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CHAPTER XIII
SIR PALAMEDES
THE DEATH OF SIR TRISTRAM
WHILE Sir Tristram and the fair Isoude abode yet at La
Joyeuse Garde, Sir Tristram rode forth one day, without
armor, having no weapon but his spear and his sword. And
as he rode he came to a place where he saw two knights in
battle, and one of them had gotten the better, and the
other lay overthrown. The knight who had the better was
Sir Palamedes. When Sir Palamedes knew Sir Tristram, he
cried out, "Sir Tristram, now we be met, and ere we
depart we will redress our old wrongs." "As for
that," said Sir Tristram, "there never yet was
Christian man that might make his boast that I ever fled
from him, and thou that art a Saracen shalt never say that
of me." And therewith Sir Tristram made his horse to
run, and with all his might came straight upon Sir
Palamedes, and broke his spear upon him. Then he drew his
sword and struck at Sir Palamedes six great strokes, upon
his helm.
Sir Palamedes saw that Sir Tristram had not his armor
on, and he marvelled at his rashness and his great folly;
and said to himself, "If I meet and slay him I am
ashamed wheresoever I go." Then Sir Tristram cried
out and said, "Thou coward knight, why wilt thou not
do battle with me? for have thou no doubt I shall endure
all thy malice." "Ah, Sir Tristram!" said
Sir Palamedes, "thou knowest I may not fight with
thee for shame; for thou art here naked, and I am armed;
now I require that thou answer me a question that I shall
ask you." "Tell me what it is," said Sir
Tristram. "I put the case," said Sir Palamedes,
"that you were well armed, and I naked as ye be; what
would you do to me now, by your true knighthood?"
"Ah!" said Sir Tristram, "now I understand
thee well, Sir Palamedes; and, as God me bless, what I
shall say shall not be said for fear that I have of thee.
But if it were so, thou shouldest depart from me, for I
would not have to do with thee." "No more will I
with thee," said Sir Palamedes, "and therefore
ride forth on thy way." "As for that, I may
choose," said Sir Tristram, "either to ride or
to abide. But, Sir Palamedes, I marvel at one thing,- that
thou art so good a knight, yet that thou wilt not be
christened." "As for that," said Sir
Palamedes, "I may not yet be christened, for a vow
which I made many years ago; yet in my heart I believe in
our Saviour and his mild mother Mary; but I have yet one
battle to do, and when that is done I will be christened,
with a good will." "By my head," said Sir
Tristram, "as for that one battle, thou shalt seek it
no longer; for yonder is a knight, whom you have smitten
down. Now help me to be clothed in his armor, and I will
soon fulfil thy vow." "As ye will," said
Sir Palamedes, "so shall it be."
So they rode both unto that knight that sat on a bank;
and Sir Tristram saluted him, and he full weakly saluted
him again. "Sir," said Sir Tristram, "I
pray you to lend me your whole armor; for I am unarmed,
and I must do battle with this knight."
"Sir," said the hurt knight, "you shall
have it, with a right good will." Then Sir Tristram
unarmed Sir Galleron, for that was the name of the hurt
knight, and he as well as he could helped to arm Sir
Tristram. Then Sir Tristram mounted upon his own horse,
and in his hand he took Sir Galleron's spear. Thereupon
Sir Palamedes was ready, and so they came hurtling
together, and each smote the other in the midst of their
shields. Sir Palamedes' spear broke, and Sir Tristram
smote down the horse. Then Sir Palamedes leapt from his
horse, and drew out his sword. That saw Sir Tristram, and
therewith he alighted and tied his horse to a tree. Then
they came together as two wild beasts, lashing the one on
the other, and so fought more than two hours; and often
Sir Tristram smote such strokes at Sir Palamedes that he
made him to kneel, and Sir Palamedes broke away Sir
Tristram's shield, and wounded him. Then Sir Tristram was
wroth out of measure, and he rushed to Sir Palamedes and
wounded him passing sore through the shoulder, and by
fortune smote Sir Palamedes' sword out of his hand. And if
Sir Palamedes had stooped for his sword, Sir Tristram had
slain him.
Then Sir Palamedes stood and beheld his sword with a
full sorrowful heart. "Now," said Sir Tristram,
"I have thee at a vantage, as thou hadst me to-day;
but it shall never be said, in court, or among good
knights, that Sir Tristram did slay any knight that was
weaponless: therefore take thou thy sword, and let us
fight this battle to the end." Then spoke Sir
Palamedes to Sir Tristram: "I have no wish to fight
this battle any more. The offence that I have done unto
you is not so great but that, if it please you, we may be
friends. All that I have offended is for the love of the
queen, La Belle Isoude, and I dare maintain that she is
peerless among ladies; and for that offence ye have given
me many grievous and sad strokes, and some I have given
you again, Wherefore I require you, my lord Sir Tristram,
forgive me all that I have offended you, and this day have
me unto the next church; and first I will be clean
confessed, and after that see you that I be truly
baptized, and then we will ride together unto the court of
my lord, King Arthur, so that we may be there at the feast
of Pentecost." "Now take your horse," said
Sir. Tristram, "and as you have said, so shall it be
done."
So they took their horses, and Sir Galleron rode with
them. When they came to the church of Carlisle, the bishop
commanded to fill a great vessel with water; and when he
had hallowed it, he then confessed Sir Palamedes clean,
and christened him; and Sir Tristram and Sir Galleron were
his godfathers. Then soon after they departed, and rode
toward Camelot, where the noble King Arthur and Queen
Guenever were keeping a court royal. And the king and all
the court were glad that Sir Palamedes was christened.
Then Sir Tristram returned again to La Joyeuse Garde, and
Sir Palamedes went his way.
Not long after these events Sir Gawain returned from
Brittany, and related to King Arthur the adventure which
befell him in the forest of Breciliande,- how Merlin had
there spoken to him, and enjoined him to charge the king
to go without delay upon the quest of the Holy Greal.
While King Arthur deliberated, Tristram determined to
enter upon the quest, and the more readily, as it was well
known to him that this holy adventure would, if achieved,
procure him the pardon of all his sins. He immediately
departed for the kingdom of Brittany, hoping there to
obtain from Merlin counsel as to the proper course to
pursue to insure success.
THE DEATH OF SIR TRISTRAM
On arriving in Brittany Tristram found King Hoel
engaged in a war with a rebellious vassal, and hard
pressed by his enemy. His best knights had fallen in a
late battle, and he knew not where to turn for assistance.
Tristram volunteered his aid. It was accepted; and the
army of Hoel, led by Tristram, and inspired by his
example, gained a complete victory. The king penetrated by
the most lively sentiments of gratitude, and having
informed himself of Tristram's birth, offered him his
daughter in marriage. The princess was beautiful and
accomplished, and bore the same name with the Queen of
Cornwall; but this one is designated by the Romancers as
Isoude of the White Hands, to distinguish her from Isoude
the Fair.
How can we describe the conflict that agitated the
heart of Tristram? He adored the first Isoude, but his
love for her was hopeless, and not unaccompanied by
remorse. Moreover, the sacred quest on which he had now
entered demanded of him perfect purity of life. It seemed
as if a happy destiny had provided for him, in the
charming princess Isoude of the White Hands, the best
security for all his good resolutions. This last
reflection determined him. They were married, and passed
some months in tranquil happiness at the court of King
Hoel. The pleasure which Tristram felt in his wife's
society increased day by day. An inward grace seemed to
stir within him from the moment when he took the oath to
go on the quest of the Holy Greal; it seemed even to
triumph over the power of the magic love-potion.
The war, which had been quelled for a time, now burst
anew. Tristram, as usual, was foremost in every danger.
The enemy was worsted in successive conflicts, and at last
shut himself up in his principal city. Tristram led on the
attack of the city. As he mounted a ladder to scale the
walls, he was struck on the head by a fragment of rock,
which the besieged threw down upon him. It bore him to the
ground, where he lay insensible.
As soon as he recovered consciousness, he demanded to
be carried to his wife. The princess, skilled in the art
of surgery, would not suffer any one but herself to touch
her beloved husband. Her fair hands bound up his wounds;
Tristram kissed them with gratitude, which began to grow
into love. At first the devoted cares of Isoude seemed to
meet with great success; but after awhile these flattering
appearances vanished, and, in spite of all her care, the
malady grew more serious day by day.
In this perplexity, an old squire of Tristram's
reminded his master that the princess of Ireland,
afterward queen of Cornwall, had once cured him under
circumstances quite as discouraging. He called Isoude of
the White Hands to him, told her of his former cure, added
that he believed that the Queen Isoude could heal him, and
that he felt sure that she would come to his relief if
sent for.
Isoude of the White Hands consented that Gesnes, a
trusty man and skilful navigator, should be sent to
Cornwall. Tristram called him, and, giving him a ring,
"Take this," he said, "to the Queen of
Cornwall. Tell her that Tristram, near to death, demands
her aid. If you succeed in bringing her with you, place
white sails to your vessel on your return, that we may
know of your success when the vessel first heaves in
sight. But if Queen Isoude refuses, put on black sails;
they will be the presage of my impending death."
Gesnes performed his mission successfully. King Mark
happened to be absent from his capital, and the queen
readily consented to return with the bark to Brittany.
Gesnes clothed his vessel in the whitest of sails, and
sped his way back to Brittany.
Meantime the wound of Tristram grew more desperate day
by day. His strength, quite prostrated, no longer
permitted him to be carried to the seaside daily, as had
been his custom from the first moment when it was possible
for the bark to be on the way homeward. He called a young
damsel, and gave her in charge to keep watch in the
direction of Cornwall, and to come and tell him the color
of the sails of the first vessel she should see
approaching.
When Isoude of the White Hands consented that the queen
of Cornwall should be sent for, she had not known all the
reasons which she had for fearing the influence which
renewed intercourse with that princess might have on her
own happiness. She had now learned more, and felt the
danger more keenly. She thought, if she could only keep
the knowledge of the queen's arrival from her husband, she
might employ in his service any resources which her skill
could supply, and still avert the dangers which she
apprehended. When the vessel was seen approaching, with
its white sails sparkling in the sun, the damsel, by
command of her mistress, carried word to Tristram that the
sails were black.
Tristram, penetrated with inexpressible grief, breathed
a profound sigh, turned away his face, and said,
"Alas, my beloved! we shall never see one another
again!" Then he commended himself to God, and
breathed his last.
The death of Tristram was the first intelligence which
the queen of Cornwall heard on landing. She was conducted
almost senseless into the chamber of Tristram, and expired
holding him in her arms.
Tristram, before his death, requested that his body
should be sent to Cornwall, and that his sword, with a
letter he had written, should be delivered to King Mark.
The remains of Tristram and Isoude were embarked in a
vessel, along with the sword, which was presented to the
king of Cornwall, He was melted with tenderness when he
saw the weapon which slew Moraunt of Ireland,- which had
so often saved his life, and redeemed the honor of his
kingdom. In the letter Tristram begged pardon of his
uncle, and related the story of the amorous draught.
Mark ordered the lovers to be buried in his own chapel.
From the tomb of Tristram there sprung a vine, which went
along the walls, and descended into the grave of the
queen. It was cut down three times, but each time sprung
up again more vigorous than before, and this wonderful
plant has ever since shaded the tombs of Tristram and
Isoude.
Spenser introduces Sir Tristram in his Faery Queene. In
Book
VI., Canto ii., Sir Calidore encounters in the forest
a young hunter, whom he thus describes:-
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"Him steadfastly he marked, and saw to be
A goodly youth of amiable grace,
Yet but a slender slip, that scarce did see
Yet seventeen yeares; but tall and faire of face,
That sure he deemed him borne of noble race.
All in a woodman's jacket he was clad
Of Lincoln greene, belayed with silver lace;
And on his head an hood with aglets* sprad,
And by his side his hunter's horne he hanging had.
"Buskins he wore of costliest cordawayne,
Pinckt upon gold, and paled part per part,*(2)
As then the guize was for each gentle swayne,
In his right hand he held a trembling dart,
Whose fellow he before had sent apart;
And in his left he held a sharp bore-speare,
With which he wont to launch the salvage heart
Of many a lyon, and of many a beare,
That first unto his hand in chase did happen
neare."
* Aglets, points or tags.
*(2) Pinckt upon gold, etc., adorned with golden
points, or eyelets, and regularly intersected with
stripes. Paled (in heraldry), striped.
Tristram is often alluded to by the Romancers as the
great authority and model in all matters relating to the
chase. In the Faery Queene, Tristram, in answer to the
inquiries of Sir Calidore, informs him of his name and
parentage, and concludes:-
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"All which my days I have not lewdly spent,
Nor spilt the blossom of my tender years
In idlesse; but, as was convenient,
Have trained been with many noble feres
In gentle thewes, and such like seemly leers;*
'Mongst which my most delight hath always been
To hunt the salvage chace, amongst my peers,
Of all that rangeth in the forest green
Of which none is to me unknown that yet was seen.
"Ne is there hawk which mantleth on her perch,
Whether high towering or accosting low,
But I the measure of her flight do search,
And all her prey, and all her diet know.
Such be our joys, which in these forests grow."
* Feres, companions; thewes,
labors; leers, learning.
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