my charger have;<br/>
For love of you, here will I take my stand,<br/>
Together we'll endure things good and bad;<br/>
I'll leave you not, for no incarnate man:<br/>
We'll give again these pagans their attack;<br/>
The better blows are those from Durendal."<br/>
Says the Archbishop: "Shame on him that holds back!<br/>
Charle is at hand, full vengeance he'll exact."<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00329"> CLX</h5>
<p id="id00330"> The pagans say: "Unlucky were we born!<br/>
An evil day for us did this day dawn!<br/>
For we have lost our peers and all our lords.<br/>
Charles his great host once more upon us draws,<br/>
Of Frankish men we plainly hear the horns,<br/>
"Monjoie" they cry, and great is their uproar.<br/>
The count Rollant is of such pride and force<br/>
He'll never yield to man of woman born;<br/>
Let's aim at him, then leave him on the spot!"<br/>
And aim they did: with arrows long and short,<br/>
Lances and spears and feathered javelots;<br/>
Count Rollant's shield they've broken through and bored,<br/>
The woven mail have from his hauberk torn,<br/>
But not himself, they've never touched his corse;<br/>
Veillantif is in thirty places gored,<br/>
Beneath the count he's fallen dead, that horse.<br/>
Pagans are fled, and leave him on the spot;<br/>
The count Rollant stands on his feet once more.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00331"> CLXI</h5>
<p id="id00332"> Pagans are fled, enangered and enraged,<br/>
Home into Spain with speed they make their way;<br/>
The count Rollanz, he has not given chase,<br/>
For Veillantif, his charger, they have slain;<br/>
Will he or nill, on foot he must remain.<br/>
To the Archbishop, Turpins, he goes with aid;<br/>
I He's from his head the golden helm unlaced,<br/>
Taken from him his white hauberk away,<br/>
And cut the gown in strips, was round his waist;<br/>
On his great wounds the pieces of it placed,<br/>
Then to his heart has caught him and embraced;<br/>
On the green grass he has him softly laid,<br/>
Most sweetly then to him has Rollant prayed:<br/>
"Ah! Gentle sir, give me your leave, I say;<br/>
Our companions, whom we so dear appraised,<br/>
Are now all dead; we cannot let them stay;<br/>
I will go seek and bring them to this place,<br/>
Arrange them here in ranks, before your face."<br/>
Said the Archbishop: "Go, and return again.<br/>
This field is yours and mine now; God be praised!"<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00333"> CLXII</h5>
<p id="id00334"> So Rollanz turns; through the field, all alone,<br/>
Searching the vales and mountains, he is gone;<br/>
He finds Gerin, Gerers his companion,<br/>
Also he finds Berenger and Otton,<br/>
There too he finds Anseis and Sanson,<br/>
And finds Gerard the old, of Rossillon;<br/>
By one and one he's taken those barons,<br/>
To the Archbishop with each of them he comes,<br/>
Before his knees arranges every one.<br/>
That Archbishop, he cannot help but sob,<br/>
He lifts his hand, gives benediction;<br/>
After he's said: "Unlucky, Lords, your lot!<br/>
But all your souls He'll lay, our Glorious God,<br/>
In Paradise, His holy flowers upon!<br/>
For my own death such anguish now I've got;<br/>
I shall not see him, our rich Emperor."<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00335"> CLXIII</h5>
<p id="id00336"> So Rollant turns, goes through the field in quest;<br/>
His companion Olivier finds at length;<br/>
He has embraced him close against his breast,<br/>
To the Archbishop returns as he can best;<br/>
Upon a shield he's laid him, by the rest;<br/>
And the Archbishop has them absolved and blest:<br/>
Whereon his grief and pity grow afresh.<br/>
Then says Rollanz: "Fair comrade Olivier,<br/>
You were the son of the good count Reinier,<br/>
Who held the march by th' Vale of Runier;<br/>
To shatter spears, through buckled shields to bear,<br/>
And from hauberks the mail to break and tear,<br/>
Proof men to lead, and prudent counsel share,<br/>
Gluttons in field to frighten and conquer,<br/>
No land has known a better chevalier."<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00337"> CLXIV</h5>
<p id="id00338"> The count Rollanz, when dead he saw his peers,<br/>
And Oliver, he held so very dear,<br/>
Grew tender, and began to shed a tear;<br/>
Out of his face the colour disappeared;<br/>
No longer could he stand, for so much grief,<br/>
Will he or nill, he swooned upon the field.<br/>
Said the Archbishop: "Unlucky lord, indeed!"<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00339"> CLXV</h5>
<p id="id00340"> When the Archbishop beheld him swoon, Rollant,<br/>
Never before such bitter grief he'd had;<br/>
Stretching his hand, he took that olifant.<br/>
Through Rencesvals a little river ran;<br/>
He would go there, fetch water for Rollant.<br/>
Went step by step, to stumble soon began,<br/>
So feeble he is, no further fare he can,<br/>
For too much blood he's lost, and no strength has;<br/>
Ere he has crossed an acre of the land,<br/>
His heart grows faint, he falls down forwards and<br/>
Death comes to him with very cruel pangs.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00341"> CLXVI</h5>
<p id="id00342"> The count Rollanz wakes from his swoon once more,<br/>
Climbs to his feet; his pains are very sore;<br/>
Looks down the vale, looks to the hills above;<br/>
On the green grass, beyond his companions,<br/>
He sees him lie, that noble old baron;<br/>
'Tis the Archbishop, whom in His name wrought God;<br/>
There he proclaims his sins, and looks above;<br/>
Joins his two hands, to Heaven holds them forth,<br/>
And Paradise prays God to him to accord.<br/>
Dead is Turpin, the warrior of Charlon.<br/>
In battles great and very rare sermons<br/>
Against pagans ever a champion.<br/>
God grant him now His Benediction!<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00343"> CLXVII</h5>
<p id="id00344"> The count Rollant sees the Archbishop lie dead,<br/>
Sees the bowels out of his body shed,<br/>
And sees the brains that surge from his forehead;<br/>
Between his two arm-pits, upon his breast,<br/>
Crossways he folds those hands so white and fair.<br/>
Then mourns aloud, as was the custom there:<br/>
"Thee, gentle sir, chevalier nobly bred,<br/>
To the Glorious Celestial I commend;<br/>
Neer shall man be, that will Him serve so well;<br/>
Since the Apostles was never such prophet,<br/>
To hold the laws and draw the hearts of men.<br/>
Now may your soul no pain nor sorrow ken,<br/>
Finding the gates of Paradise open!"<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00345"> CLXVIII</h5>
<p id="id00346"> Then Rollanz feels that death to him draws near,<br/>
For all his brain is issued from his ears;<br/>
He prays to God that He will call the peers,<br/>
Bids Gabriel, the angel, t' himself appear.<br/>
Takes the olifant, that no reproach shall hear,<br/>
And Durendal in the other hand he wields;<br/>
Further than might a cross-bow's arrow speed<br/>
Goes towards Spain into a fallow-field;<br/>
Climbs on a cliff; where, under two fair trees,<br/>
Four terraces, of marble wrought, he sees.<br/>
There he falls down, and lies upon the green;<br/>
He swoons again, for death is very near.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00347"> CLXIX</h5>
<p id="id00348"> High are the peaks, the trees are very high.<br/>
Four terraces of polished marble shine;<br/>
On the green grass count Rollant swoons thereby.<br/>
A Sarrazin him all the time espies,<br/>
Who feigning death among the others hides;<br/>
Blood hath his face and all his body dyed;<br/>
He gets afoot, running towards him hies;<br/>
Fair was he, strong and of a courage high;<br/>
A mortal hate he's kindled in his pride.<br/>
He's seized Rollant, and the arms, were at his side,<br/>
"Charles nephew," he's said, "here conquered lies.<br/>
To Araby I'll bear this sword as prize."<br/>
As he drew it, something the count descried.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00349"> CLXX</h5>
<p id="id00350"> So Rollant felt his sword was taken forth,<br/>
Opened his eyes, and this word to him spoke<br/>
"Thou'rt never one of ours, full well I know."<br/>
Took the olifant, that he would not let go,<br/>
Struck him on th' helm, that jewelled was with gold,<br/>
And broke its steel, his skull and all his bones,<br/>
Out of his head both the two eyes he drove;<br/>
Dead at his feet he has the pagan thrown:<br/>
After he's said: "Culvert, thou wert too bold,<br/>
Or right or wrong, of my sword seizing hold!<br/>
They'll dub thee fool, to whom the tale is told.<br/>
But my great one, my olifant I broke;<br/>
Fallen from it the crystal and the gold."<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00351"> CLXXI</h5>
<p id="id00352"> Then Rollanz feels that he has lost his sight,<br/>
Climbs to his feet, uses what strength he might;<br/>
In all his face the colour is grown white.<br/>
In front of him a great brown boulder lies;<br/>
Whereon ten blows with grief and rage he strikes;<br/>
The steel cries out, but does not break outright;<br/>
And the count says: "Saint Mary, be my guide<br/>
Good Durendal, unlucky is your plight!<br/>
I've need of you no more; spent is my pride!<br/>
We in the field have won so many fights,<br/>
Combating through so many regions wide<br/>
That Charles holds, whose beard is hoary white!<br/>
Be you not his that turns from any in flight!<br/>
A good vassal has held you this long time;<br/>
Never shall France the Free behold his like."<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00353"> CLXXII</h5>
<p id="id00354"> Rollant hath struck the sardonyx terrace;<br/>
The steel cries out, but broken is no ways.<br/>
So when he sees he never can it break,<br/>
Within himself begins he to complain:<br/>
"Ah! Durendal, white art thou, clear of stain!<br/>
Beneath the sun reflecting back his rays!<br/>
In Moriane was Charles, in the vale,<br/>
When from heaven God by His angel bade<br/>
Him give thee to a count and capitain;<br/>
Girt thee on me that noble King and great.<br/>
I won for him with thee Anjou, Bretaigne,<br/>
And won for him with thee Peitou, the Maine,<br/>
And Normandy the free for him I gained,<br/>
Also with thee Provence and Equitaigne,<br/>
And Lumbardie and all the whole Romaigne,<br/>
I won Baivere, all Flanders in the plain,<br/>
Also Burguigne and all the whole Puillane,<br/>
Costentinnople, that homage to him pays;<br/>
In Saisonie all is as he ordains;<br/>
With thee I won him Scotland, Ireland, Wales,<br/>
England also, where he his chamber makes;<br/>
Won I with thee so many countries strange<br/>
That Charles holds, whose beard is white with age!<br/>
For this sword's sake sorrow upon me weighs,<br/>
Rather I'ld die, than it mid pagans stay.<br/>
Lord God Father, never let France be shamed!"<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00355"> CLXXIII</h5>
<p id="id00356"> Rollant his stroke on a dark stone repeats,<br/>
And more of it breaks off than I can speak.<br/>
The sword cries out, yet breaks not in the least,<br/>
Back from the blow into the air it leaps.<br/>
Destroy it can he not; which when he sees,<br/>
Within himself he makes a plaint most sweet.<br/>
"Ah! Durendal, most holy, fair indeed!<br/>
Relics enough thy golden hilt conceals:<br/>
Saint Peter's Tooth, the Blood of Saint Basile,<br/>
Some of the Hairs of my Lord, Saint Denise,<br/>
Some of the Robe, was worn by Saint Mary.<br/>
It is not right that pagans should thee seize,<br/>
For Christian men your use shall ever be.<br/>
Nor any man's that worketh cowardice!<br/>
Many broad lands with you have I retrieved<br/>
Which Charles holds, who hath the great white beard;<br/>
Wherefore that King so proud and rich is he."<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00357"> CLXXIV</h5>
<p id="id00358"> But Rollant felt that death had made a way<br/>
Down from his head till on his heart it lay;<br/>
Beneath a pine running in haste he came,<br/>
On the green grass he lay there on his face;<br/>
His olifant and sword beneath him placed,<br/>
Turning his head towards the pagan race,<br/>
Now this he did, in truth, that Charles might say<br/>
(As he desired) and all the Franks his race;—<br/>
'Ah, gentle count; conquering he was slain!'—<br/>
He owned his faults often and every way,<br/>
And for his sins his glove to God upraised.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00359"> CLXXV</h5>
<p id="id00360"> But Rollant feels he's no more time to seek;<br/>
Looking to Spain, he lies on a sharp peak,<br/>
And with one hand upon his breast he beats:<br/>
"Mea Culpa! God, by Thy Virtues clean<br/>
Me from my sins, the mortal and the mean,<br/>
Which from the hour that I was born have been<br/>
Until this day, when life is ended here!"<br/>
Holds out his glove towards God, as he speaks<br/>
Angels descend from heaven on that scene.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00361"> CLXXVI</h5>
<p id="id00362"> The count Rollanz, beneath a pine he sits;<br/>
Turning his eyes towards Spain, he begins<br/>
Remembering so many divers things:<br/>
So many lands where he went conquering,<br/>
And France the Douce, the heroes of his kin,<br/>
And Charlemagne, his lord who nourished him.<br/>
Nor can he help but weep and sigh at this.<br/>
But his own self, he's not forgotten him,<br/>
He owns his faults, and God's forgiveness bids:<br/>
"Very Father, in Whom no falsehood is,<br/>
Saint Lazaron from death Thou didst remit,<br/>
And Daniel save from the lions' pit;<br/>
My soul in me preserve from all perils<br/>
And from the sins I did in life commit!"<br/>
His right-hand glove, to God he offers it<br/>
Saint Gabriel from's hand hath taken it.<br/>
Over his arm his head bows down and slips,<br/>
He joins his hands: and so is life finish'd.<br/>
God sent him down His angel cherubin,<br/>
And Saint Michael, we worship in peril;<br/>
And by their side Saint Gabriel alit;<br/>
So the count's soul they bare to Paradis.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00363"> CLXXVII</h5>
<p id="id00364"> Rollant is dead; his soul to heav'n God bare.<br/>
That Emperour to Rencesvals doth fare.<br/>
There was no path nor passage anywhere<br/>
Nor of waste ground no ell nor foot to spare<br/>
Without a Frank or pagan lying there.<br/>
Charles cries aloud: "Where are you, nephew fair?<br/>
Where's the Archbishop and that count Oliviers?<br/>
Where is Gerins and his comrade Gerers?<br/>
Otes the Duke, and the count Berengiers<br/>
And Ivorie, and Ive, so dear they were?<br/>
What is become of Gascon Engelier,<br/>
Sansun the Duke and Anseis the fierce?<br/>
Where's old Gerard of Russillun; oh, where<br/>
The dozen peers I left behind me here?"<br/>
But what avail, since none can answer bear?<br/>
"God!" says the King, "Now well may I despair,<br/>
I was not here the first assault to share!"<br/>
Seeming enraged, his beard the King doth tear.<br/>
Weep from their eyes barons and chevaliers,<br/>
A thousand score, they swoon upon the earth;<br/>
Duke Neimes for them was moved with pity rare.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00365"> CLXXVIII</h5>
<p id="id00366"> No chevalier nor baron is there, who<br/>
Pitifully weeps not for grief and dule;<br/>
They mourn their sons, their brothers, their nephews,<br/>
And their liege lords, and trusty friends and true;<br/>
Upon the ground a many of them swoon.<br/>
Thereon Duke Neimes doth act with wisdom proof,<br/>
First before all he's said to the Emperour:<br/>
"See beforehand, a league from us or two,<br/>
From the highways dust rising in our view;<br/>
Pagans are there, and many them, too.<br/>
Canter therefore! Vengeance upon them do!"<br/>
"Ah, God!" says Charles, "so far are they re-moved!<br/>
Do right by me, my honour still renew!<br/>
They've torn from me the flower of France the Douce."<br/>
The King commands Gebuin and Otun,<br/>
Tedbalt of Reims, also the count Milun:<br/>
"Guard me this field, these hills and valleys too,<br/>
Let the dead lie, all as they are, unmoved,<br/>
Let not approach lion, nor any brute,<br/>
Let not approach esquire, nor any groom;<br/>
For I forbid that any come thereto,<br/>
Until God will that we return anew."<br/>
These answer him sweetly, their love to prove:<br/>
"Right Emperour, dear Sire, so will we do."<br/>
A thousand knights they keep in retinue.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00367"> CLXXIX</h5>
<p id="id00368"> That Emperour bids trumpets sound again,<br/>
Then canters forth with his great host so brave.<br/>
Of Spanish men, whose backs are turned their way,<br/>
Franks one and all continue in their chase.<br/>
When the King sees the light at even fade,<br/>
On the green grass dismounting as he may,<br/>
He kneels aground, to God the Lord doth pray<br/>
That the sun's course He will for him delay,<br/>
Put off the night, and still prolong the day.<br/>
An angel then, with him should reason make,<br/>
Nimbly enough appeared to him and spake:<br/>
"Charles, canter on! Light needst not thou await.<br/>
The flower of France, as God knows well, is slain;<br/>
Thou canst be avenged upon that crimeful race."<br/>
Upon that word mounts the Emperour again.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00369"> CLXXX</h5>
<p id="id00370"> For Charlemagne a great marvel God planned:<br/>
Making the sun still in his course to stand.<br/>
So pagans fled, and chased them well the Franks<br/>
Through the Valley of Shadows, close in hand;<br/>
Towards Sarraguce by force they chased them back,<br/>
And as they went with killing blows attacked:<br/>
Barred their highways and every path they had.<br/>
The River Sebre before them reared its bank,<br/>
'Twas very deep, marvellous current ran;<br/>
No barge thereon nor dromond nor caland.<br/>
A god of theirs invoked they, Tervagant.<br/>
And then leaped in, but there no warrant had.<br/>
The armed men more weighty were for that,<br/>
Many of them down to the bottom sank,<br/>
Downstream the rest floated as they might hap;<br/>
So much water the luckiest of them drank,<br/>
That all were drowned, with marvellous keen pangs.<br/>
"An evil day," cry Franks, "ye saw Rollant!"<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00371"> CLXXXI</h5>
<p id="id00372"> When Charles sees that pagans all are dead,<br/>
Some of them slain, the greater part drowned;<br/>
(Whereby great spoils his chevaliers collect)<br/>
That gentle King upon his feet descends,<br/>
Kneels on the ground, his thanks to God presents.<br/>
When he once more rise, the sun is set.<br/>
Says the Emperour "Time is to pitch our tents;<br/>
To Rencesvals too late to go again.<br/>
Our horses are worn out and foundered:<br/>
Unsaddle them, take bridles from their heads,<br/>
And through these meads let them refreshment get."<br/>
Answer the Franks: "Sire, you have spoken well."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00373"> CLXXXII</h5>
<p id="id00374"> That Emperour hath chosen his bivouac;<br/>
The Franks dismount in those deserted tracts,<br/>
Their saddles take from off their horses' backs,<br/>
Bridles of gold from off their heads unstrap,<br/>
Let them go free; there is enough fresh grass—<br/>
No service can they render them, save that.<br/>
Who is most tired sleeps on the ground stretched flat.<br/>
Upon this night no sentinels keep watch.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00375"> CLXXXIII</h5>
<p id="id00376"> That Emperour is lying in a mead;<br/>
By's head, so brave, he's placed his mighty spear;<br/>
On such a night unarmed he will not be.<br/>
He's donned his white hauberk, with broidery,<br/>
Has laced his helm, jewelled with golden beads,<br/>
Girt on Joiuse, there never was its peer,<br/>
Whereon each day thirty fresh hues appear.<br/>
All of us know that lance, and well may speak<br/>
Whereby Our Lord was wounded on the Tree:<br/>
Charles, by God's grace, possessed its point of steel!<br/>
His golden hilt he enshrined it underneath.<br/>
By that honour and by that sanctity<br/>
The name Joiuse was for that sword decreed.<br/>
Barons of France may not forgetful be<br/>
Whence comes the ensign "Monjoie," they cry at need;<br/>
Wherefore no race against them can succeed.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00377"> CLXXXIV</h5>
<p id="id00378"> Clear was the night, the moon shone radiant.<br/>
Charles laid him down, but sorrow for Rollant<br/>
And Oliver, most heavy on him he had,<br/>
For's dozen peers, for all the Frankish band<br/>
He had left dead in bloody Rencesvals;<br/>
He could not help, but wept and waxed mad,<br/>
And prayed to God to be their souls' Warrant.<br/>
Weary that King, or grief he's very sad;<br/>
He falls on sleep, he can no more withstand.<br/>
Through all those meads they slumber then, the Franks;<br/>
Is not a horse can any longer stand,<br/>
Who would eat grass, he takes it lying flat.<br/>
He has learned much, can understand their pangs.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00379"> CLXXXV</h5>
<p id="id00380"> Charles, like a man worn out with labour, slept.<br/>
Saint Gabriel the Lord to him hath sent,<br/>
Whom as a guard o'er the Emperour he set;<br/>
Stood all night long that angel by his head.<br/>
In a vision announced he to him then<br/>
A battle, should be fought against him yet,<br/>
Significance of griefs demonstrated.<br/>
Charles looked up towards the sky, and there<br/>
Thunders and winds and blowing gales beheld,<br/>
And hurricanes and marvellous tempests;<br/>
Lightnings and flames he saw in readiness,<br/>
That speedily on all his people fell;<br/>
Apple and ash, their spear-shafts all burned,<br/>
Also their shields, e'en the golden bosses,<br/>
Crumbled the shafts of their trenchant lances,<br/>
Crushed their hauberks and all their steel helmets.<br/>
His chevaliers he saw in great distress.<br/>
Bears and leopards would feed upon them next;<br/>
Adversaries, dragons, wyverns, serpents,<br/>
Griffins were there, thirty thousand, no less,<br/>
Nor was there one but on some Frank it set.<br/>
And the Franks cried: "Ah! Charlemagne, give help!"<br/>
Wherefore the King much grief and pity felt,<br/>
He'ld go to them but was in duress kept:<br/>
Out of a wood came a great lion then,<br/>
'Twas very proud and fierce and terrible;<br/>
His body dear sought out, and on him leapt,<br/>
Each in his arms, wrestling, the other held;<br/>
But he knew not which conquered, nor which fell.<br/>
That Emperour woke not at all, but slept.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00381"> CLXXXVI</h5>
<p id="id00382"> And, after that, another vision came:<br/>
Himseemed in France, at Aix, on a terrace,<br/>
And that he held a bruin by two chains;<br/>
Out of Ardenne saw thirty bears that came,<br/>
And each of them words, as a man might, spake<br/>
Said to him: "Sire, give him to us again!<br/>
It is not right that he with you remain,<br/>
He's of our kin, and we must lend him aid."<br/>
A harrier fair ran out of his palace,<br/>
Among them all the greatest bear assailed<br/>
On the green grass, beyond his friends some way.<br/>
There saw the King marvellous give and take;<br/>
But he knew not which fell, nor which o'ercame.<br/>
The angel of God so much to him made plain.<br/>
Charles slept on till the clear dawn of day.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00383"> CLXXXVII</h5>
<p id="id00384"> King Marsilies, fleeing to Sarraguce,<br/>
Dismounted there beneath an olive cool;<br/>
His sword and sark and helm aside he put,<br/>
On the green grass lay down in shame and gloom;<br/>
For his right hand he'd lost, 'twas clean cut through;<br/>
Such blood he'd shed, in anguish keen he swooned.<br/>
Before his face his lady Bramimunde<br/>
Bewailed and cried, with very bitter rue;<br/>
Twenty thousand and more around him stood,<br/>
All of them cursed Carlun and France the Douce.<br/>
Then Apollin in's grotto they surround,<br/>
And threaten him, and ugly words pronounce:<br/>
"Such shame on us, vile god!, why bringest thou?<br/>
This is our king; wherefore dost him confound?<br/>
Who served thee oft, ill recompense hath found."<br/>
Then they take off his sceptre and his crown,<br/>
With their hands hang him from a column down,<br/>
Among their feet trample him on the ground,<br/>
With great cudgels they batter him and trounce.<br/>
From Tervagant his carbuncle they impound,<br/>
And Mahumet into a ditch fling out,<br/>
Where swine and dogs defile him and devour.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00385"> CLXXXVIII</h5>
<p id="id00386"> Out of his swoon awakens Marsilies,<br/>
And has him borne his vaulted roof beneath;<br/>
Many colours were painted there to see,<br/>
And Bramimunde laments for him, the queen,<br/>
Tearing her hair; caitiff herself she clepes;<br/>
Also these words cries very loud and clear:<br/>
"Ah! Sarraguce, henceforth forlorn thou'lt be<br/>
Of the fair king that had thee in his keep!<br/>
All those our gods have wrought great felony,<br/>
Who in battle this morning failed at need.<br/>
That admiral will shew his cowardice,<br/>
Unless he fight against that race hardy,<br/>
Who are so fierce, for life they take no heed.<br/>
That Emperour, with his blossoming beard,<br/>
Hath vassalage, and very high folly;<br/>
Battle to fight, he will not ever flee.<br/>
Great grief it is, no man may slay him clean."<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00387"> CLXXXIX</h5>
<p id="id00388"> That Emperour, by his great Majesty,<br/>
I Full seven years in Spain now has he been,<br/>
And castles there, and many cities seized.<br/>
King Marsilies was therefore sore displeased;<br/>
In the first year he sealed and sent his brief<br/>
To Baligant, into Babilonie:<br/>
('Twas the admiral, old in antiquity,<br/>
That clean outlived Omer and Virgilie,)<br/>
To Sarraguce, with succour bade him speed,<br/>
For, if he failed, Marsile his gods would leave,<br/>
All his idols he worshipped formerly;<br/>
He would receive blest Christianity<br/>
And reconciled to Charlemagne would be.<br/>
Long time that one came not, far off was he.<br/>
Through forty realms he did his tribes rally;<br/>
His great dromonds, he made them all ready,<br/>
Barges and skiffs and ships and galleries;<br/>
Neath Alexandre, a haven next the sea,<br/>
In readiness he gat his whole navy.<br/>
That was in May, first summer of the year,<br/>
All of his hosts he launched upon the sea.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00389"> CXC</h5>
<p id="id00390"> Great are the hosts of that opposed race;<br/>
With speed they sail, they steer and navigate.<br/>
High on their yards, at their mast-heads they place<br/>
Lanterns enough, and carbuncles so great<br/>
Thence, from above, such light they dissipate<br/>
The sea's more clear at midnight than by day.<br/>
And when they come into the land of Spain<br/>
All that country lightens and shines again:<br/>
Of their coming Marsile has heard the tale.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00391"> CXCI</h5>
<p id="id00392"> The pagan race would never rest, but come<br/>
Out of the sea, where the sweet waters run;<br/>
They leave Marbris, they leave behind Marbrus,<br/>
Upstream by Sebre doth all their navy turn.<br/>
Lanterns they have, and carbuncles enough,<br/>
That all night long and very clearly burn.<br/>
Upon that day they come to Sarragus.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00393"> CXCII</h5>
<p id="id00394"> Clear is that day, and the sun radiant.<br/>
Out of his barge issues their admiral,<br/>
Espaneliz goes forth at his right hand,<br/>
Seventeen kings follow him in a band,<br/>
Counts too, and dukes; I cannot tell of that.<br/>
Where in a field, midway, a laurel stands,<br/>
On the green grass they spread a white silk mat,<br/>
Set a fald-stool there, made of olifant;<br/>
Sits him thereon the pagan Baligant,<br/>
And all the rest in rows about him stand.<br/>
The lord of them speaks before any man:<br/>
"Listen to me, free knights and valiant!<br/>
Charles the King, the Emperour of the Franks,<br/>
Shall not eat bread, save when that I command.<br/>
Throughout all Spain great war with me he's had;<br/>
I will go seek him now, into Douce France,<br/>
I will not cease, while I'm a living man,<br/>
Till be slain, or fall between my hands."<br/>
Upon his knee his right-hand glove he slaps.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00395"> CXCIII</h5>
<p id="id00396"> He is fast bound by all that he has said.<br/>
He will not fail, for all the gold neath heav'n,<br/>
But go to Aix, where Charles court is held:<br/>
His men applaud, for so they counselled.<br/>
After he called two of his chevaliers,<br/>
One Clarifan, and the other Clarien:<br/>
"You are the sons of king Maltraien,<br/>
Freely was, wont my messages to bear.<br/>
You I command to Sarraguce to fare.<br/>
Marsiliun on my part you shall tell<br/>
Against the Franks I'm come to give him help,<br/>
Find I their host, great battle shall be there;<br/>
Give him this glove, that's stitched with golden thread,<br/>
On his right hand let it be worn and held;<br/>
This little wand of fine gold take as well,<br/>
Bid him come here, his homage to declare.<br/>
To France I'll go, and war with Charles again;<br/>
Save at my feet he kneel, and mercy beg,<br/>
Save all the laws of Christians he forget,<br/>
I'll take away the crown from off his head."<br/>
Answer pagans: "Sire, you say very well."<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00397"> CXCIV</h5>
<p id="id00398"> Said Baligant: "But canter now, barons,<br/>
Take one the wand, and the other one the glove!"<br/>
These answer him: "Dear lord, it shall be done."<br/>
Canter so far, to Sarraguce they come,<br/>
Pass through ten gates, across four bridges run,<br/>
Through all the streets, wherein the burghers crowd.<br/>
When they draw nigh the citadel above,<br/>
From the palace they hear a mighty sound;<br/>
About that place are seen pagans enough,<br/>
Who weep and cry, with grief are waxen wood,<br/>
And curse their gods, Tervagan and Mahum<br/>
And Apolin, from whom no help is come.<br/>
Says each to each: "Caitiffs! What shall be done?<br/>
For upon us confusion vile is come,<br/>
Now have we lost our king Marsiliun,<br/>
For yesterday his hand count Rollanz cut;<br/>
We'll have no more Fair Jursaleu, his son;<br/>
The whole of Spain henceforward is undone."<br/>
Both messengers on the terrace dismount.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00399"> CXCV</h5>
<p id="id00400"> Horses they leave under an olive tree,<br/>
Which by the reins two Sarrazins do lead;<br/>
Those messengers have wrapped them in their weeds,<br/>
To the palace they climb the topmost steep.<br/>
When they're come in, the vaulted roof beneath,<br/>
Marsilium with courtesy they greet:<br/>
"May Mahumet, who all of us doth keep,<br/>
And Tervagan, and our lord Apoline<br/>
Preserve the, king and guard from harm the queen!"<br/>
Says Bramimunde "Great foolishness I hear:<br/>
Those gods of ours in cowardice are steeped;<br/>
In Rencesvals they wrought an evil deed,<br/>
Our chevaliers they let be slain in heaps;<br/>
My lord they failed in battle, in his need,<br/>
Never again will he his right hand see;<br/>
For that rich count, Rollanz, hath made him bleed.<br/>
All our whole Spain shall be for Charles to keep.<br/>
Miserable! What shall become of me?<br/>
Alas! That I've no man to slay me clean!"<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00401"> CXCVI</h5>
<p id="id00402"> Says Clarien: "My lady, say not that!<br/>
We're messengers from pagan Baligant;<br/>
To Marsilies, he says, he'll be warrant,<br/>
So sends him here his glove, also this wand.<br/>
Vessels we have, are moored by Sebres bank,<br/>
Barges and skiffs and gallies four thousand,<br/>
Dromonds are there—I cannot speak of that.<br/>
Our admiral is wealthy and puissant.<br/>
And Charlemagne he will go seek through France<br/>
And quittance give him, dead or recreant."<br/>
Says Bramimunde: "Unlucky journey, that!<br/>
Far nearer here you'll light upon the Franks;<br/>
For seven years he's stayed now in this land.<br/>
That Emperour is bold and combatant,<br/>
Rather he'ld die than from the field draw back;<br/>
No king neath heav'n above a child he ranks.<br/>
Charles hath no fear for any living man.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00403"> CXCVII</h5>
<p id="id00404"> Says Marsilies the king: "Now let that be."<br/>
To th'messengers: "Sirs, pray you, speak to me.<br/>
I am held fast by death, as ye may see.<br/>
No son have I nor daughter to succeed;<br/>
That one I had, they slew him yester-eve.<br/>
Bid you my lord, he come to see me here.<br/>
Rights over Spain that admiral hath he,<br/>
My claim to him, if he will take't, I yield;<br/>
But from the Franks he then must set her free.<br/>
Gainst Charlemagne I'll shew him strategy.<br/>
Within a month from now he'll conquered be.<br/>
Of Sarraguce ye'll carry him the keys,<br/>
He'll go not hence, say, if he trusts in me."<br/>
They answer him: "Sir, 'tis the truth you speak."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00405"> CXCVIII</h5>
<p id="id00406"> Then says Marsile: "The Emperour, Charles the Great<br/>
Hath slain my men and all my land laid waste,<br/>
My cities are broken and violate;<br/>
He lay this night upon the river Sebre;<br/>
I've counted well, 'tis seven leagues away.<br/>
Bid the admiral, leading his host this way,<br/>
Do battle here; this word to him convey."<br/>
Gives them the keys of Sarraguce her gates;<br/>
Both messengers their leave of him do take,<br/>
Upon that word bow down, and turn away.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00407"> CXCIX</h5>
<p id="id00408"> Both messengers did on their horses mount;<br/>
From that city nimbly they issued out.<br/>
Then, sore afraid, their admiral they sought,<br/>
To whom the keys of Sarraguce they brought.<br/>
Says Baligant: "Speak now; what have ye found?<br/>
Where's Marsilies, to come to me was bound?"<br/>
Says Clarien: "To death he's stricken down.<br/>
That Emperour was in the pass but now;<br/>
To France the Douce he would be homeward-bound,<br/>
Rereward he set, to save his great honour:<br/>
His nephew there installed, Rollanz the count,<br/>
And Oliver; the dozen peers around;<br/>
A thousand score of Franks in armour found.<br/>
Marsile the king fought with them there, so proud;<br/>
He and Rollanz upon that field did joust.<br/>
With Durendal he dealt him such a clout<br/>
From his body he cut the right hand down.<br/>
His son is dead, in whom his heart was bound,<br/>
And the barons that service to him vowed;<br/>
Fleeing he came, he could no more hold out.<br/>
That Emperour has chased him well enow.<br/>
The king implores, you'll hasten with succour,<br/>
Yields to you Spain, his kingdom and his crown."<br/>
And Baligant begins to think, and frowns;<br/>
Such grief he has, doth nearly him confound.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00409"> CC</h5>
<p id="id00410"> "Sir admiral," said to him Clariens,<br/>
"In Rencesvals was yesterday battle.<br/>
Dead is Rollanz and that count Oliver,<br/>
The dozen peers whom Charle so cherished,<br/>
And of their Franks are twenty thousand dead.<br/>
King Marsilie's of his right hand bereft,<br/>
And the Emperour chased him enow from thence.<br/>
Throughout this land no chevalier is left,<br/>
But he be slain, or drowned in Sebres bed.<br/>
By river side the Franks have pitched their tents,<br/>
Into this land so near to us they've crept;<br/>
But, if you will, grief shall go with them hence."<br/>
And Baligant looked on him proudly then,<br/>
In his courage grew joyous and content;<br/>
From the fald-stool upon his feet he leapt,<br/>
Then cried aloud: "Barons, too long ye've slept;<br/>
Forth from your ships issue, mount, canter well!<br/>
If he flee not, that Charlemagne the eld,<br/>
King Marsilies shall somehow be avenged;<br/>
For his right hand I'll pay him back an head."<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00411"> CCI</h5>
<p id="id00412"> Pagan Arabs out of their ships issue,<br/>
Then mount upon their horses and their mules,<br/>
And canter forth, (nay, what more might they do?)<br/>
Their admiral, by whom they all were ruled,<br/>
Called up to him Gemalfin, whom he knew:<br/>
"I give command of all my hosts to you."<br/>
On a brown horse mounted, as he was used,<br/>
And in his train he took with him four dukes.<br/>
Cantered so far, he came to Sarraguce.<br/>
Dismounted on a floor of marble blue,<br/>
Where four counts were, who by his stirrup stood;<br/>
Up by the steps, the palace came into;<br/>
To meet him there came running Bramimunde,<br/>
Who said to him: "Accursed from the womb,<br/>
That in such shame my sovran lord I lose!<br/>
Fell at his feet, that admiral her took.<br/>
In grief they came up into Marsile's room.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00413"> CCII</h5>
<p id="id00414"> King Marsilies, when he sees Baligant,<br/>
Calls to him then two Spanish Sarazands:<br/>
"Take me by the arms, and so lift up my back."<br/>
One of his gloves he takes in his left hand;<br/>
Then says Marsile: "Sire, king and admiral,<br/>
Quittance I give you here of all my land,<br/>
With Sarraguce, and the honour thereto hangs.<br/>
Myself I've lost; my army, every man."<br/>
He answers him: "Therefore the more I'm sad.<br/>
No long discourse together may we have;<br/>
Full well I know, Charles waits not our attack,<br/>
I take the glove from you, in spite of that."<br/>
He turned away in tears, such grief he had.<br/>
Down by the steps, out of the palace ran,<br/>
Mounted his horse, to's people gallopped back.<br/>
Cantered so far, he came before his band;<br/>
From hour to hour then, as he went, he sang:<br/>
"Pagans, come on: already flee the Franks!"<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00415"> CCIII</h5>
<p id="id00416"> In morning time, when the dawn breaks at last,<br/>
Awakened is that Emperour Charles.<br/>
Saint Gabriel, who on God's part him guards,<br/>
Raises his hand, the Sign upon him marks.<br/>
Rises the King, his arms aside he's cast,<br/>
The others then, through all the host, disarm.<br/>
After they mount, by virtue canter fast<br/>
Through those long ways, and through those roads so large;<br/>
They go to see the marvellous damage<br/>
In Rencesvals, there where the battle was.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00417"> CCIV</h5>
<p id="id00418"> In Rencesvals is Charles entered,<br/>
Begins to weep for those he finds there dead;<br/>
Says to the Franks: "My lords, restrain your steps,<br/>
Since I myself alone should go ahead,<br/>
For my nephew, whom I would find again.<br/>
At Aix I was, upon the feast Noel,<br/>
Vaunted them there my valiant chevaliers,<br/>
Of battles great and very hot contests;<br/>
With reason thus I heard Rollant speak then:<br/>
He would not die in any foreign realm<br/>
Ere he'd surpassed his peers and all his men.<br/>
To the foes' land he would have turned his head,<br/>
Conqueringly his gallant life he'ld end."<br/>
Further than one a little wand could send,<br/>
Before the rest he's on a peak mounted.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00419"> CCV</h5>
<p id="id00420"> When the Emperour went seeking his nephew,<br/>
He found the grass, and every flower that bloomed,<br/>
Turned scarlat, with our barons' blood imbrued;<br/>
Pity he felt, he could but weep for rue.<br/>
Beneath two trees he climbed the hill and looked,<br/>
And Rollant's strokes on three terraces knew,<br/>
On the green grass saw lying his nephew;<br/>
`Tis nothing strange that Charles anger grew.<br/>
Dismounted then, and went—his heart was full,<br/>
In his two hands the count's body he took;<br/>
With anguish keen he fell on him and swooned.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00421"> CCVI</h5>
<p id="id00422"> That Emperour is from his swoon revived.<br/>
Naimes the Duke, and the count Aceline,<br/>
Gefrei d'Anjou and his brother Tierry,<br/>
Take up the King, bear him beneath a pine.<br/>
There on the ground he sees his nephew lie.<br/>
Most sweetly then begins he to repine:<br/>
"Rollant, my friend, may God to thee be kind!<br/>
Never beheld any man such a knight<br/>
So to engage and so to end a fight.<br/>
Now my honour is turned into decline!"<br/>
Charle swoons again, he cannot stand upright.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00423"> CCVII</h5>
<p id="id00424"> Charles the King returned out of his swoon.<br/>
Him in their hands four of his barons took,<br/>
He looked to the earth, saw lying his nephew;<br/>
All colourless his lusty body grew,<br/>
He turned his eyes, were very shadowful.<br/>
Charles complained in amity and truth:<br/>
"Rollant, my friend, God lay thee mid the blooms<br/>
Of Paradise, among the glorious!<br/>
Thou cam'st to Spain in evil tide, seigneur!<br/>
Day shall not dawn, for thee I've no dolour.<br/>
How perishes my strength and my valour!<br/>
None shall I have now to sustain my honour;<br/>
I think I've not one friend neath heaven's roof,<br/>
Kinsmen I have, but none of them's so proof."<br/>
He tore his locks, till both his hands were full.<br/>
Five score thousand Franks had such great dolour<br/>
There was not one but sorely wept for rue.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00425"> CCVIII</h5>
<p id="id00426"> "Rollant, my friend, to France I will away;<br/>
When at Loum, I'm in my hall again,<br/>
Strange men will come from many far domains,<br/>
Who'll ask me, where's that count, the Capitain;<br/>
I'll say to them that he is dead in Spain.<br/>
In bitter grief henceforward shall I reign,<br/>
Day shall not dawn, I weep not nor complain.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00427"> CCIX</h5>
<p id="id00428"> "Rollant, my friend, fair youth that bar'st the bell,<br/>
When I arrive at Aix, in my Chapelle,<br/>
Men coming there will ask what news I tell;<br/>
I'll say to them: `Marvellous news and fell.<br/>
My nephew's dead, who won for me such realms!'<br/>
Against me then the Saxon will rebel,<br/>
Hungar, Bulgar, and many hostile men,<br/>
Romain, Puillain, all those are in Palerne,<br/>
And in Affrike, and those in Califerne;<br/>
Afresh then will my pain and suffrance swell.<br/>
For who will lead my armies with such strength,<br/>
When he is slain, that all our days us led?<br/>
Ah! France the Douce, now art thou deserted!<br/>
Such grief I have that I would fain be dead."<br/>
All his white beard he hath begun to rend,<br/>
Tore with both hands the hair out of his head.<br/>
Five score thousand Franks swooned on the earth and fell.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00429"> CCX</h5>
<p id="id00430"> "Rollant, my friend, God shew thee His mercy!<br/>
In Paradise repose the soul of thee!<br/>
Who hath thee slain, exile for France decreed.<br/>
I'ld live no more, so bitter is my grief<br/>
For my household, who have been slain for me.<br/>
God grant me this, the Son of Saint Mary,<br/>
Ere I am come to th' master-pass of Size,<br/>
From my body my soul at length go free!<br/>
Among their souls let mine in glory be,<br/>
And let my flesh upon their flesh be heaped."<br/>
Still his white beard he tears, and his eyes weep.<br/>
Duke Naimes says: "His wrath is great indeed."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00431"> CCXI</h5>
<p id="id00432"> "Sire, Emperour," Gefrei d'Anjou implored,<br/>
"Let not your grief to such excess be wrought;<br/>
Bid that our men through all this field be sought,<br/>
Whom those of Spain have in the battle caught;<br/>
In a charnel command that they be borne."<br/>
Answered the King: "Sound then upon your horn."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00433"> CCXII</h5>
<p id="id00434"> Gefreid d'Anjou upon his trumpet sounds;<br/>
As Charles bade them, all the Franks dismount.<br/>
All of their friends, whose bodies they have found<br/>
To a charnel speedily the bring down.<br/>
Bishops there are, and abbots there enow,<br/>
Canons and monks, vicars with shaven crowns;<br/>
Absolution in God's name they've pronounced;<br/>
Incense and myrrh with precious gums they've ground,<br/>
And lustily they've swung the censers round;<br/>
With honour great they've laid them in the ground.<br/>
They've left them there; what else might they do now?<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00435"> CCXIII</h5>
<p id="id00436"> That Emperour sets Rollant on one side<br/>
And Oliver, and the Archbishop Turpine;<br/>
Their bodies bids open before his eyes.<br/>
And all their hearts in silken veils to wind,<br/>
And set them in coffers of marble white;<br/>
After, they take the bodies of those knights,<br/>
Each of the three is wrapped in a deer's hide;<br/>
They're washen well in allspice and in wine.<br/>
The King commands Tedbalt and Gebuin,<br/>
Marquis Otun, Milun the count besides:<br/>
Along the road in three wagons to drive.<br/>
They're covered well with carpets Galazine.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00437"> CCXIV</h5>
<p id="id00438"> Now to be off would that Emperour Charles,<br/>
When pagans, lo! comes surging the vanguard;<br/>
Two messengers come from their ranks forward,<br/>
From the admiral bring challenge to combat:<br/>
"'Tis not yet time, proud King, that thou de-part.<br/>
Lo, Baligant comes cantering afterward,<br/>
Great are the hosts he leads from Arab parts;<br/>
This day we'll see if thou hast vassalage."<br/>
Charles the King his snowy beard has clasped,<br/>
Remembering his sorrow and damage,<br/>
Haughtily then his people all regards,<br/>
In a loud voice he cries with all his heart:<br/>
"Barons and Franks, to horse, I say, to arms!"<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00439"> CCXC</h5>
<p id="id00440"> First before all was armed that Emperour,<br/>
Nimbly enough his iron sark indued,<br/>
Laced up his helm, girt on his sword Joiuse,<br/>
Outshone the sun that dazzling light it threw,<br/>
Hung from his neck a shield, was of Girunde,<br/>
And took his spear, was fashioned at Blandune.<br/>
On his good horse then mounted, Tencendur,<br/>
Which he had won at th'ford below Marsune<br/>
When he flung dead Malpalin of Nerbune,<br/>
Let go the reins, spurred him with either foot;<br/>
Five score thousand behind him as he flew,<br/>
Calling on God and the Apostle of Roum.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00441"> CCXVI</h5>
<p id="id00442"> Through all the field dismount the Frankish men,<br/>
Five-score thousand and more, they arm themselves;<br/>
The gear they have enhances much their strength,<br/>
Their horses swift, their arms are fashioned well;<br/>
Mounted they are, and fight with great science.<br/>
Find they that host, battle they'll render them.<br/>
Their gonfalons flutter above their helms.<br/>
When Charles sees the fair aspect of them,<br/>
He calls to him Jozeran of Provence,<br/>
Naimon the Duke, with Antelme of Maience:<br/>
"In such vassals should man have confidence,<br/>
Whom not to trust were surely want of sense;<br/>
Unless the Arabs of coming here repent,<br/>
Then Rollant's life, I think, we'll dearly sell."<br/>
Answers Duke Neimes: "God grant us his consent!"<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00443"> CCXVII</h5>
<p id="id00444"> Charles hath called Rabel and Guineman;<br/>
Thus said the King: "My lords, you I command<br/>
To take their place, Olivier and Rollant,<br/>
One bear the sword and the other the olifant;<br/>
So canter forth ahead, before the van,<br/>
And in your train take fifteen thousand Franks,<br/>
Young bachelors, that are most valiant.<br/>
As many more shall after them advance,<br/>
Whom Gebuins shall lead, also Lorains."<br/>
Naimes the Duke and the count Jozerans<br/>
Go to adjust these columns in their ranks.<br/>
Find they that host, they'll make a grand attack.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00445"> CCXVIII</h5>
<p id="id00446"> Of Franks the first columns made ready there,<br/>
After those two a third they next prepare;<br/>
In it are set the vassals of Baiviere,<br/>
Some thousand score high-prized chevaliers;<br/>
Never was lost the battle, where they were:<br/>
Charles for no race neath heaven hath more care,<br/>
Save those of France, who realms for him conquered.<br/>
The Danish chief, the warrior count Oger,<br/>
Shall lead that troop, for haughty is their air.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00447"> CCXIX</h5>
<p id="id00448"> Three columns now, he has, the Emperour Charles.<br/>
Naimes the Duke a fourth next sets apart<br/>
Of good barons, endowed with vassalage;<br/>
Germans they are, come from the German March,<br/>
A thousand score, as all said afterward;<br/>
They're well equipped with horses and with arms,<br/>
Rather they'll die than from the battle pass;<br/>
They shall be led by Hermans, Duke of Trace,<br/>
Who'll die before he's any way coward.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00449"> CCXX</h5>
<p id="id00450"> Naimes the Duke and the count Jozerans<br/>
The fifth column have mustered, of Normans,<br/>
A thousand score, or so say all the Franks;<br/>
Well armed are they, their horses charge and prance;<br/>
Rather they'ld die, than eer be recreant;<br/>
No race neath heav'n can more in th'field compass.<br/>
Richard the old, lead them in th'field he shall,<br/>
He'll strike hard there with his good trenchant lance.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00451"> CCXXI</h5>
<p id="id00452"> The sixth column is mustered of Bretons;<br/>
Thirty thousand chevaliers therein come;<br/>
These canter in the manner of barons,<br/>
Upright their spears, their ensigns fastened on.<br/>
The overlord of them is named Oedon,<br/>
Who doth command the county Nevelon,<br/>
Tedbald of Reims and the marquis Oton:<br/>
"Lead ye my men, by my commission."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00453"> CCXXII</h5>
<p id="id00454"> That Emperour hath now six columns yare<br/>
Naimes the Duke the seventh next prepares<br/>
Of Peitevins and barons from Alverne;<br/>
Forty thousand chevaliers might be there;<br/>
Their horses good, their arms are all most fair.<br/>
They're neath a cliff, in a vale by themselves;<br/>
With his right hand King Charles hath them blessed,<br/>
Them Jozerans shall lead, also Godselmes.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00455"> CCXXIII</h5>
<p id="id00456"> And the eighth column hath Naimes made ready;<br/>
Tis of Flamengs, and barons out of Frise;<br/>
Forty thousand and more good knights are these,<br/>
Nor lost by them has any battle been.<br/>
And the King says: "These shall do my service."<br/>
Between Rembalt and Hamon of Galice<br/>
Shall they be led, for all their chivalry.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00457"> CCXXIV</h5>
<p id="id00458"> Between Naimon and Jozeran the count<br/>
Are prudent men for the ninth column found,<br/>
Of Lotherengs and those out of Borgoune;<br/>
Fifty thousand good knights they are, by count;<br/>
In helmets laced and sarks of iron brown,<br/>
Strong are their spears, short are the shafts cut down;<br/>
If the Arrabits demur not, but come out<br/>
And trust themselves to these, they'll strike them down.<br/>
Tierris the Duke shall lead them, of Argoune.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00459"> CCXXV</h5>
<p id="id00460"> The tenth column is of barons of France,<br/>
Five score thousand of our best capitans;<br/>
Lusty of limb, and proud of countenance,<br/>
Snowy their heads are, and their beards are blanched,<br/>
In doubled sarks, and in hauberks they're clad,<br/>
Girt on their sides Frankish and Spanish brands<br/>
And noble shields of divers cognisance.<br/>
Soon as they mount, the battle they demand,<br/>
"Monjoie" they cry. With them goes Charlemagne.<br/>
Gefreid d'Anjou carries that oriflamme;<br/>
Saint Peter's twas, and bare the name Roman,<br/>
But on that day Monjoie, by change, it gat.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00461"> CCXXVI</h5>
<p id="id00462"> That Emperour down from his horse descends;<br/>
To the green grass, kneeling, his face he bends.<br/>
Then turns his eyes towards the Orient,<br/>
Calls upon God with heartiest intent:<br/>
"Very Father, this day do me defend,<br/>
Who to Jonas succour didst truly send<br/>
Out of the whale's belly, where he was pent;<br/>
And who didst spare the king of Niniven,<br/>
And Daniel from marvellous torment<br/>
When he was caged within the lions' den;<br/>
And three children, all in a fire ardent:<br/>
Thy gracious Love to me be here present.<br/>
In Thy Mercy, if it please Thee, consent<br/>
That my nephew Rollant I may avenge.<br/>
When he had prayed, upon his feet he stepped,<br/>
With the strong mark of virtue signed his head;<br/>
Upon his swift charger the King mounted<br/>
While Jozerans and Neimes his stirrup held;<br/>
He took his shield, his trenchant spear he kept;<br/>
Fine limbs he had, both gallant and well set;<br/>
Clear was his face and filled with good intent.<br/>
Vigorously he cantered onward thence.<br/>
In front, in rear, they sounded their trumpets,<br/>
Above them all boomed the olifant again.<br/>
Then all the Franks for pity of Rollant wept.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00463"> CCXXVII</h5>
<p id="id00464"> That Emperour canters in noble array,<br/>
Over his sark all of his beard displays;<br/>
For love of him, all others do the same,<br/>
Five score thousand Franks are thereby made plain.<br/>
They pass those peaks, those rocks and those mountains,<br/>
Those terrible narrows, and those deep vales,<br/>
Then issue from the passes and the wastes<br/>
Till they are come into the March of Spain;<br/>
A halt they've made, in th'middle of a plain.<br/>
To Baligant his vanguard comes again<br/>
A Sulian hath told him his message:<br/>
"We have seen Charles, that haughty sovereign;<br/>
Fierce are his men, they have no mind to fail.<br/>
Arm yourself then: Battle you'll have to-day."<br/>
Says Baligant: "Mine is great vassalage;<br/>
Let horns this news to my pagans proclaim."<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00465"> CCXXVIII</h5>
<p id="id00466"> Through all the host they have their drums sounded,<br/>
And their bugles, and, very clear trumpets.<br/>
Pagans dismount, that they may arm themselves.<br/>
Their admiral will stay no longer then;<br/>
Puts on a sark, embroidered in the hems,<br/>
Laces his helm, that is with gold begemmed;<br/>
After, his sword on his left side he's set,<br/>
Out of his pride a name for it he's spelt<br/>
Like to Carlun's, as he has heard it said,<br/>
So Preciuse he bad his own be clept;<br/>
Twas their ensign when they to battle went,<br/>
His chevaliers'; he gave that cry to them.<br/>
His own broad shield he hangs upon his neck,<br/>
(Round its gold boss a band of crystal went,<br/>
The strap of it was a good silken web;)<br/>
He grasps his spear, the which he calls Maltet;—<br/>
So great its shaft as is a stout cudgel,<br/>
Beneath its steel alone, a mule had bent;<br/>
On his charger is Baligant mounted,<br/>
Marcules, from over seas, his stirrup held.<br/>
That warrior, with a great stride he stepped,<br/>
Small were his thighs, his ribs of wide extent,<br/>
Great was his breast, and finely fashioned,<br/>
With shoulders broad and very clear aspect;<br/>
Proud was his face, his hair was ringleted,<br/>
White as a flow'r in summer was his head.<br/>
His vassalage had often been proved.<br/>
God! what a knight, were he a Christian yet!<br/>
His horse he's spurred, the clear blood issued;<br/>
He's gallopped on, over a ditch he's leapt,<br/>
Full fifty feet a man might mark its breadth.<br/>
Pagans cry out: "Our Marches shall be held;<br/>
There is no Frank, may once with him contest,<br/>
Will he or nill, his life he'll soon have spent.<br/>
Charles is mad, that he departs not hence."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00467"> CCXXIX</h5>
<p id="id00468"> That admiral to a baron's like enough,<br/>
White is his beard as flowers by summer burnt;<br/>
In his own laws, of wisdom hath he much;<br/>
And in battle he's proud and arduous.<br/>
His son Malprimes is very chivalrous,<br/>
He's great and strong;—his ancestors were thus.<br/>
Says to his sire: "To canter then let us!<br/>
I marvel much that soon we'll see Carlun."<br/>
Says Baligant: "Yea, for he's very pruff;<br/>
In many tales honour to him is done;<br/>
He hath no more Rollant, his sister's son,<br/>
He'll have no strength to stay in fight with us."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00469"> CCXXX</h5>
<p id="id00470"> "Fair son Malprimes," then says t'him Baligant,<br/>
"Was slain yestreen the good vassal Rollanz,<br/>
And Oliver, the proof and valiant,<br/>
The dozen peers, whom Charles so cherished, and<br/>
Twenty thousand more Frankish combatants.<br/>
For all the rest I'ld not unglove my hand.<br/>
But the Emperour is verily come back,<br/>
—So tells me now my man, that Sulian—<br/>
Ten great columns he's set them in their ranks;<br/>
He's a proof man who sounds that olifant,<br/>
With a clear call he rallies his comrades;<br/>
These at the head come cantering in advance,<br/>
Also with them are fifteen thousand Franks,<br/>
Young bachelors, whom Charles calls Infants;<br/>
As many again come following that band,<br/>
Who will lay on with utmost arrogance."<br/>
Then says Malprimes: "The first blow I demand."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00471"> CCXXXI</h5>
<p id="id00472"> "Fair son Malprimes," says Baligant to him,<br/>
"I grant it you, as you have asked me this;<br/>
Against the Franks go now, and smite them quick.<br/>
And take with you Torleu, the Persian king<br/>
And Dapamort, another king Leutish.<br/>
Their arrogance if you can humble it,<br/>
Of my domains a slice to you I'll give<br/>
From Cheriant unto the Vale Marquis."<br/>
"I thank you, Sire!" Malprimes answers him;<br/>
Going before, he takes delivery;<br/>
'Tis of that land, was held by king Flurit.<br/>
After that hour he never looked on it,<br/>
Investiture gat never, nor seizin.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00473"> CCXXXII</h5>
<p id="id00474"> That admiral canters among his hosts;<br/>
After, his son with's great body follows,<br/>
Torleus the king, and the king Dapamort;<br/>
Thirty columns most speedily they form.<br/>
They've chevaliers in marvellous great force;<br/>
Fifty thousand the smallest column holds.<br/>
The first is raised of men from Butenrot,<br/>
The next, after, Micenes, whose heads are gross;<br/>
Along their backs, above their spinal bones,<br/>
As they were hogs, great bristles on them grow.<br/>
The third is raised from Nubles and from Blos;<br/>
The fourth is raised from Bruns and Esclavoz;<br/>
The fifth is raised from Sorbres and from Sorz;<br/>
The sixth is raised from Ermines and from Mors;<br/>
The seventh is the men of Jericho;<br/>
Negroes are the eighth; the ninth are men of Gros;<br/>
The tenth is raised from Balide the stronghold,<br/>
That is a tribe no goodwill ever shews.<br/>
That admiral hath sworn, the way he knows,<br/>
By Mahumet, his virtues and his bones:<br/>
"Charles of France is mad to canter so;<br/>
Battle he'll have, unless he take him home;<br/>
No more he'll wear on's head that crown of gold."<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00475"> CCXXXIII</h5>
<p id="id00476"> Ten great columns they marshal thereafter;<br/>
Of Canelious, right ugly, is the first,<br/>
Who from Val-Fuit came across country there;<br/>
The next's of Turks; of Persians is the third;<br/>
The fourth is raised of desperate Pinceners,<br/>
The fifth is raised from Soltras and Avers;<br/>
The sixth is from Ormaleus and Eugez;<br/>
The seventh is the tribe of Samuel;<br/>
The eighth is from Bruise; the ninth from Esclavers;<br/>
The tenth is from Occiant, the desert,<br/>
That is a tribe, do not the Lord God serve,<br/>
Of such felons you never else have heard;<br/>
Hard is their hide, as though it iron were,<br/>
Wherefore of helm or hauberk they've no care;<br/>
In the battle they're felon murderers.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00477"> CCXXXIV</h5>
<p id="id00478"> That admiral ten columns more reviews;<br/>
The first is raised of Giants from Malpruse;<br/>
The next of Huns; the third a Hungar crew;<br/>
And from Baldise the Long the fourth have trooped;<br/>
The fifth is raised of men from Val-Penuse;<br/>
The sixth is raised of tribesmen from Maruse;<br/>
The seventh is from Leus and Astrimunes;<br/>
The eighth from Argoilles; the ninth is from Clarbune;<br/>
The tenth is raised of beardsmen from Val-Frunde,<br/>
That is a tribe, no love of God e'er knew.<br/>
Gesta Francor' these thirty columns prove.<br/>
Great are the hosts, their horns come sounding through.<br/>
Pagans canter as men of valour should.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00479"> CCXXXV</h5>
<p id="id00480"> That admiral hath great possessions;<br/>
He makes them bear before him his dragon,<br/>
And their standard, Tervagan's and Mahom's,<br/>
And his image, Apollin the felon.<br/>
Ten Canelious canter in the environs,<br/>
And very loud the cry out this sermon:<br/>
"Let who would from our gods have garrison,<br/>
Serve them and pray with great affliction."<br/>
Pagans awhile their heads and faces on<br/>
Their breasts abase, their polished helmets doff.<br/>
And the Franks say: "Now shall you die, gluttons;<br/>
This day shall bring you vile confusion!<br/>
Give warranty, our God, unto Carlon!<br/>
And in his name this victory be won!"<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00481"> CCXXXVI</h5>
<p id="id00482"> That admiral hath wisdom great indeed;<br/>
His son to him and those two kings calls he:<br/>
My lords barons, beforehand canter ye,<br/>
All my columns together shall you lead;<br/>
But of the best I'll keep beside me three:<br/>
One is of Turks; the next of Ormaleis;<br/>
And the third is the Giants of Malpreis.<br/>
And Occiant's, they'll also stay with me,<br/>
Until with Charles and with the Franks they meet.<br/>
That Emperour, if he combat with me,<br/>
Must lose his head, cut from his shoulders clean;<br/>
He may be sure naught else for him's decreed.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00483"> CCXXXVII</h5>
<p id="id00484"> Great are the hosts, and all the columns fair,<br/>
No peak nor vale nor cliff between them there,<br/>
Thicket nor wood, nor ambush anywhere;<br/>
Across the plain they see each other well.<br/>
Says Baligant: "My pagan tribes adverse,<br/>
Battle to seek, canter ye now ahead!"<br/>
Carries the ensign Amboires of Oluferne;<br/>
Pagans cry out, by Preciuse they swear.<br/>
And the Franks say: "Great hurt this day you'll get!"<br/>
And very loud "Monjoie!" they cry again.<br/>
That Emperour has bid them sound trumpets;<br/>
And the olifant sounds over all its knell.<br/>
The pagans say: "Carlun's people are fair.<br/>
Battle we'll have, bitter and keenly set."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00485"> CCXXXVIII</h5>
<p id="id00486"> Great is that plain, and wide is that country;<br/>
Their helmets shine with golden jewellery,<br/>
Also their sarks embroidered and their shields,<br/>
And the ensigns fixed on all their burnished spears.<br/>
The trumpets sound, their voice is very clear,<br/>
And the olifant its echoing music speaks.<br/>
Then the admiral, his brother calleth he,<br/>
'Tis Canabeus, the king of Floredee,<br/>
Who holds the land unto the Vale Sevree;<br/>
He's shewn to him Carlun's ten companies:<br/>
"The pride of France, renowned land, you see.<br/>
That Emperour canters right haughtily,<br/>
His bearded men are with him in the rear;<br/>
Over their sarks they have thrown out their beards<br/>
Which are as white as driven snows that freeze.<br/>
Strike us they will with lances and with spears:<br/>
Battle with them we'll have, prolonged and keen;<br/>
Never has man beheld such armies meet."<br/>
Further than one might cast a rod that's peeled<br/>
Goes Baligant before his companies.<br/>
His reason then he's shewn to them, and speaks:<br/>
"Pagans, come on; for now I take the field."<br/>
His spear in hand he brandishes and wields,<br/>
Towards Carlun has turned the point of steel.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00487"> CCXXXIX</h5>
<p id="id00488"> Charles the Great, when he sees the admiral<br/>
And the dragon, his ensign and standard;—<br/>
(In such great strength are mustered those Arabs<br/>
Of that country they've covered every part<br/>
Save only that whereon the Emperour was.)<br/>
The King of France in a loud voice has called:<br/>
"Barons and Franks, good vassals are ye all,<br/>
Ye in the field have fought so great combats;<br/>
See the pagans; they're felons and cowards,<br/>
No pennyworth is there in all their laws.<br/>
Though they've great hosts, my lords, what matters that?<br/>
Let him go hence, who'ld fail me in the attack."<br/>
Next with both spurs he's gored his horse's flanks,<br/>
And Tencendor has made four bounds thereat.<br/>
Then say the Franks: "This King's a good vassal.<br/>
Canter, brave lord, for none of us holds back."<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00489"> CCXL</h5>
<p id="id00490"> Clear is the day, and the sun radiant;<br/>
The hosts are fair, the companies are grand.<br/>
The first columns are come now hand to hand.<br/>
The count Rabel and the count Guinemans<br/>
Let fall the reins on their swift horses' backs,<br/>
Spurring in haste; then on rush all the Franks,<br/>
And go to strike, each with his trenchant lance.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00491"> CCXLI</h5>
<p id="id00492"> That count Rabel, he was a hardy knight,<br/>
He pricked his horse with spurs of gold so fine,<br/>
The Persian king, Torleu, he went to strike.<br/>
Nor shield nor sark could such a blow abide;<br/>
The golden spear his carcass passed inside;<br/>
Flung down upon a little bush, he died.<br/>
Then say the Franks: "Lord God, be Thou our Guide!<br/>
Charles we must not fail; his cause is right."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00493"> CCXLII</h5>
<p id="id00494"> And Guineman tilts with the king Leutice;<br/>
Has broken all the flowers on his shield,<br/>
Next of his sark he has undone the seam,<br/>
All his ensign thrust through the carcass clean,<br/>
So flings him dead, let any laugh or weep.<br/>
Upon that blow, the Franks cry out with heat:<br/>
"Strike on, baron, nor slacken in your speed!<br/>
Charle's in the right against the pagan breed;<br/>
God sent us here his justice to complete."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00495"> CCXLIII</h5>
<p id="id00496"> Pure white the horse whereon Malprimes sate;<br/>
Guided his corse amid the press of Franks,<br/>
Hour in, hour out, great blows he struck them back,<br/>
And, ever, dead one upon others packed.<br/>
Before them all has cried out Baligant:<br/>
"Barons, long time I've fed you at my hand.<br/>
Ye see my son, who goes on Carlun's track,<br/>
And with his arms so many lords attacks;<br/>
Better vassal than him I'll not demand.<br/>
Go, succour him, each with his trenchant lance!"<br/>
Upon that word the pagans all advance;<br/>
Grim blows they strike, the slaughter's very grand.<br/>
And marvellous and weighty the combat:<br/>
Before nor since was never such attack.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00497"> CCXLIV</h5>
<p id="id00498"> Great are the hosts; the companies in pride<br/>
Come touching, all the breadth of either side;<br/>
And the pagans do marvellously strike.<br/>
So many shafts, by God! in pieces lie<br/>
And crumpled shields, and sarks with mail untwined!<br/>
So spattered all the earth there would you find<br/>
That through the field the grass so green and fine<br/>
With men's life-blood is all vermilion dyed.<br/>
That admiral rallies once more his tribe:<br/>
"Barons, strike on, shatter the Christian line."<br/>
Now very keen and lasting is the fight,<br/>
As never was, before or since that time;<br/>
The finish none shall reach, unless he die.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00499"> CCXLV</h5>
<p id="id00500"> That admiral to all his race appeals:<br/>
"Pagans, strike on; came you not therefore here?<br/>
I promise you noble women and dear,<br/>
I promise you honours and lands and fiefs."<br/>
Answer pagans: "We must do well indeed."<br/>
With mighty blows they shatter all their spears;<br/>
Five score thousand swords from their scabbards leap,<br/>
Slaughter then, grim and sorrowful, you'd seen.<br/>
Battle he saw, that stood those hosts between.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00501"> CCXLVI</h5>
<p id="id00502"> That Emperour calls on his Franks and speaks:<br/>
"I love you, lords, in whom I well believe;<br/>
So many great battles you've fought for me,<br/>
Kings overthrown, and kingdoms have redeemed!<br/>
Guerdon I owe, I know it well indeed;<br/>
My lands, my wealth, my body are yours to keep.<br/>
For sons, for heirs, for brothers wreak<br/>
Who in Rencesvals were slaughtered yester-eve!<br/>
Mine is the right, ye know, gainst pagan breeds."<br/>
Answer the Franks: "Sire, 'tis the truth you speak."<br/>
Twenty thousand beside him Charles leads,<br/>
Who with one voice have sworn him fealty;<br/>
In straits of death they never will him leave.<br/>
There is not one thenceforth employs his spear,<br/>
But with their swords they strike in company.<br/>
The battle is straitened marvellously.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00503"> CCXLVII</h5>
<p id="id00504"> Across that field the bold Malprimes canters;<br/>
Who of the Franks hath wrought there much great damage.<br/>
Naimes the Duke right haughtily regards him,<br/>
And goes to strike him, like a man of valour,<br/>
And of his shield breaks all the upper margin,<br/>
Tears both the sides of his embroidered ha'berk,<br/>
Through the carcass thrusts all his yellow banner;<br/>
So dead among sev'n hundred else he casts him.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00505"> CCXLVIII</h5>
<p id="id00506"> King Canabeus, brother of the admiral,<br/>
Has pricked his horse with spurs in either flank;<br/>
He's drawn his sword, whose hilt is of crystal,<br/>
And strikes Naimun on's helmet principal;<br/>
Away from it he's broken off one half,<br/>
Five of the links his brand of steel hath knapped;<br/>
No pennyworth the hood is after that;<br/>
Right to the flesh he slices through the cap;<br/>
One piece of it he's flung upon the land.<br/>
Great was the blow; the Duke, amazed thereat,<br/>
Had fallen ev'n, but aid from God he had;<br/>
His charger's neck he clasped with both his hands.<br/>
Had the pagan but once renewed the attack,<br/>
Then was he slain, that noble old vassal.<br/>
Came there to him, with succour, Charles of France.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00507"> CCXLIX</h5>
<p id="id00508"> Keen anguish then he suffers, that Duke Naimes,<br/>
And the pagan, to strike him, hotly hastens.<br/>
"Culvert," says Charles, "You'll get now as you gave him!"<br/>
With vassalage he goes to strike that pagan,<br/>
Shatters his shield, against his heart he breaks it,<br/>
Tears the chin-guard above his hauberk mailed;<br/>
So flings him dead: his saddle shall be wasted.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00509"> CCL</h5>
<p id="id00510"> Bitter great grief has Charlemagne the King,<br/>
Who Duke Naimun before him sees lying,<br/>
On the green grass all his clear blood shedding.<br/>
Then the Emperour to him this counsel gives:<br/>
"Fair master Naimes, canter with me to win!<br/>
The glutton's dead, that had you straitly pinned;<br/>
Through his carcass my spear I thrust once in."<br/>
Answers the Duke: "Sire, I believe it, this.<br/>
Great proof you'll have of valour, if I live."<br/>
They 'ngage them then, true love and faith swearing;<br/>
A thousand score of Franks surround them still.<br/>
Nor is there one, but slaughters, strikes and kills.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00511"> CCLI</h5>
<p id="id00512"> Then through the field cantered that admiral,<br/>
Going to strike the county Guineman;<br/>
Against his heart his argent shield he cracked,<br/>
The folds of his hauberk apart he slashed,<br/>
Two of his ribs out of his side he hacked,<br/>
So flung him dead, while still his charger ran.<br/>
After, he slew Gebuin and Lorain,<br/>
Richard the old, the lord of those Normans.<br/>
"Preciuse," cry pagans, "is valiant!<br/>
Baron, strike on; here have we our warrant!"<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00513"> CCLII</h5>
<p id="id00514"> Who then had seen those Arrabit chevaliers,<br/>
From Occiant, from Argoille and from Bascle!<br/>
And well they strike and slaughter with their lances;<br/>
But Franks, to escape they think it no great matter;<br/>
On either side dead men to the earth fall crashing.<br/>
Till even-tide 'tis very strong, that battle;<br/>
Barons of France do suffer much great damage,<br/>
Grief shall be there ere the two hosts be scattered.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00515"> CCLIII</h5>
<p id="id00516"> Right well they strike, both Franks and Arrabies,<br/>
Breaking the shafts of all their burnished spears.<br/>
Whoso had seen that shattering of shields,<br/>
Whoso had heard those shining hauberks creak,<br/>
And heard those shields on iron helmets beat,<br/>
Whoso had seen fall down those chevaliers,<br/>
And heard men groan, dying upon that field,<br/>
Some memory of bitter pains might keep.<br/>
That battle is most hard to endure, indeed.<br/>
And the admiral calls upon Apollin<br/>
And Tervagan and Mahum, prays and speaks:<br/>
"My lords and gods, I've done you much service;<br/>
Your images, in gold I'll fashion each;<br/>
Against Carlun give me your warranty!"<br/>
Comes before him his dear friend Gemalfin,<br/>
Evil the news he brings to him and speaks:<br/>
"Sir Baliganz, this day in shame you're steeped;<br/>
For you have lost your son, even Malprime;<br/>
And Canabeus, your brother, slain is he.<br/>
Fairly two Franks have got the victory;<br/>
That Emperour was one, as I have seen;<br/>
Great limbs he has, he's every way Marquis,<br/>
White is his beard as flowers in April."<br/>
That admiral has bent his head down deep,<br/>
And thereafter lowers his face and weeps,<br/>
Fain would he die at once, so great his grief;<br/>
He calls to him Jangleu from over sea.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00517"> CCLIV</h5>
<p id="id00518"> Says the admiral, "Jangleu, beside me stand!<br/>
For you are proof, and greatly understand,<br/>
Counsel from you I've ever sought to have.<br/>
How seems it you, of Arrabits and Franks,<br/>
Shall we from hence victorious go back?"<br/>
He answers him: "Slain are you, Baligant!<br/>
For from your gods you'll never have warrant.<br/>
So proud is Charles, his men so valiant,<br/>
Never saw I a race so combatant.<br/>
But call upon barons of Occiant,<br/>
Turks and Enfruns, Arrabits and Giants.<br/>
No more delay: what must be, take in hand."<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00519"> CCLV</h5>
<p id="id00520"> That admiral has shaken out his beard<br/>
That ev'n so white as thorn in blossom seems;<br/>
He'll no way hide, whateer his fate may be,<br/>
Then to his mouth he sets a trumpet clear,<br/>
And clearly sounds, so all the pagans hear.<br/>
Throughout the field rally his companies.<br/>
From Occiant, those men who bray and bleat,<br/>
And from Argoille, who, like dogs barking, speak;<br/>
Seek out the Franks with such a high folly,<br/>
Break through their line, the thickest press they meet<br/>
Dead from that shock they've seven thousand heaped.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00521"> CCLVI</h5>
<p id="id00522"> The count Oger no cowardice e'er knew,<br/>
Better vassal hath not his sark indued.<br/>
He sees the Franks, their columns broken through,<br/>
So calls to him Duke Tierris, of Argune,<br/>
Count Jozeran, and Gefreid, of Anjou;<br/>
And to Carlun most proud his reason proves:<br/>
"Behold pagans, and how your men they slew!<br/>
Now from your head please God the crown remove<br/>
Unless you strike, and vengeance on them do!"<br/>
And not one word to answer him he knew;<br/>
They spurred in haste, their horses let run loose,<br/>
And, wheresoeer they met the pagans, strook.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00523"> CCLVII</h5>
<p id="id00524"> Now very well strikes the King Charlemagne,<br/>
Naimes the Duke, also Oger the Dane,<br/>
Geifreid d'Anjou, who that ensign displays.<br/>
Exceeding proof is Don Oger, the Dane;<br/>
He spurs his horse, and lets him run in haste,<br/>
So strikes that man who the dragon displays.<br/>
Both in the field before his feet he breaks<br/>
That king's ensign and dragon, both abased.<br/>
Baligant sees his gonfalon disgraced,<br/>
And Mahumet's standard thrown from its place;<br/>
That admiral at once perceives it plain,<br/>
That he is wrong, and right is Charlemain.<br/>
Pagan Arabs coyly themselves contain;<br/>
That Emperour calls on his Franks again:<br/>
"Say, barons, come, support me, in God's Name!"<br/>
Answer the Franks, "Question you make in vain;<br/>
All felon he that dares not exploits brave!"<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00525"> CCLVIII</h5>
<p id="id00526"> Passes that day, turns into vesper-tide.<br/>
Franks and pagans still with their swords do strike.<br/>
Brave vassals they, who brought those hosts to fight,<br/>
Never have they forgotten their ensigns;<br/>
That admiral still "Preciuse" doth cry,<br/>
Charles "Monjoie," renowned word of pride.<br/>
Each the other knows by his clear voice and high;<br/>
Amid the field they're both come into sight,<br/>
Then, as they go, great blows on either side<br/>
They with their spears on their round targes strike;<br/>
And shatter them, beneath their buckles wide;<br/>
And all the folds of their hauberks divide;<br/>
But bodies, no; wound them they never might.<br/>
Broken their girths, downwards their saddles slide;<br/>
Both those Kings fall, themselves aground do find;<br/>
Nimbly enough upon their feet they rise;<br/>
Most vassal-like they draw their swords outright.<br/>
From this battle they'll ne'er be turned aside<br/>
Nor make an end, without that one man die.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00527"> CCLIX</h5>
<p id="id00528"> A great vassal was Charles, of France the Douce;<br/>
That admiral no fear nor caution knew.<br/>
Those swords they had, bare from their sheaths they drew;<br/>
Many great blows on 's shield each gave and took;<br/>
The leather pierced, and doubled core of wood;<br/>
Down fell the nails, the buckles brake in two;<br/>
Still they struck on, bare in their sarks they stood.<br/>
From their bright helms the light shone forth anew.<br/>
Finish nor fail that battle never could<br/>
But one of them must in the wrong be proved.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00529"> CCLX</h5>
<p id="id00530"> Says the admiral: "Nay, Charles, think, I beg,<br/>
And counsel take that t'wards me thou repent!<br/>
Thou'st slain my son, I know that very well;<br/>
Most wrongfully my land thou challengest;<br/>
Become my man, a fief from me thou'lt get;<br/>
Come, serving me, from here to the Orient!"<br/>
Charle answers him: "That were most vile offence;<br/>
No peace nor love may I to pagan lend.<br/>
Receive the Law that God to us presents,<br/>
Christianity, and then I'll love thee well;<br/>
Serve and believe the King Omnipotent!"<br/>
Says Baligant: "Evil sermon thou saist."<br/>
They go to strikewith th'swords, are on their belts.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00531"> CCLXI</h5>
<p id="id00532"> In the admiral is much great virtue found;<br/>
He strikes Carlun on his steel helm so brown,<br/>
Has broken it and rent, above his brow,<br/>
Through his thick hair the sword goes glancing round,<br/>
A great palm's breadth and more of flesh cuts out,<br/>
So that all bare the bone is, in that wound.<br/>
Charles tottereth, falls nearly to the ground;<br/>
God wills not he be slain or overpow'red.<br/>
Saint Gabriel once more to him comes down,<br/>
And questions him "Great King, what doest thou?"<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00533"> CCLXII</h5>
<p id="id00534"> Charles, hearing how that holy Angel spake,<br/>
Had fear of death no longer, nor dismay;<br/>
Remembrance and a fresh vigour he's gained.<br/>
So the admiral he strikes with France's blade,<br/>
His helmet breaks, whereon the jewels blaze,<br/>
Slices his head, to scatter all his brains,<br/>
And, down unto the white beard, all his face;<br/>
So he falls dead, recovers not again.<br/>
"Monjoie," cries Charles, that all may know the tale.<br/>
Upon that word is come to him Duke Naimes,<br/>
Holds Tencendur, bids mount that King so Great.<br/>
Pagans turn back, God wills not they remain.<br/>
And Franks have all their wish, be that what may.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00535"> CCLXIII</h5>
<p id="id00536"> Pagans are fled, ev'n as the Lord God wills;<br/>
Chase them the Franks, and the Emperour therewith.<br/>
Says the King then: "My Lords, avenge your ills,<br/>
Unto your hearts' content, do what you will!<br/>
For tears, this morn, I saw your eyes did spill."<br/>
Answer the Franks: "Sir, even so we will."<br/>
Then such great blows, as each may strike, he gives<br/>
That few escape, of those remain there still.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00537"> CCLXIV</h5>
<p id="id00538"> Great was the heat, the dust arose and blew;<br/>
Still pagans fled, and hotly Franks pursued.<br/>
The chase endured from there to Sarraguce.<br/>
On her tower, high up clomb Bramimunde,<br/>
Around her there the clerks and canons stood<br/>
Of the false law, whom God ne'er loved nor knew;<br/>
Orders they'd none, nor were their heads tonsured.<br/>
And when she saw those Arrabits confused<br/>
Aloud she cried: "Give us your aid, Mahume!<br/>
Ah! Noble king, conquered are all our troops,<br/>
And the admiral to shameful slaughter put!"<br/>
When Marsile heard, towards the wall he looked,<br/>
Wept from his eyes, and all his body stooped,<br/>
So died of grief. With sins he's so corrupt;<br/>
The soul of him to Hell live devils took.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00539"> CCLXV</h5>
<p id="id00540"> Pagans are slain; the rest are put to rout<br/>
Whom Charles hath in battle overpowered.<br/>
Of Sarraguce the gates he's battered down,<br/>
For well he knows there's no defence there now;<br/>
In come his men, he occupies that town;<br/>
And all that night they lie there in their pow'r.<br/>
Fierce is that King, with 's hoary beard, and proud,<br/>
And Bramimunde hath yielded up her towers;<br/>
But ten ere great, and lesser fifty around.<br/>
Great exploits his whom the Lord God endows!<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00541"> CCLXVI</h5>
<p id="id00542"> Passes the day, the darkness is grown deep,<br/>
But all the stars burn, and the moon shines clear.<br/>
And Sarraguce is in the Emperour's keep.<br/>
A thousand Franks he bids seek through the streets,<br/>
The synagogues and the mahumeries;<br/>
With iron malls and axes which they wield<br/>
They break the idols and all the imageries;<br/>
So there remain no fraud nor falsity.<br/>
That King fears God, and would do His service,<br/>
On water then Bishops their blessing speak,<br/>
And pagans bring into the baptistry.<br/>
If any Charles with contradiction meet<br/>
Then hanged or burned or slaughtered shall he be.<br/>
Five score thousand and more are thus redeemed,<br/>
Very Christians; save that alone the queen<br/>
To France the Douce goes in captivity;<br/>
By love the King will her conversion seek.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00543"> CCLXVII</h5>
<p id="id00544"> Passes the night, the clear day opens now.<br/>
Of Sarraguce Charles garrisons the tow'rs;<br/>
A thousand knights he's left there, fighters stout;<br/>
Who guard that town as bids their Emperour.<br/>
After, the King and all his army mount,<br/>
And Bramimunde a prisoner is bound,<br/>
No harm to her, but only good he's vowed.<br/>
So are they come, with joy and gladness out,<br/>
They pass Nerbone by force and by vigour,<br/>
Come to Burdele, that city of high valour.<br/>
Above the altar, to Saint Sevrin endowed,<br/>
Stands the olifant, with golden pieces bound;<br/>
All the pilgrims may see it, who thither crowd.<br/>
Passing Girunde in great ships, there abound,<br/>
Ev'n unto Blaive he's brought his nephew down<br/>
And Oliver, his noble companioun,<br/>
And the Archbishop, who was so wise and proud.<br/>
In white coffers he bids them lay those counts<br/>
At Saint Romain: So rest they in that ground.<br/>
Franks them to God and to His Angels vow.<br/>
Charles canters on, by valleys and by mounts,<br/>
Not before Aix will he not make sojourn;<br/>
Canters so far, on th'terrace he dismounts.<br/>
When he is come into his lofty house,<br/>
By messengers he seeks his judges out;<br/>
Saxons, Baivers, Lotherencs and Frisouns,<br/>
Germans he calls, and also calls Borgounds;<br/>
From Normandy, from Brittany and Poitou,<br/>
And those in France that are the sagest found.<br/>
Thereon begins the cause of Gueneloun.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00545"> CCLXVIII</h5>
<p id="id00546"> That Emperour, returning out of Spain,<br/>
Arrived in France, in his chief seat, at Aix,<br/>
Clomb to th' Palace, into the hall he came.<br/>
Was come to him there Alde, that fair dame;<br/>
Said to the King: "Where's Rollanz the Captain,<br/>
Who sware to me, he'ld have me for his mate?"<br/>
Then upon Charles a heavy sorrow weighed,<br/>
And his eyes wept, he tore his beard again:<br/>
"Sister, dear friend, of a dead man you spake.<br/>
I'll give you one far better in exchange,<br/>
That is Loewis, what further can I say;<br/>
He is my son, and shall my marches take."<br/>
Alde answered him: "That word to me is strange.<br/>
Never, please God, His Angels and His Saints,<br/>
When Rollant's dead shall I alive remain!"<br/>
Her colour fails, at th' feet of Charlemain,<br/>
She falls; she's dead. Her soul God's Mercy awaits!<br/>
Barons of France weep therefore and complain.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00547"> CCLXIX</h5>
<p id="id00548"> Alde the fair is gone now to her rest.<br/>
Yet the King thought she was but swooning then,<br/>
Pity he had, our Emperour, and wept,<br/>
Took her in's hands, raised her from th'earth again;<br/>
On her shoulders her head still drooped and leant.<br/>
When Charles saw that she was truly dead<br/>
Four countesses at once he summoned;<br/>
To a monast'ry of nuns they bare her thence,<br/>
All night their watch until the dawn they held;<br/>
Before the altar her tomb was fashioned well;<br/>
Her memory the King with honour kept.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00549"> CCLXX</h5>
<p id="id00550"> That Emperour is now returned to Aix.<br/>
The felon Guene, all in his iron chains<br/>
Is in that town, before the King's Palace;<br/>
Those serfs have bound him, fast upon his stake,<br/>
In deer-hide thongs his hands they've helpless made,<br/>
With clubs and whips they trounce him well and baste:<br/>
He has deserved not any better fate;<br/>
In bitter grief his trial there he awaits.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00551"> CCLXXI</h5>
<p id="id00552"> Written it is, and in an ancient geste<br/>
How Charles called from many lands his men,<br/>
Assembled them at Aix, in his Chapelle.<br/>
Holy that day, for some chief feast was held,<br/>
Saint Silvester's that baron's, many tell.<br/>
Thereon began the trial and defence<br/>
Of Guenelun, who had the treason spelt.<br/>
Before himself the Emperour has him led.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00553"> CCLXXII</h5>
<p id="id00554"> "Lords and barons," Charles the King doth speak,<br/>
"Of Guenelun judge what the right may be!<br/>
He was in th'host, even in Spain with me;<br/>
There of my Franks a thousand score did steal,<br/>
And my nephew, whom never more you'll see,<br/>
And Oliver, in 's pride and courtesy,<br/>
And, wealth to gain, betrayed the dozen peers."<br/>
"Felon be I," said Guenes, "aught to conceal!<br/>
He did from me much gold and wealth forfeit,<br/>
Whence to destroy and slay him did I seek;<br/>
But treason, no; I vow there's not the least."<br/>
Answer the Franks: "Take counsel now must we."<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00555"> CCLXXIII</h5>
<p id="id00556"> So Guenelun, before the King there, stood;<br/>
Lusty his limbs, his face of gentle hue;<br/>
Were he loyal, right baron-like he'd looked.<br/>
He saw those Franks, and all who'ld judge his doom,<br/>
And by his side his thirty kinsmen knew.<br/>
After, he cried aloud; his voice was full:<br/>
"For th' Love of God, listen to me, baruns!<br/>
I was in th' host, beside our Emperour,<br/>
Service I did him there in faith and truth.<br/>
Hatred of me had Rollant, his nephew;<br/>
So he decreed death for me and dolour.<br/>
Message I bare to king Marsiliun;<br/>
By my cunning I held myself secure.<br/>
To that fighter Rollant my challenge threw,<br/>
To Oliver, and all their comrades too;<br/>
Charles heard that, and his noble baruns.<br/>
Vengeance I gat, but there's no treason proved."<br/>
Answered the Franks: "Now go we to the moot.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00557"> CCLXXIV</h5>
<p id="id00558"> When Guenes sees, his great cause is beginning,<br/>
Thirty he has around him of his kinsmen,<br/>
There's one of them to whom the others listen,<br/>
'Tis Pinabel, who in Sorence castle liveth;<br/>
Well can he speak, soundly his reasons giving,<br/>
A good vassal, whose arm to fight is stiffened.<br/>
Says to him Guenes: "In you my faith is fixed.<br/>
Save me this day from death, also from prison."<br/>
Says Pinabel: "Straightway you'll be delivered.<br/>
Is there one Frank, that you to hang committeth?<br/>
Let the Emperour but once together bring us,<br/>
With my steel brand he shall be smartly chidden."<br/>
Guenes the count kneels at his feet to kiss them.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00559"> CCLXXV</h5>
<p id="id00560"> To th' counsel go those of Bavier and Saxe,<br/>
Normans also, with Poitevins and Franks;<br/>
Enough there are of Tudese and Germans.<br/>
Those of Alverne the greatest court'sy have,<br/>
From Pinabel most quietly draw back.<br/>
Says each to each: "'Twere well to let it stand.<br/>
Leave we this cause, and of the King demand<br/>
That he cry quits with Guenes for this act;<br/>
With love and faith he'll serve him after that.<br/>
Since he is dead, no more ye'll see Rollanz,<br/>
Nor any wealth nor gold may win him back.<br/>
Most foolish then is he, would do combat."<br/>
There is but one agrees not to their plan;<br/>
Tierri, brother to Don Geifreit, 's that man.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00561"> CCLXXVI</h5>
<p id="id00562"> Then his barons, returning to Carlun,<br/>
Say to their King: "Sire, we beseech of you<br/>
That you cry quits with county Guenelun,<br/>
So he may serve you still in love and truth;<br/>
Nay let him live, so noble a man 's he proved.<br/>
Rollant is dead, no longer in our view,<br/>
Nor for no wealth may we his life renew."<br/>
Then says the King: "You're felons all of you!"<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00563"> CCLXXVII</h5>
<p id="id00564"> When Charles saw that all of them did fail,<br/>
Deep down he bowed his head and all his face<br/>
For th' grief he had, caitiff himself proclaimed.<br/>
One of his knights, Tierris, before him came,<br/>
Gefrei's brother, that Duke of Anjou famed;<br/>
Lean were his limbs, and lengthy and delicate,<br/>
Black was his hair and somewhat brown his face;<br/>
Was not too small, and yet was hardly great;<br/>
And courteously to the Emperour he spake:<br/>
"Fair' Lord and King, do not yourself dismay!<br/>
You know that I have served you many ways:<br/>
By my ancestors should I this cause maintain.<br/>
And if Rollant was forfeited to Guenes<br/>
Still your service to him full warrant gave.<br/>
Felon is Guene, since th' hour that he betrayed,<br/>
And, towards you, is perjured and ashamed:<br/>
Wherefore I judge that he be hanged and slain,<br/>
His carcass flung to th' dogs beside the way,<br/>
As a felon who felony did make.<br/>
But, has he a friend that would dispute my claim<br/>
With this my sword which I have girt in place<br/>
My judgement will I warrant every way."<br/>
Answer the Franks: "Now very well you spake."<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00565"> CCLXXVIII</h5>
<p id="id00566"> Before the King is come now Pinabel;<br/>
Great is he, strong, vassalous and nimble;<br/>
Who bears his blow has no more time to dwell:<br/>
Says to him: "Sire, on you this cause depends;<br/>
Command therefore this noise be made an end.<br/>
See Tierri here, who hath his judgment dealt;<br/>
I cry him false, and will the cause contest."<br/>
His deer-hide glove in the King's hand he's left.<br/>
Says the Emperour: "Good pledges must I get."<br/>
Thirty kinsmen offer their loyal pledge.<br/>
"I'll do the same for you," the King has said;<br/>
Until the right be shewn, bids guard them well.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00567"> CCLXXIX</h5>
<p id="id00568"> When Tierri sees that battle shall come after,<br/>
His right hand glove he offereth to Chares.<br/>
That Emperour by way of hostage guards it;<br/>
Four benches then upon the place he marshals<br/>
Where sit them down champions of either party.<br/>
They're chos'n aright, as the others' judgement cast them;<br/>
Oger the Dane between them made the parley.<br/>
Next they demand their horses and their armour.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00569"> CCLXXX</h5>
<p id="id00570"> For battle, now, ready you might them see,<br/>
They're well confessed, absolved, from sin set free;<br/>
Masses they've heard, Communion received,<br/>
Rich offerings to those minsters they leave.<br/>
Before Carlun now both the two appear:<br/>
They have their spurs, are fastened on their feet,<br/>
And, light and strong, their hauberks brightly gleam;<br/>
Upon their heads they've laced their helmets clear,<br/>
And girt on swords, with pure gold hilted each;<br/>
And from their necks hang down their quartered shields;<br/>
In their right hands they grasp their trenchant spears.<br/>
At last they mount on their swift coursing steeds.<br/>
Five score thousand chevaliers therefor weep,<br/>
For Rollant's sake pity for Tierri feel.<br/>
God knows full well which way the end shall be.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00571"> CCLXXXI</h5>
<p id="id00572"> Down under Aix there is a pasture large<br/>
Which for the fight of th' two barons is marked.<br/>
Proof men are these, and of great vassalage,<br/>
And their horses, unwearied, gallop fast;<br/>
They spur them well, the reins aside they cast,<br/>
With virtue great, to strike each other, dart;<br/>
All of their shields shatter and rend apart.<br/>
Their hauberks tear; the girths asunder start,<br/>
The saddles slip, and fall upon the grass.<br/>
Five score thousand weep, who that sight regard.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00573"> CCLXXXII</h5>
<p id="id00574"> Upon the ground are fallen both the knights;<br/>
Nimbly enough upon their feet they rise.<br/>
Nimble and strong is Pinabels, and light.<br/>
Each the other seeks; horses are out of mind,<br/>
But with those swords whose hilts with gold are lined<br/>
Upon those helms of steel they beat and strike:<br/>
Great are the blows, those helmets to divide.<br/>
The chevaliers of France do much repine.<br/>
"O God!" says Charles, "Make plain to us the right!"<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00575"> CCLXXXIII</h5>
<p id="id00576"> Says Pinabel "Tierri, I pray thee, yield:<br/>
I'll be thy man, in love and fealty;<br/>
For the pleasure my wealth I'll give to thee;<br/>
But make the King with Guenelun agree."<br/>
Answers Tierri: "Such counsel's not for me.<br/>
Pure felon I, if e'er I that concede!<br/>
God shall this day the right shew, us between!"<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00577"> CCLXXXIV</h5>
<p id="id00578"> Then said Tierri "Bold art thou, Pinabel,<br/>
Thou'rt great and strong, with body finely bred;<br/>
For vassalage thy peers esteem thee well:<br/>
Of this battle let us now make an end!<br/>
With Charlemagne I soon will have thee friends;<br/>
To Guenelun such justice shall be dealt<br/>
Day shall not dawn but men of it will tell."<br/>
"Please the Lord God, not so!" said Pinabel.<br/>
"I would sustain the cause of my kindred<br/>
No mortal man is there from whom I've fled;<br/>
Rather I'ld die than hear reproaches said."<br/>
Then with their swords began to strike again<br/>
Upon those helms that were with gold begemmed<br/>
Into the sky the bright sparks rained and fell.<br/>
It cannot be that they be sundered,<br/>
Nor make an end, without one man be dead.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00579"> CCLXXXV</h5>
<p id="id00580"> He's very proof, Pinabel of Sorence,<br/>
Tierri he strikes, on 's helmet of Provence,<br/>
Leaps such a spark, the grass is kindled thence;<br/>
Of his steel brand the point he then presents,<br/>
On Tierri's brow the helmet has he wrenched<br/>
So down his face its broken halves descend;<br/>
And his right cheek in flowing blood is drenched;<br/>
And his hauberk, over his belly, rent.<br/>
God's his warrant, Who death from him prevents.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00581"> CCLXXXVI</h5>
<p id="id00582"> Sees Tierris then 'that in the face he's struck,<br/>
On grassy field runs clear his flowing blood;<br/>
Strikes Pinabel on 's helmet brown and rough,<br/>
To the nose-piece he's broken it and cut,<br/>
And from his head scatters his brains in th' dust;<br/>
Brandishes him on th' sword, till dead he's flung.<br/>
Upon that blow is all the battle won.<br/>
Franks cry aloud: "God hath great virtue done.<br/>
It is proved right that Guenelun be hung.<br/>
And those his kin, that in his cause are come."<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00583"> CCLXXXVII</h5>
<p id="id00584"> Now that Tierris the battle fairly wins,<br/>
That Emperour Charles is come to him;<br/>
Forty barons are in his following.<br/>
Naimes the Duke, Oger that Danish Prince,<br/>
Geifrei d'Anjou, Willalme of Blaive therewith.<br/>
Tierri, the King takes in his arms to kiss;<br/>
And wipes his face with his great marten-skins;<br/>
He lays them down, and others then they bring;<br/>
The chevaliers most sweetly disarm him;<br/>
An Arab mule they've brought, whereon he sits.<br/>
With baronage and joy they bring him in.<br/>
They come to Aix, halt and dismount therein.<br/>
The punishment of the others then begins.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00585"> CCLXXXVIII</h5>
<p id="id00586"> His counts and Dukes then calls to him Carlun:<br/>
"With these I guard, advise what shall be done.<br/>
Hither they came because of Guenelun;<br/>
For Pinabel, as pledges gave them up."<br/>
Answer the Franks: "Shall not of them live one."<br/>
The King commands his provost then, Basbrun:<br/>
"Go hang them all on th' tree of cursed wood!<br/>
Nay, by this beard, whose hairs are white enough,<br/>
If one escape, to death and shame thou'rt struck!"<br/>
He answers him: "How could I act, save thus?"<br/>
With an hundred serjeants by force they come;<br/>
Thirty of them there are, that straight are hung.<br/>
Who betrays man, himself and 's friends undoes.<br/>
AOI.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00587"> CCLXXXIX</h5>
<p id="id00588"> Then turned away the Baivers and Germans<br/>
And Poitevins and Bretons and Normans.<br/>
Fore all the rest, 'twas voted by the Franks<br/>
That Guenes die with marvellous great pangs;<br/>
So to lead forth four stallions they bade;<br/>
After, they bound his feet and both his hands;<br/>
Those steeds were swift, and of a temper mad;<br/>
Which, by their heads, led forward four sejeants<br/>
Towards a stream that flowed amid that land.<br/>
Sones fell Gue into perdition black;<br/>
All his sinews were strained until they snapped,<br/>
And all the limbs were from his body dragged.<br/>
On the green grass his clear blood gushed and ran.<br/>
Guenes is dead, a felon recreant.<br/>
Who betrays man, need make no boast of that.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00589"> CCXC</h5>
<p id="id00590"> When the Emperour had made his whole vengeance,<br/>
He called to him the Bishops out of France,<br/>
Those of Baviere and also the Germans:<br/>
"A dame free-born lies captive in my hands,<br/>
So oft she's heard sermons and reprimands,<br/>
She would fear God, and christening demands.<br/>
Baptise her then, so God her soul may have."<br/>
They answer him: "Sponsors the rite demands,<br/>
Dames of estate and long inheritance."<br/>
The baths at Aix great companies attract;<br/>
There they baptised the Queen of Sarazands,<br/>
And found for her the name of Juliane.<br/>
Christian is she by very cognisance.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00591"> CCXCI</h5>
<p id="id00592"> When the Emperour his justice hath achieved,<br/>
His mighty wrath's abated from its heat,<br/>
And Bramimunde has christening received;<br/>
Passes the day, the darkness is grown deep,<br/>
And now that King in 's vaulted chamber sleeps.<br/>
Saint Gabriel is come from God, and speaks:<br/>
"Summon the hosts, Charles, of thine Empire,<br/>
Go thou by force into the land of Bire,<br/>
King Vivien thou'lt succour there, at Imphe,<br/>
In the city which pagans have besieged.<br/>
The Christians there implore thee and beseech."<br/>
Right loth to go, that Emperour was he:<br/>
"God!" said the King: "My life is hard indeed!"<br/>
Tears filled his eyes, he tore his snowy beard.<br/></p>
<h4 id="id00593" style="margin-top: 2em"> SO ENDS THE TALE WHICH TUROLD HATH CONCEIVED.</h4>
<SPAN name="endofbook"></SPAN>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />