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CHAPTER VIII
THE STORY OF LAUNCELOT - THE LADY OF SHALOTT
KING ARTHUR proclaimed a solemn tournament to be held
at Winchester. The king, not less impatient than his
knights for this festival, set off some days before to
superintend the preparations, leaving the queen with her
court at Camelot. Sir Launcelot, under pretence of
indisposition, remained behind also. His intention was to
attend the tournament in disguise; and having communicated
his project to Guenever, he mounted his horse, set off
without any attendant, and, counterfeiting the feebleness
of age, took the most unfrequented road to Winchester, and
passed unnoticed as an old knight who was going to be a
spectator of the sports. Even Arthur and Gawain, who
happened to behold him from the windows of a castle under
which he passed, were the dupes of his disguise. But an
accident betrayed him. His horse happened to stumble, and
the hero, forgetting for a moment his assumed character,
recovered the animal with a strength and agility so
peculiar to himself, that they instantly recognized the
inimitable Launcelot. They suffered him, however, to
proceed on his journey without interruption, convinced
that his extraordinary feats of arms must discover him at
the approaching festival.
In the evening Launcelot was magnificently entertained
as a stranger knight at the neighboring castle of Shalott.
The lord of this castle had a daughter of exquisite
beauty, and two sons lately received into the order of
knighthood, one of whom was at that time ill in bed, and
thereby prevented from attending the tournament, for which
both brothers had long made preparations. Launcelot
offered to attend the other, if he were permitted to
borrow the armor of the invalid, and the lord of Shalott,
without knowing the name of his guest, being satisfied
from his appearance that his son could not have a better
assistant in arms, most thankfully accepted the offer. In
the meantime the young lady, who had been much struck by
the first appearance of the stranger knight, continued to
survey him with increased attention, and before the
conclusion of supper, became so deeply enamored of him,
that, after frequent changes of color, and other symptoms
which Sir Launcelot could not possibly mistake, she was
obliged to retire to her chamber, and seek relief in
tears. Sir Launcelot hastened to convey to her, by means
of her brother, the information that his heart was already
disposed of, but that it would be his pride and pleasure
to act as her knight at the approaching tournament. The
lady, obliged to be satisfied with that courtesy,
presented him her scarf to be worn at the tournament.
Launcelot set off in the morning with the young knight,
who, on their approaching Winchester, carried him to the
castle of a lady, sister to the lord of Shalott, by whom
they were hospitably entertained. The next day they put on
their armor, which was perfectly plain, and without any
device, as was usual to youths during the first year of
knighthood, their shields being only painted red, as some
color was necessary to enable them to be recognized by
their attendants. Launcelot wore on his crest the scarf of
the maid of Shalott, and, thus equipped, proceeded to the
tournament, where the knights were divided into two
companies, the one commanded by Sir Galehaut, the other by
King Arthur. Having surveyed the combat for a short time
from without the lists, and observed that Sir Galehaut's
party began to give way, they joined the press and
attacked the royal knights, the young man choosing such
adversaries as were suited to his strength, while his
companion selected the principal champions of the Round
Table, and successively overthrew Gawain, Bohort, and
Lionel. The astonishment of the spectators was extreme,
for it was thought that no one but Launcelot could possess
such invincible force; yet the favor on his crest seemed
to preclude the possibility of his being thus disguised,
for Launcelot had never been known to wear the badge of
any but his sovereign lady. At length Sir Hector,
Launcelot's brother, engaged him, and, after a dreadful
combat, wounded him dangerously in the head, but was
himself completely stunned by a blow on the helmet, and
felled to the ground; after which the conqueror rode off
at full speed, attended by his companion.
They returned to the castle of Shalott, where Launcelot
was attended with the greatest care by the good earl, by
his two sons, and, above all, by his fair daughter, whose
medical skill probably much hastened the period of his
recovery. His health was almost completely restored, when
Sir Hector, Sir Bohort, and Sir Lionel, who, after the
return of the court to Camelot, had undertaken the quest
of their relation, discovered him walking on the walls of
the castle. Their meeting was very joyful; they passed
three days in the castle amidst constant festivities, and
bantered each other on the events of the tournament.
Launcelot, though he began by vowing vengeance against the
author of his wound, yet ended by declaring that he felt
rewarded for the pain by the pride he took in witnessing
his brother's extraordinary prowess. He then dismissed
them with a message to the queen, promising to follow
immediately, it being necessary that he should first take
a formal leave of his kind hosts, as well as of the fair
maid of Shalott.
The young lady, after vainly attempting to detain him
by her tears and solicitations, saw him depart without
leaving her any ground for hope.
It was early summer when the tournament took place; but
some months had passed since Launcelot's departure, and
winter was now near at hand. The health and strength of
the Lady of Shalott had gradually sunk, and she felt that
she could not live apart from the object of her
affections. She left the castle, and, descending to the
river's brink, placed herself in a boat, which she loosed
from its moorings, and suffered to bear her down the
current toward Camelot.
One morning, as Arthur and Sir Lionel looked from the
window of the tower, the walls of which were washed by a
river, they descried a boat richly ornamented, and covered
with an awning of cloth of gold, which appeared to be
floating down the stream without any human guidance. It
struck the shore while they watched it, and they hastened
down to examine it. Beneath the awning they discovered the
dead body of a beautiful woman, in whose features Sir
Lionel easily recognized the lovely maid of Shalott,
Pursuing their search, they discovered a purse richly
embroidered with gold and jewels, and within the purse a
letter, which Arthur opened, and found addressed to
himself and all the knights of the Round Table, stating
that Launcelot of the Lake, the most accomplished of
knights and most beautiful of men, but at the same time
the most cruel and inflexible, had by his rigor produced
the death of the wretched maiden, whose love was no less
invincible than his cruelty.
The king immediately gave orders for the interment of
the lady, with all the honors suited to her rank, at the
same time explaining to the knights the history of her
affection for Launcelot, which moved the compassion and
regret of all.
Tennyson has chosen the story of the Lady of Shalott
for the subject of a poem:-
"There she weaves by night and day
A magic web with colors gay.
She has heard a whisper say
A curse is on her if she stay
To look
down to Camelot.
She knows not what the curse may be,
And so she weaveth steadily,
And little other care hath she,
The Lady
of Shalott.
"And moving thro' a mirror clear
That hangs before her all the year,
Shadows of the world appear.
There she sees the highway near
Winding
down to Camelot:
There the river eddy whirls,
And there the surly village churls,
And the red cloaks of market girls
Pass
onward from Shalott.
"Sometimes a troop of damsels glad,
An abbot on an ambling pad,
Sometimes a curly shepherd lad,
Or long-haired page in crimson clad
Goes by
to towered Camelot.
And sometimes thro' the mirror blue
The knights come riding two and two:
She has no loyal knight and true,
The Lady
of Shalott.
"But in her web she still delights
To weave the mirror's magic sights,
For often thro' the silent nights
A funeral, with plumes and lights
And
music, went to Camelot:
Or when the moon was overhead,
Came two young lovers lately wed;
'I am half sick of shadows,' said
The Lady
of Shalott."
The poem goes on as the story: the lady sees Launcelot,
he rides away, and she afterward dies and floats down the
river in a boat to Camelot. The poem ends as follows:-
"Under tower and balcony,
By garden wall and gallery,
A gleaming shape she floated by
Dead-pale between the houses high,
Silent
unto Camelot.
Out upon the wharves they came,
Knight and burgher, lord and dame,
And round the prow they read her name,
The Lady
of Shalott.
"Who is this? and what is here?
And in the lighted palace near
Died the sound of royal cheer;
And they crossed themselves for fear
All the
knights at Camelot:
But Launcelot mused a little space;
He said 'She has a lovely face;
God in his mercy lend her grace,
The Lady
of Shalott."'
The story of "Elaine, the fair, Elaine, the
lovable, Elaine, the lily-maid of Astolat," one of
the earliest of the "Idylls of the King," is of
course the same tale as the Lady of Shalott.
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