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CHAPTER V
SIR GAWAIN
SIR GAWAIN was nephew to King Arthur, by his sister Morgana,
married to Lot, king of Orkney, who was by Arthur made
king of Norway. Sir Gawain was one of the most famous
knights of the Round Table, and is characterized by the
romancers as the sage and courteous Gawain. To this
Chaucer alludes in his "Squiere's Tale," which
the strange knight "saluteth" all the court-
"With so high reverence and observance,
As well in speeche as in countenance,
That Gawain, with his olde curtesie,
Though he were come agen out of faerie,
Ne coude him not amenden with a word."
Gawain's brothers were Agravain, Gaharet, and Gareth.
SIR GAWAIN'S MARRIAGE
Once upon a time King Arthur held his court in merry
Carlisle, when a damsel came before him and craved a boon.
It was for vengeance upon a caitiff knight, who had made
her lover captive and despoiled her of her lands. King
Arthur commanded to bring him his sword, Excalibar, and to
saddle his steed, and rode forth without delay to right
the lady's wrong. Ere long he reached the castle of the
grim baron, and challenged him to the conflict. But the
castle stood on magic ground, and the spell was such that
no knight could tread thereon but straight his courage
fell and his strength decayed. King Arthur felt the charm,
and before a blow was struck his sturdy limbs lost their
strength, and his head grew faint. He was fain to yield
himself prisoner to the churlish knight, who refused to
release him except upon condition that he should return at
the end of a year, and bring a true answer to the
question, "What thing is it which women most
desire?" or in default thereof surrender himself and
his lands. King Arthur accepted the terms, and gave his
oath to return at the time appointed. During the year the
king rode east, and he rode west, and inquired of all whom
he met what thing it is which all women most desire. Some
told him riches; some pomp and state; some mirth; some
flattery; and some a gallant knight. But in the diversity
of answers he could find no sure dependence. The year was
well nigh spent when, one day, as he rode thoughtfully
through a forest, he saw sitting beneath a tree a lady of
such hideous aspect that he turned away his eyes, and when
she greeted him in seemly sort made no answer. "What
wight art thou," the lady said, "that will not
speak to me? It may chance that I may resolve thy doubts,
though I be not fair of aspect." "If thou wilt
do so," said King Arthur, "choose what reward
thou wilt, thou grim lady, and it shall be given
thee." "Swear me this upon thy faith," she
said, and Arthur swore it. Then the lady told him the
secret, and demanded her reward, which was that the king
should find some fair and courtly knight to be her
husband.
King Arthur hastened to the grim baron's castle and
told him one by one all the answers which he had received
from his various advisers, except the last, and not one
was admitted as the true one. "Now yield thee,
Arthur," the giant said, "for thou hast not paid
thy ransom, and thou and thy lands are forfeited to
me." Then King Arthur said:-
"Yet hold thy hand, thou proud baron,
I pray thee hold thy hand.
And give me leave to speak once more,
In rescue of my land.
This morn, as I came over a moor,
I saw a lady set,
Between an oak and a green holly,
All clad in red scarlet.
She says all women would have their will,
This is their chief desire;
Now yield, as thou art a baron true,
That I have paid my hire."
"It was my sister that told thee this," the
churlish baron exclaimed. "Vengeance light on her! I
will some time or other do her as ill a turn."
King Arthur rode homeward, but not light of heart; for
he remembered the promise he was under to the loathly lady
to give her one of his young and gallant knights for a
husband. He told his grief to Sir Gawain, his nephew, and
he replied, "Be not sad, my lord, for I will marry
the loathly lady." King Arthur replied:-
"Now nay, now nay, good Sir Gawaine,
My sister's son ye be;
The loathly lady's all too grim,
And all too foule for thee."
But Gawain persisted, and the king at last, with sorrow
of heart, consented that Gawain should be his ransom. So,
one day, the king and his knights rode to the forest, met
the loathly lady, and brought her to the court. Sir Gawain
stood the scoffs and jeers of his companions as he best
might, and the marriage was solemnized, but not with the
usual festivities, Chaucer tells us:-
"There was no joye, ne feste at alle;
There n'as but hevinesse and mochel sorwe,
For prively he wed her on the morwe,
And all day after hid him as an owle,
So wo was him his wife loked so foule!"*
* N'as is not was,
contracted; in modern phrase, there was not.
Mockel sorwe is much sorrow.
morwe is morrow.
When night came, and they were alone together, Sir
Gawain could not conceal his aversion; and the lady asked
him why he sighed so heavily, and turned away his face. He
candidly confessed it was on account of three things, her
age, her ugliness, and her low degree. The lady, not at
all offended, replied with excellent arguments to all his
objections. She showed him that with age is discretion,
with ugliness security from rivals, and that all true
gentility depends, not upon the accident of birth, but
upon the character of the individual.
Sir Gawain made no reply; but, turning his eyes on his
bride, what was his amazement to perceive that she wore no
longer the unseemly aspect that had so distressed him. She
then told him that the form she had worn was not her true
form, but a disguise imposed upon her by a wicked
enchanter, and that she was condemned to wear it until two
things should happen; one, that she should obtain some
young and gallant knight to be her husband. This having
been done, one half of the charm was removed. She was now
at liberty to wear her true form for half the time, and
she bade him choose whether he would have her fair by day
and ugly by night, or the reverse. Sir Gawain would fain
have had her look, her best by night, when he alone should
see her, and show her repulsive visage, if at all, to
others. But she reminded him how much more pleasant it
would be to her to wear her best looks in the throng of
knights and ladies by day. Sir Gawain yielded, and gave up
his will to hers. This alone was wanting to dissolve the
charm. The lovely lady now with joy assured him that she
should change no more; but as she now was so would she
remain by night as well as by day.
"Sweet blushes stayned her rud-red cheek,
Her eyen were black as sloe,
The ripening cherrye swelled her lippe,
And all her neck was snow.
Sir Gawain kist that ladye faire
Lying upon the sheete,
And swore, as he was a true knight,
The spice was never so swete."
The dissolution of the charm which had held the lady
also released her brother, the "grim baron," for
he too had been implicated in it. He ceased to be a
churlish oppressor, and became a gallant and generous
knight as any at Arthur's court.
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