ORLANDO, on the loss of Angelica, laid aside his crest
and arms, and arrayed himself in a suit of black armor,
expressive of his despair. In this guise he carried such
slaughter among the ranks of the infidels, that both
armies were astonished at the achievements of the stranger
knight. Mandricardo, who had been absent from the battle,
heard the report of these achievements, and determined to
test for himself the valor of the knight so extolled. He
it was who broke in upon the conference of Zerbino and
Isabella, and their benefactor Orlando, as they stood
occupied in mutual felicitations, after the happy reunion
of the lovers by the prowess of the paladin.
Mandricardo, after contemplating the group for a
moment, addressed himself to Orlando in these words:
"Thou must be the man I seek. For ten days and more I
have been on thy track. The fame of thy exploits has
brought me hither, that I may measure my strength with
thine. Thy crest and shield prove thee the same who spread
such slaughter among our troops. But these marks are
superfluous, and if I saw thee among a hundred I should
know thee by thy martial bearing to be the man I
seek."
"I respect thy courage," said Orlando;
"such a design could not have sprung up in any but a
brave and generous mind. If the desire to see me has
brought thee hither, I would, if it were possible, show
thee my inmost soul. I will remove my visor, that you may
satisfy your curiosity; but when you have done so, I hope
that you will also try and see if my valor corresponds to
my appearance."
"Come on," said the Saracen, "my first
wish was to see and know thee; I will now gratify my
second."
Orlando, observing Mandricardo, was surprised to see no
sword at his side, nor mace at his saddle-bow. "And
what weapon hast thou," said he, "if thy lance
fail thee?"
"Do not concern yourself about that," said
Mandricardo; "I have made many good knights give
ground with no other weapon than you see. Know that I have
sworn an oath never to bear a sword until I win back that
famous Durindana that Orlando, the paladin, carries. That
sword belongs to the suit of armor which I wear; that only
is wanting. Without doubt it was stolen, but how it got
into the hands of Orlando I know not. But I will make him
pay dearly for it when I find him. I seek him the more
anxiously that I may avenge with his blood the death of
King Agrican, my father, whom he treacherously slew. I am
sure he must have done it by treachery, for it was not in
his power to subdue in fair fight such a warrior as my
father."
"Thou liest," cried Orlando; "and all
who say so lie. I am Orlando, whom you seek; yes, I am he
who slew your father honorably. Hold, here is the sword:
you shall have it if your courage avails to merit it.
Though it belongs to me by right, I will not use it in
this dispute. See, I hang it on this tree: you shall be
master of it, if you bereave me of life; not else."
At these words, Orlando drew Durindana, and hung it on
one of the branches of a tree near by.
Both knights, boiling with equal ardor, rode off in a
semicircle; then rushed together with reins thrown loose,
and struck one another with their lances. Both kept their
seats, immovable. The splinters of their lances flew into
the air, and no weapon remained for either but the
fragment which he held in his hand. Then those two
knights, covered with iron mail, were reduced to the
necessity of fighting with staves, in the manner of two
rustics, who dispute the boundary of a meadow, or the
possession of a spring.
These clubs could not long keep whole in the hands of
such sturdy smiters, who were soon reduced to fight with
naked fists. Such warfare was more painful to him that
gave than to him that received the blows. They next
clasped, and strained each his adversary, as Hercules did
Antaeus. Mandricardo, more enraged than Orlando, made
violent efforts to unseat the paladin, and dropped the
rein of his horse. Orlando, more calm, perceived it. With
one hand he resisted Mandricardo, with the other he
twitched the horse's bridle over the ears of the animal.
The Saracen dragged Orlando with all his might, but
Orlando's thighs held the saddle like a vise. At last the
efforts of the Saracen broke the girths of Orlando's
horse; the saddle slipped; the knight, firm in his
stirrups slipped with it, and came to the ground hardly
conscious of his fall. The noise of his armor in falling
startled Mandricardo's horse, now without a bridle. He
started off in full career, heeding neither trees nor
rocks nor broken ground. Urged by fright, he ran with
furious speed, carrying his master, who, almost distracted
with rage, shouted and beat the animal with his fists, and
thereby impelled his flight. After running thus three
miles or more, a deep ditch opposed their progress. The
horse and rider fell headlong into it, and did not find
the bottom covered with feather-beds or roses. They got
sadly bruised; but were lucky enough to escape without any
broken limbs.
Mandricardo, as soon as he gained his feet, seized the
horse by his mane with fury, but, having no bridle, could
not hold him. He looked round in hopes of finding
something that would do for a rein. Just then fortune, who
seemed willing to help him at last, brought that way a
peasant with a bridle in his hand, who was in search of
his farm horse that had strayed away.
Orlando, having speedily repaired his horse's girths,
remounted, and waited a good hour for the Saracen to
return. Not seeing him, he concluded to go in search of
him. He took an affectionate leave of Zerbino and
Isabella, who would willingly have followed him; but this
the brave paladin would by no means permit. He held it
unknightly to go in search of an enemy accompanied by a
friend, who might act as a defender. Therefore, desiring
them to say to Mandricardo, if they should meet him, that
his purpose was to tarry in the neighborhood three days,
and then repair to the camp of Charlemagne, he took down
Durindana from the tree, and proceeded in the direction
which the Saracen's horse had taken. But the animal,
having no guide but its terror, had so doubled and
confused its traces that Orlando, after two days spent in
the search, gave up the attempt.
It was about the middle of the third day when the
paladin arrived on the pleasant bank of a stream which
wound through a meadow enamelled with flowers. High trees,
whose tops met and formed an arbor, overshadowed the
fountain; and the breeze which blew through their foliage
tempered the heat. Hither the shepherds used to resort to
quench their thirst, and to enjoy the shelter from the
midday sun. The air, perfumed with the flowers, seemed to
breathe fresh strength into their veins. Orlando felt the
influence, though covered with his armor. He stopped in
this delicious arbor, where everything seemed to invite to
repose. But he could not have chosen a more fatal asylum.
He there spent the most miserable moments of his life.
He looked around, and noted with pleasure all the charms
of the spot. He saw that some of the trees were carved
with inscriptions,- he drew near, and read them, and what
was his surprise to find that they composed the name of
Angelica. Farther on, he found the name of Medoro mixed
with hers. The paladin thought he dreamed. He stood like
one amazed,- like a bird that, rising to fly, finds its
feet caught in a net.
Orlando followed the course of the stream, and came to
one of its turns where the rocks of the mountain bent in
such a way as to form a sort of grotto. The twisted stems
of ivy and the wild vine draped the entrance of this
recess, scooped by the hand of nature.
The unhappy paladin, on entering the grotto, saw
letters which appeared to have been lately carved. They
were verses which Medoro had written in honor of his happy
nuptials with the beautiful queen. Orlando tried to
persuade himself it must be some other Angelica whom those
verses celebrated, and as for Medoro, he had never heard
his name. The sun was now declining, and Orlando remounted
his horse, and went on his way. He soon saw the roof of a
cottage whence the smoke ascended; he heard the barking of
dogs and the lowing of cattle, and arrived at a humble
dwelling which seemed to offer an asylum for the night.
The inmates, as soon as they saw him, hastened to render
him service. One took his horse, another his shield and
cuirass, another his golden spurs. This cottage was the
very same where Medoro had been carried, deeply wounded,-
where Angelica had tended him, and afterwards married him.
The shepherd who lived in it loved to tell everybody the
story of this marriage, and soon related it, with all its
details, to the miserable Orlando.
Having finished it, he went away, and returned with the
precious bracelet which Angelica, grateful for his
services, had given him as a memorial. It was the one
which Orlando had himself given her.
This last touch was the finishing stroke to the excited
paladin. Frantic, exasperated, he exclaimed against the
ungrateful and cruel princess who had disdained him, the
most renowned, the most indomitable of all the paladins of
France,- him, who had rescued her from the most alarming
perils,- him, who had fought the most terrible battles for
her sake,- she to prefer to him a young Saracen! The pride
of the noble Count was deeply wounded. Indignant, frantic,
a victim to ungovernable rage, he rushed into the forest,
uttering the most frightful shrieks.
"No, no!" cried he, "I am not the man
they take me for! Orlando is dead! I am only the wandering
ghost of that unhappy Count, who is now suffering the
torments of hell!"
Orlando wandered all night, as chance directed, through
the wood, and at sunrise his destiny led him to the
fountain where Medoro had engraved the fatal inscription.
The frantic paladin saw it a second time with fury, drew
his sword, and hacked it from the rock.
Unlucky grotto! you shall no more attract by your shade
and coolness, you shall no more shelter with your arch
either shepherd or flock. And you, fresh and pure
fountain, you may not escape the rage of the furious
Orlando! He cast into the fountain branches, trunks of
trees which he tore up, pieces of rocks which he broke
off, plants uprooted, with the earth adhering, and turf
and bushes, so as to choke the fountain, and destroy the
purity of its waters. At length, exhausted by his violent
exertions, bathed in sweat, breathless, Orlando sunk
panting upon the earth, and lay there insensible three
days and three nights.
The fourth day he started up and seized his arms. His
helmet, his buckler, he cast far from him; his hauberk and
his clothes he rent asunder; the fragments were scattered
through the wood. In fine, he became a furious madman. His
insanity was such that he cared not to
retain even his sword. But he had no need of Durindana,
nor of other arms, to do wonderful things. His prodigious
strength sufficed. At the first wrench of his mighty arm,
he tore up a pine-tree by the roots. Oaks, beeches,
maples, whatever he met in his path, yielded in like
manner. The ancient forest soon became as bare as the
borders of a morass, where the fowler has cleared away the
bushes to spread his nets. The shepherds, hearing the
horrible crashing in the forest, abandoned their flocks to
run and see the cause of this unwonted uproar. By their
evil star, or for their sins, they were led thither. When
they saw the furious state the Count was in, and his
incredible force, they would fain have fled out of his
reach, but in their fears lost their presence of mind. The
madman pursued them, seized one and rent him limb from
limb, as easily as one would pull ripe apples from a tree.
He took another by the feet, and used him as a club to
knock down a third. The shepherds fled; but it would have
been hard for any to escape, if he had not at that moment
left them to throw himself with the same fury upon their
flocks. The peasants, abandoning their ploughs and
harrows, mounted on the roofs of buildings and pinnacles
of the rocks, afraid to trust themselves even to the oaks
and pines. From such heights they looked on, trembling at
the raging fury of the unhappy Orlando. His fists, his
teeth, his nails, his feet, seize, break, and tear cattle,
sheep, and swine, the most swift in flight alone being
able to escape him.
When at last terror had scattered everything before
him, he entered a cottage which was abandoned by its
inhabitants, and there found that which served for food.
His long fast had caused him to feel the most ravenous
hunger. Seizing whatever he found that was eatable,
whether roots, acorns, or bread, raw meat or cooked, he
gorged it indiscriminately.
Issuing thence again, the frantic Orlando gave chase to
whatever living thing he saw, whether men or animals.
Sometimes he pursued the deer and hind, sometimes he
attacked bears and wolves, and with his naked hands killed
and tore them, and devoured their flesh.
Thus he wandered, from place to place, through France,
imperilling his life a thousand ways, yet always preserved
by some mysterious providence from a fatal result. But
here we leave Orlando for a time, that we may record what
befell Zerbino and Isabella after their parting with him.
The prince and his fair bride waited, by Orlando's
request, near the scene of the battle for three days,
that, if Mandricardo should return, they might inform him
where Orlando would give him another meeting. At the end
of that time, their anxiety to know the issue led them to
follow Orlando's traces, which led them at last to the
wood where the trees were inscribed with the names of
Angelica and Medoro. They remarked how all these
inscriptions were defaced, and how the grotto was
disordered, and the fountain clogged with rubbish. But
that which surprised them and distressed them most of all
was to find on the grass the cuirass of Orlando, and not
far from it his helmet, the same which the renowned
Almontes once wore.
Hearing a horse neigh in the forest, Zerbino turned his
eyes in that direction, and saw Brigliadoro, with the
bridle yet hanging at the saddle-bow. He looked round for
Durindana, and found that famous sword, without the
scabbard, lying on the grass. He saw also the fragments of
Orlando's other arms and clothing scattered on all sides
over the plain.
Zerbino and Isabella stood in astonishment and grief,
not knowing what to think, but little imagining the true
cause. If they had found any marks of blood on the arms or
on the fragments of the clothing, they would have supposed
him slain, but there were none. While they were in this
painful uncertainty, they saw a young peasant approach.
He, not yet recovered from the terror of the scene which
he had witnessed from the top of a rock, told them the
whole of the sad events.
Zerbino, with his eyes full of tears, carefully
collected all the scattered arms. Isabella also dismounted
to aid him in the sad duty. When they had collected all
the pieces of that rich armor, they hung them like a
trophy on a pine; and to prevent their being violated by
any passers-by, Zerbino inscribed on the bark this
caution: "These are the arms of the Paladin
Orlando."
Having finished this pious work, he remounted his
horse, and just then a knight rode up, and requested
Zerbino to tell him the meaning of the trophy. The prince
related the facts as they had happened; and Mandricardo,
for it was that Saracen knight, full of joy, rushed
forward, and seized the sword, saying, "No one can
censure me for what I do; this sword is mine; I can take
my own wherever I find it. It is plain that Orlando, not
daring to defend it against me, has counterfeited madness
to excuse him in surrendering it."
Zerbino vehemently exclaimed, "Touch not that
sword. Think not to possess it without a contest. If it be
true that the arms you wear are those of Hector, you must
have got them by theft, and not by prowess."
Immediately they attacked one another with the utmost
fury. The air resounded with thick-falling blows. Zerbino,
skilful and alert, evaded for a time with good success the
strokes of Durindana; but at length a terrible blow struck
him on the neck. He fell from his horse, and the Tartar
king, possessed of the spoils of his victory, rode away.