AFTER the expulsion of the Saracens from France,
Charlemagne led his army into Spain, to punish Marsilius,
the king of that country, for having sided with the
African Saracens in the late war. Charlemagne succeeded in
all his attempts, and compelled Marsilius to submit, and
pay tribute to France. Our readers will remember Gano,
otherwise called Gan, or Ganelon, whom we mentioned in one
of our early chapters as an old courtier of Charlemagne,
and a deadly enemy of Orlando, Rinaldo, and all their
friends. He had great influence over Charles, from
equality of age and long intimacy; and he was not without
good qualities: he was brave and sagacious, but envious,
false, and treacherous. Gan prevailed on Charles to send
him as ambassador to Marsilius, to arrange the tribute. He
embraced Orlando over and over again at taking leave,
using such pains to seem loving and sincere, that his
hypocrisy was manifest to every one but the old monarch.
He fastened with equal tenderness on Oliver, who smiled
contemptuously in his face, and thought to himself,
"You may make as many fair speeches as you choose but
you lie." All the other paladins who were present
thought the same, and they said as much to the Emperor,
adding, that Gan should on no account be sent ambassador
to the Spaniards. But Charles was infatuated.
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Gan was received with great honor by Marsilius. The king,
attended by his lords, came fifteen miles out of Saragossa
to meet him, and then conducted him into the city with
acclamations. There was nothing for several days but
balls, games, and exhibitions of chivalry, the ladies
throwing flowers on the heads of the French knights, and
the people shouting, "France! Mountjoy and St.
Denis!"
After the ceremonies of the first reception, the king and
the ambassador began to understand one another. One day
they sat together in a garden on the border of a fountain.
The water was so clear and smooth it reflected every
object around, and the spot was encircled with fruit-trees
which quivered with the fresh air. As they sat and talked,
as if without restraint, Gan, without looking the king in
the face, was enabled to see the expression of his
countenance in the water, and governed his speech
accordingly. Marsilius was equally adroit, and watched the
face of Gan while he addressed him. Marsilius began by
lamenting, not as to the ambassador, but as to the friend,
the injuries which Charles had done him by invading his
dominions, charging him with wishing to take his kingdom
from him, and give it to Orlando; till at length he
plainly uttered his belief that, if that ambitious paladin
were but dead, good men would get their rights.
Gan heaved a sigh, as if he was unwillingly compelled
to allow the force of what the king said; but, unable to
contain himself long, he lifted up his face, radiant with
triumphant wickedness, and exclaimed: "Every word you
utter is truth; die he must, and die also must Oliver, who
struck me that foul blow at court. Is it treachery to
punish affronts like these? I have planned everything,- I
have settled everything already with their besotted
master. Orlando will come to your borders,- to
Roncesvalles,- for the purpose of receiving the tribute.
Charles will await him at the foot of the mountains.
Orlando will bring but a small band with him: you, when
you meet him, will have secretly your whole army at your
back. You surround him, and who receives tribute
then?"
The new Judas had scarcely uttered these words when his
exultation was interrupted by a change in the face of
nature. The sky was suddenly overcast, there was thunder
and lightning, a laurel was split in two from head to
foot, and the Carob-tree under which Gan was sitting,
which is said to be the species of tree on which Judas
Iscariot hung himself, dropped one of its pods on his
head.
Marsilius, as well as Gan, was appalled at this omen;
but on assembling his soothsayers they came to the
conclusion that the laurel-tree turned the omen against
the Emperor, the successor of the Caesars, though one of
them renewed the consternation of Gan by saying that he
did not understand the meaning of the tree of Judas, and
intimating that perhaps the ambassador could explain it.
Gan relieved his vexation by anger; the habit of
wickedness prevailed over all other considerations; and
the king prepared to march to Roncesvalles at the head of
all his forces.
Gan wrote to Charlemagne to say how humbly and
submissively Marsilius was coming to pay the tribute into
the hands of Orlando, and how handsome it would be of the
Emperor to meet him halfway, and so be ready to receive
him after the payment at his camp. He added a brilliant
account of the tribute, and the accompanying presents. The
good Emperor wrote in turn to say how pleased he was with
the ambassador's diligence, and that matters were arranged
precisely as he wished. His court, however, had its
suspicions still, though they little thought Gan's object
in bringing Charles into the neighborhood of Roncesvalles
was to deliver him into the hands of Marsilius, after
Orlando should have been destroyed by him.
[images: "Charlemagne
installs Roland as his representative in Spain."]
Orlando, however, did as his lord and sovereign
desired. He went to Roncesvalles, accompanied by a
moderate train of warriors, not dreaming of the atrocity
that awaited him. Gan, meanwhile, had hastened back to
France, in order to show himself free and easy in the
presence of Charles, and secure the success of his plot;
while Marsilius, to make assurance doubly sure, brought
into the passes of Roncesvalles no less than three armies,
which were successively to fall on the paladin in case of
the worst, and so extinguish him with numbers. He had
also, by Gan's advice, brought heaps of wine and good
cheer to be set before his victims in the first instance;
"for that," said the traitor, "will render
the onset the more effective, the feasters being unarmed.
One thing, however, I must not forget," added he;
"my son Baldwin is sure to be with Orlando; you must
take care of his life for my sake."
"I give him this vesture off my own body,"
said the king. "let him wear it in the battle, and
have no fear. My soldiers shall be directed not to touch
him."
Gan went away rejoicing to France. He embraced the
sovereign and the court all round with the air of a man
who had brought them nothing but blessings, and the old
king wept for very tenderness and delight.
"Something is going on wrong, and looks very
black," thought Malagigi, the good wizard;
"Rinaldo is not here, and it is indispensably
necessary that he should be. I must find out where he is,
and Ricciardetto too, and send for them with all
speed."
Malagigi called up by his art a wise, terrible, and cruel
spirit, named Ashtaroth. "Tell me, and tell me truly,
of Rinaldo," said Malagigi to the spirit. The demon
looked hard at the paladin, and said nothing. His aspect
was clouded and violent.
The enchanter, with an aspect still cloudier, bade
Ashtaroth lay down that look; and made signs as if he
would resort to angrier compulsion; and the devil,
alarmed, loosened his tongue, and said, "You have not
told me what you desire to know of Rinaldo." "I
desire to know what he has been doing, and where he
is."
"He has been conquering and baptizing the world,
east and west," said the demon, "and is now in
Egypt with Ricciardetto."
"And what has Gan been plotting with
Marsilius?" inquired Malagigi; "and what is to
come of it?"
"I know not," said the devil. "I was not
attending to Gan at the time, and we fallen spirits know
not the future. All I discern is that by the signs and
comets in the heavens something dreadful is about to
happen,- something very strange, treacherous, and bloody;-
and that Gan has a seat ready prepared for him in
hell."
"Within three days," cried the enchanter,
loudly, "bring Rinaldo and Ricciardetto into the pass
of Roncesvalles. Do it, and I hereby undertake to summon
thee no more."
"Suppose they will not trust themselves with
me?" said the spirit.
"Enter Rinaldo's horse, and bring him, whether he
trust thee or not."
"It shall be done," returned the demon. There
was an earthquake, and Ashtaroth disappeared.
Marsilius now made his first movement towards the
destruction of Orlando, by sending before him his vassal,
King Blanchardin, with his presents of wines and other
luxuries. The temperate but courteous hero took them in
good part, and distributed them as the traitor wished; and
then Blanchardin, on pretence of going forward to salute
Charlemagne, returned, and put himself at the head of the
second army, which was the post assigned him by his
liege-lord. King Falseron, whose son Orlando had slain in
battle, headed the first army, and King Balugante the
third. Marsilius made a speech to them, in which he let
them into his design, and concluded by recommending to
their good-will the son of his friend Gan, whom they would
know by the vest he had sent him, and who was the only
soul amongst the Christians they were to spare.
This son of Gan, meanwhile, and several of the
paladins, who distrusted the misbelievers, and were
anxious at all events to be with Orlando, had joined the
hero in the fated valley; so that the little Christian
host, considering the tremendous valor of their lord and
his friends, were not to be sold for nothing. Rinaldo,
alas! the second thunderbolt of Christendom, was destined
not to be there in time to meet the issue. The paladins in
vain begged Orlando to be on his guard against treachery,
and sent for a more numerous body of men. The great heart
of the Champion of the Faith was unwilling to harbor
suspicion as long as he could help it. He refused to
summon aid which might be superfluous; neither would he do
anything but what his liege-lord had directed. And yet he
could not wholly repress a misgiving. A shadow had fallen
on his heart, great and cheerful as it was. The
anticipations of his friends disturbed him, in spite of
the face with which he met them. Perhaps by a certain
foresight he felt his death approaching; but he felt bound
not to encourage the impression. Besides, time pressed;
the moment of the looked-for tribute was at hand, and
little combinations of circumstances determine often the
greatest events.
King Marsilius was to arrive early next day with the
tribute, and Oliver, with the morning sun, rode forth to
reconnoitre, and see if he could discover the peaceful
pomp of the Spanish court in the distance. He rode up the
nearest height, and from the top of it beheld the first
army of Marsilius already forming in the passes. "O
devil Gan," he exclaimed, "this then is the
consummation of thy labors!" Oliver put spurs to his
horse, and galloped back down the mountain to Orlando.
"Well," cried the hero, "what
news?"
"Bad news," said his cousin, "such as
you would not hear of yesterday. Marsilius is here in
arms, and all the world is with him."
The paladins pressed round Orlando, and entreated him
to sound his horn, in token that he needed help. His only
answer was to mount his horse, and ride up the mountain
with Sansonetto.
As soon, however, as he cast forth his eyes, and beheld
what was round about him, he turned in sorrow, and looked
down into Roncesvalles, and said, "O miserable
valley! the blood shed in thee this day will color thy
name forever."
Orlando's little camp were furious against the
Saracens. They armed themselves with the greatest
impatience. There was nothing but lacing of helmets and
mounting of horses, while good Archbishop Turpin went from
rank to rank exhorting and encouraging the warriors of
Christ. Orlando and his captains withdrew for a moment to
consultation. He fairly groaned for sorrow, and at first
had not a word to say; so wretched he felt at having
brought his people to die in Roncesvalles. Then he said:
"If it had entered into my heart to conceive the king
of Spain to be such a villain, never would you have seen
this day. He has exchanged with me a thousand courtesies
and good words; and I thought that the worse enemies we
had been before, the better friends we had become now. I
fancied every human being capable of this kind of virtue
on a good opportunity, saving, indeed, such base-hearted
wretches as can never forgive their very forgivers; and of
these I did not suppose him to be one. Let us die, if die
we must, like honest and gallant men, so that it shall be
said of us, it was only our bodies that died. The reason
why I did not sound the horn was partly because I thought
it did not become us, and partly because our liege-lord
could hardly save us, even if he heard it." And with
these words Orlando sprang to his horse, crying,
"Away, against the Saracens!" But he had no
sooner turned his face, than he wept bitterly, and said,
"O Holy Virgin, think not of me, the sinner Orlando,
but have pity on these thy servants!"
And now, with a mighty dust, and an infinite sound of
horns and tambours which came filling the valley, the
first army of the infidels made its appearance, horses
neighing, and a thousand pennons flying in the air. King
Falseron led them on, saying to his officers: "Let
nobody dare to lay a finger on Orlando. He belongs to
myself. The revenge of my son's death is mine. I will cut
the man down that comes between us."
"Now, friends," said Orlando, "every man
for himself, and St. Michael for us all! There is not one
here that is not a perfect knight," And he might well
say it, for the flower of all France was there, except
Rinaldo and Ricciardetto,- every man a picked man, all
friends and constant companions of Orlando.
So the captains of the little troop and of the great
army sat looking at one another, and singling one another
out as the latter came on, and then the knights put spear
in rest, and ran for a while two and two in succession,
one against the other.
Astolpho was the first to move. He ran against Arlotto
of Soria, and thrust his antagonist's body out of the
saddle, and his soul into the other world. Oliver
encountered Malprimo, and, though he received a thrust
which hurt him, sent his lance right through the heart of
Malprimo.
Falseron was daunted at this blow. "Truly,"
thought he, "this is a marvel." Oliver did not
press on among the Saracens, his wound was too painful;
but Orlando now put himself and his whole band in motion,
and you may guess what an uproar ensued. The sound of the
rattling of blows and helmets was as if the forge of
Vulcan had been thrown open. Falseron beheld Orlando
coming so furiously, that he thought him a Lucifer who had
burst his chain, and was quite of another mind than when
he purposed to have him all to himself. On the contrary,
he recommended himself to his gods, and turned away,
meaning to wait for a more auspicious season of revenge.
But Orlando hailed him, with a terrible voice, saying,
"O thou traitor! was this the end to which old
quarrels were made up?" Then he dashed at Falseron
with a fury so swift, and at the same time with a mastery
of his lance so marvellous, that, though he plunged it in
the man's body so as instantly to kill him, and then
withdrew it, the body did not move in the saddle. The hero
himself, as he rushed onwards, was fain to see the end of
a stroke so perfect, and turning his horse back, touched
the carcass with his sword, and it fell on the instant!
When the infidels beheld their leader dead, such fear
fell upon them that they were for leaving the field to the
paladins, but they were unable. Marsilius had drawn the
rest of his forces round the valley like a net, so that
their shoulders were turned in vain. Orlando rode into the
thick of them, and wherever he went thunderbolts fell upon
helmets. Oliver was again in the fray, with Walter and
Baldwin, Avino and Avolio, while Archbishop Turpin had
changed his crosier for a lance, and chased a new flock
before him to the mountains.
Yet what could be done against foes without number?
Marsilius constantly pours them in. The paladins are as
units to thousands. Why tarry the horses of Rinaldo and
Ricciardetto?
The horses did not tarry, but fate had been quicker
than enchantment. Ashtaroth had presented himself to
Rinaldo in Egypt, and, after telling his errand, he and
Foul-mouth, his servant, entered the horses of Rinaldo and
Ricciardetto, which began to neigh, and snort, and leap
with the fiends within them, till off they flew through
the air over the pyramids and across the desert, and
reached Spain and the scene of action just as Marsilius
brought up his third army. The two paladins on their
horses dropped right into the midst of the Saracens, and
began making such havoc among them that Marsilius, who
overlooked the fight from a mountain, thought his soldiers
had turned against one another. Orlando beheld it, and
guessed it could be no other but his cousins, and pressed
to meet them. Oliver coming up at the same moment, the
rapture of the whole party is not to be expressed. After a
few hasty words of explanation they were forced to turn
again upon the enemy, whose numbers seemed perfectly
without limit.
Orlando, making a bloody passage towards Marsilius,
struck a youth on the head, whose helmet was so strong as
to resist the blow, but at the same time flew off. Orlando
prepared to strike a second blow, when the youth
exclaimed, "Hold! you loved my father; I am
Bujaforte!" The paladin had never seen Bujaforte, but
he saw the likeness to the good old man, his father, and
he dropped his sword. "O Bujaforte," said he,
"I loved him indeed; but what does his son do here
fighting against his friends?"
Bujaforte could not at once speak for weeping. At
length he said: "I am forced to be here by my lord
and master, Marsilius; and I have made a show of fighting,
but have not hurt a single Christian. Treachery is on
every side of you, Baldwin himself has a vest given him by
Marsilius, that everybody may know the son of his friend
Gan, and do him no harm."
"Put your helmet on again," said Orlando,
"and behave just as you have done. Never will your
father's friend be an enemy to the son." The hero
then turned in fury to look for Baldwin, who was hastening
towards him, at that moment, with friendliness in his
looks.
"'Tis strange," said Baldwin, "I have
done my duty as well as I could, yet nobody will come
against me. I have slain right and left, and cannot
comprehend what it is that makes the stoutest infidels
avoid me."
"Take off your vest," said Orlando,
contemptuously, "and you will soon discover the
secret, if you wish to know it. Your father has sold us to
Marsilius, all but his honorable son."
"If my father," said Baldwin, impetuously
tearing off the vest, "has been such a villain, and I
escape dying, I will plunge this sword through his heart.
But I am no traitor, Orlando, and you do me wrong to say
it. Think not I can live with dishonor."
Baldwin spurred off into the fight, not waiting to hear
another word from Orlando, who was very sorry for what he
had said, for he perceived that the youth was in despair.
And now the fight raged beyond all it had done before;
twenty pagans went down for one paladin, but still the
paladins fell. Sansonetto was beaten to earth by the club
of Grandonio, Walter d'Amulion had his shoulder broken,
Berlinghieri and Ottone were slain, and at last Astolpho
fell, in revenge of whose death Orlando turned the spot
where he died into a lake of Saracen blood. The luckless
Bujaforte met Rinaldo, and, before he could explain how he
seemed to be fighting on the Saracen side, received such a
blow upon the head that he fell, unable to utter a word.
Orlando, cutting his way to a spot where there was a great
struggle and uproar, found the poor youth Baldwin, the son
of Gan, with two spears in his breast. "I am no
traitor now," said Baldwin, and those were the last
words he said. Orlando was bitterly sorry to have been the
cause of his death, and tears streamed from his eyes. At
length down went Oliver himself, He had become blinded
with his own blood, and smitten Orlando without knowing
him. "How now, cousin," cried Orlando,
"have you too gone over to the enemy?" "O
my lord and master," cried the other, "I ask
your pardon. I can see nothing; I am dying. Some traitor
has stabbed me in the back. If you love me, lead my horse
into the thick of them, so that I may not die
unavenged."
"I shall die myself before long," said
Orlando, "out of very toil and grief; so we will go
together."
Orlando led his cousin's horse where the press was
thickest, and dreadful was the strength of the dying man
and his tired companion. They made a street through which
they passed out of the battle, and Orlando led his cousin
away to his tent, and said, "Wait a little till I
return, for I will go and sound the horn on the hill
yonder."
"'Tis of no use," said Oliver, "my
spirit is fast going, and desires to be with its Lord and
Saviour."
He would have said more, but his words came from him
imperfectly, like those of a man in a dream, and so he
expired.
When Orlando saw him dead, he felt as if he was alone
on the earth, and he was quite willing to leave it; only
he wished that King Charles, at the foot of the mountains,
should know how the case stood before he went. So he took
up the horn and blew it three times, with such force that
the blood burst out of his nose and mouth. Turpin says
that at the third blast the horn broke in two.
In spite of all the noise of the battle, the sound of
the horn broke over it like a voice out of the other
world. They say that birds fell dead at it, and that the
whole Saracen army drew back in terror. Charlemagne was
sitting in the midst of his court when the sound reached
him; and Gan was there. The Emperor was the first to hear
it.
"Do you hear that?" said be to his nobles.
"Did you hear the horn as I heard it?"
Upon this they all listened, and Gan felt his heart
misgive him. The horn sounded a second time.
"What is the meaning of this?" said Charles.
"Orlando is hunting," observed Gan, "and
the stag is killed."
But when the horn sounded yet a third time, and the
blast was one of so dreadful a vehemence, everybody looked
at the other, and then they all looked at Gan in fury.
Charles rose from his seat.
"This is no hunting of the stag," said he.
"The sound goes to my very heart. O Gan! O Gan! Not
for thee do I blush, but for myself. O foul and monstrous
villain! Take him, gentlemen, and keep him in close
prison. Would to God I had not lived to see this
day!"
But it was no time for words. They put the traitor in
prison, and then Charles with all his court took his way
to Roncesvalles, grieving and praying.
It was afternoon when the horn sounded, and half an
hour after it when the Emperor set out; and meantime
Orlando had returned to the fight that he might do his
duty, however hopeless, as long as he could sit his horse.
At length he found his end approaching, for toil and
fever, and rode all alone to a fountain where he had
before quenched his thirst. His horse was wearier than he,
and no sooner had his master alighted than the beast,
kneeling down as if to take leave, and to say, "I
have brought you to a place of rest," fell dead at
his feet. Orlando cast water on him from the fountain, not
wishing to believe him dead; but when he found it to no
purpose, he grieved for him as if he had been a human
being, and addressed him by name with tears, and asked
forgiveness if he had ever done him wrong. They say that
the horse, at these words, opened his eyes a little, and
looked kindly at his master, and then stirred never more.
They say also that Orlando then, summoning all his
strength, smote a rock near him with his beautiful sword
Durindana, thinking to shiver the steel in pieces, and so
prevent its falling into the hands of the enemy; but
though the rock split like a slate, and a great cleft
remained ever after to astonish the eyes of pilgrims, the
sword remained uninjured.
And now Rinaldo and Ricciardetto came up, with Turpin,
having driven back the Saracens, and told Orlando that the
battle was won. Then Orlando knelt before Turpin, and
begged remission of his sins, and Turpin gave him
absolution. Orlando fixed his eyes on the hilt of his
sword as on a crucifix, and embraced it, and he raised his
eyes and appeared like a creature seraphical and
transfigured, and, bowing his head, he breathed out his
pure soul.
And now King Charles and his nobles came up. The
Emperor, at sight of the dead Orlando, threw himself, as
if he had been a reckless youth, from his horse, and
embraced and kissed the body, and said: "I bless
thee, Orlando; I bless thy whole life, and all that thou
wast, and all that thou ever didst, and the father that
begat thee; and I ask pardon of thee for believing those
who brought thee to thine end. They shall have their
reward, O thou beloved one! But indeed it is thou that
livest, and I who am worse than dead."
Horrible to the Emperor's eyes was the sight of the
field of Roncesvalles. The Saracens indeed had fled,
conquered; but all his paladins but two were left on it
dead, and the whole valley looked like a great
slaughter-house, trampled into blood and dirt, and reeking
to the heat. Charles trembled to his heart's core for
wonder and agony. After gazing dumbly on the place, he
cursed it with a solemn curse, and wished that never grass
might grow in it again, nor seed of any kind, neither
within it nor on any of its mountains around, but the
anger of Heaven abide over it forever.
Charles and his warriors went after the Saracens into
Spain. They took and fired Saragossa, and Marsilius was
hung to the carob-tree under which he had planned his
villainy with Gan; and Gan was hung and drawn and
quartered in Roncesvalles, amidst the execrations of the
country.