The Once and Future King
Chapter IX
On a bright winter day, six months later, Joyous Gard was invested. The sun shone at right-angles to the north wind, leaving the east side of the furrows white with frost. Outside the castle, the starlings and green plover searched anxiously in the stiff grass. The deciduous trees stood up in skeleton, like maps of the veins or of the nervous system. The cow-droppings, if you hit them, rang like wood. Everything had the colour of winter, the faded lichen green, like a green velvet cushion which has been left in the sun for years. The vein-trees, like the cushion, had a nap on their trunks. The conifers had it all over their funeral draperies. The ice crackled in the puddles and on the gellid moat. Joyous Gard itself stood up, a beautiful picture in the powerless sunshine.
Lancelot’s castle was not forbidding. The old-fashioned keeps of Arthur’s accession had given place to a gaiety of defence, now difficult to imagine. You must not picture it like the ruined strongholds, with mortar crumbling between the stones, which you see today. It was plastered. They had put chrome in the plaster, so that it was faintly gold. Its slated turrets, conical in the French fashion, crowded from complicated battlements in a hundred unexpected aspirations. There were little fantastic bridges, covered like the Bridge of Sighs, from this chapel to that tower. There were outside staircases, going heaven knows where – perhaps to heaven. Chimneys suddenly soared out of machicolations. Real stained-glass windows, high up and out of danger, gleamed where once there had been blank walls. Bannerettes, crucifixes, gargoyles, water-spouts, weather-cocks, spires and belfries crowded the angled roofs – roofs going this way and that, sometimes of red tile, sometimes of mossy stone, sometimes of slate. The place was a town, not a castle. It was light pastry, not the dour unleavened bread of old Dunlothian.
Round the joyful castle there was the camp of its besiegers. Kings, in those days, took their household tapestries with them on campaign, which was a measure of the kind of camps they had. The tents were red, green, checkered, striped. Some of them were of silk. In a maze of colour and guy-ropes, of tent-pegs and tall spears, of chess-players and sutlers, of tapestried interiors and of gold plate, Arthur of England had sat down to starve his friend.
Lancelot and Guenever were standing by a log fire in the hall. Fires were no longer lit in the middle of the rooms, leaving the smoke to escape as best it could through lanterns. Here there was a proper fireplace, richly carved with the arms and supporters of Benwick, and half a tree smouldered in the grate. The ice outside had made the ground too slippery for horses. So it was a day of truce, though undeclared.
Guenever was saying: ‘I can’t think how you could have done it.’
‘Neither can I, Jenny. I don’t even know that I did do it, except that everybody says so.’
‘Can’t you remember anything?’
‘I was excited, I suppose, and frightened about you. There was a press of people waving weapons, and knights trying to stop me. I had to cut my way.’
‘It seems unlike you.’
‘You don’t suppose I wanted to, do you?’ he asked, bitterly. ‘Gareth was fonder of me than he was of his brothers. I was almost his godfather. Oh, let’s leave it, for God’s sake.’
‘Never mind,’ she said. ‘I dare say he is better out of it, poor dear.’
Lancelot kicked the log thoughtfully, one arm on the mantelpiece, looking into the ashy glow.
‘He had blue eyes.’
He stopped, considering them in the fire.
‘When he came to court, he would not name his parents. It was because he had to run away from home, so as to come, in the first place. There was a feud between his mother and Arthur, and the old woman hated him coming. But he couldn’t keep away. He wanted the romance and the chivalry and the honour. So he ran away to us, and wouldn’t say who he was. He didn’t ask to be knighted. It was enough for him to be at the great centre until he had proved his strength.’
He pushed a stray branch into place.
‘Kay took him to work in the kitchen, and gave him a nickname: “Pretty Hands.” Kay was always a bully. And then … it seems so long ago.’
In the silence – while they stood, each with an elbow on the mantel and a foot towards the fire, the weightless ash shuffled down.
‘I used to give him tips sometimes, to buy himself his little things. Beaumains the kitchen page. He took to me for some reason. I knighted him with my own hands.’
He looked at his fingers in surprise, moving them as if he had not seen them before.
‘Then he fought the adventure of the Green Knight, and we found out what a champion he was …
‘Gentle Gareth,’ he said, almost in amazement, ‘I killed him with the same hands too, because he refused to wear his armour against me. What horrible creatures humans are! If we see a flower as we walk through the fields, we lop off its head with a stick. That is how Gareth has gone.’
Guenever took the guilty hand with distress.
‘You couldn’t help it.’
‘I could have helped it.’ He was in his customary religious misery. ‘It was my fault. You are right that it was unlike me. It was my fault, my fault, my grievous fault. It was because I laid about me in the press.’
‘You had to make the rescue.’
‘Yes, but I could have fought the armed knights only. Instead of which, I laid about me against the half-armed foot-soldiers, who had no chance. I was cap-à-pied, and they were in cuir-bouillé, just leather and pikes. But I cut at them and God punished us. It was because I had forgotten my knighthood that God made me kill poor Gareth, and Gaheris too.’
‘Lance!’ she said sharply.
‘Now we are in this hellish misery,’ he went on, refusing to listen. ‘Now I have got to fight against my own King, who knighted me and taught me all I know. How can I fight him? How can I fight Gawaine, even? I have killed three of his brothers. How can I add to that? But Gawaine will never let me off. He will never forgive now. I don’t blame him. Arthur would forgive us, but Gawaine won’t let him. I have got to be besieged in this hole like a coward, when nobody wants to fight except Gawaine, and then they come outside with their fanfares and sing:
Traitor knight
Come out to fight.
Yah! Yah! Yah!’
‘It doesn’t matter what they sing. It doesn’t make you a coward because they sing it.’
‘And my own men are beginning to think so too. Bors, Blamore, Bleoberis, Lionel – they are always asking me to go out and fight. And when I do go out, what happens?’
‘So far as I can learn,’ she said, ‘what happens is that you beat them, and then you let them off and beg them to go home. Everybody respects your kindness.’
He hid his head in the crook of his elbow.
‘Do you know what happened in the last battle? Bors had a tilt with the King himself, and knocked him down. He jumped off his horse and stood over Arthur with his sword drawn. I saw it happen, and galloped like mad. Bors said: Shall I make an end of this war? Not so hardy, I shouted, on pain of thy head. So we got Arthur back on his horse and I begged him, begged him on my knees, to go away. Arthur began to cry. His eyes filled with tears, and he stared at me and said nothing. He looks much older. He doesn’t want to fight us, but it is Gawaine. Gawaine was once on our side, but I slew his brothers in my wickedness.’
‘Forget your wickedness. It is Gawaine’s black temper and Mordred’s cunning.’
‘If it were just Gawaine,’ he lamented, ‘there would still be a hope of peace. He is decent inside himself. He is a good man. But Mordred is always there, hinting to him and making him miserable. And there is the whole hatred of Gael and Gall, and this New Order of Mordred’s. I can’t see the end.’
The Queen suggested for the hundredth time: ‘Would it be any use if I were to go back to Arthur, and put myself on his mercy?’
‘We have offered it, and they have refused. It is no use going in the face of that. They would probably burn you after all.’
She left the fireplace and drifted over to the great embrasure of the window. Outside, the siege works were spread below. Some tiny soldiers in the enemy camp were merrily playing Fox-and-Geese on a frozen pond. Their clear laughter came up, separated by distance from the tumbles which gave it rise.
‘All the time the war goes on,’ she said, ‘and footmen who are not knights get killed, but nobody notices that.’
‘All the time.’
She observed, without turning: ‘I think I will go back, dear, and chance it. Even if I am burned, that would be better than having the Trouble.’
He followed her to the window.
‘Jenny, I would go with you, if it were any use. We could go together, and let them cut our heads off, if there was any hope of stopping the war by that. But everybody has gone mad. Even if we did give ourselves up, Bors and Ector and the rest would carry on the feud – if we were killed. There are a hundred extra feuds on foot, for those we killed in the market-place and on the stairs, and for things through half a century of Arthur’s past. Soon I will not be able to hold them, even as it is. Hebes le Renoumes, Villiers the Valiant, Urre of Hungary: they would begin revenging us, and everything would be worse. Urre is horribly grateful.’
‘Civilization seems to have become insane,’ she said.
‘Yes, and it seems that we have made it so. Bors, Lionel and Gawaine wounded, and everybody raving for blood. I have to sally out with my knights and rush about pretending to strike, and perhaps Arthur will be urged against me, or Gawaine will come, and then I have to cover myself with the shield, and defend myself, and I mustn’t hit back. The men notice it, and say that by not exerting myself I am prolonging the war, which makes it worse for them.’
‘What they say is true.’
‘Of course it is true. But the alternative is to kill Arthur and Gawaine, and how can I do that? If only Arthur would take you back, and go away, it would be better than this.’
She might have flared up at such a tactless suggestion, twenty years before. It was a measure of their autumn that now she was amused.
‘Jenny, it is a terrible thing to say, but it is true.’
‘Of course it’s true.’
‘We seem to be treating you like a dummy.’
‘We are all dummies.’
He leaned his head against the cold stone of the embrasure, until she took his hand.
‘Don’t think about it. Just stay in the castle, and be patient. Perhaps God will look after us.’
‘You said that once before.’
‘Yes, the week before they caught us.’
‘Even if God won’t,’ he remarked bitterly, ‘we could apply to the Pope.’
‘The Pope!’
He looked up.
‘What do you mean?’
‘Why, Lance, the thing you said … If the Pope was to send bulls to both sides, saying he would excommunicate us if we didn’t come to terms? If we appealed for a papal ruling? Bors and the others would have to accept it. Surely …’
He looked at her closely, as she chose the words.
‘He could appoint the Bishop of Rochester to administer the terms of peace …’
‘But what terms?’
She had caught her idea, however, and was on fire with it.
‘Lance, we two would have to accept them, whatever they might be. Even if they were to mean … even if they were bad for us, they would mean peace for the people. And our knights would have no excuse for carrying on the feud, because they would have to obey the Church …’
He could find no words.
‘Well?’
She turned to him with a face of composure and relief – the efficient and undramatic face which women achieve when they have nursing to do, or some other employment of efficiency. He did not know how to answer it.
‘We can send a messenger tomorrow,’ she said.
‘Jenny!’
He could not bear it that she was allowing herself to be handed from one to another, no longer young, or that he was to lose her, or that he was not to lose her. Between men’s lives and their love and his old totems, he was left with nothing but shame. This she saw, and helped him with it also. She kissed him tenderly. Outside, the daily chorus was beginning.
Traitor knight
Come out to fight.
Yah! Yah! Yah!
‘There,’ she said, stroking his white hair. ‘Don’t listen to them. My Lancelot must stay in the castle, and there will be a happy ending.’