MORDRED, A TRAGEDY

HENRY NEWBOLT

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  • ACT I
  • ACT II
  • ACT III
  • ACT IV
  • ACT V

  •    "The fate of...is tragic in the essential sense, and not merely that superficial sense of the word according to which every misfortune is called 'tragic.'...In truth innocent suffering of that sort is merely pathetic, not tragic, inasmuch as it is not within the sphere of reason. Now suffering—misfortune—comes within the sphere of reason only if it is brought about by the free will of the subject, who must be entirely moral and justifiable; as must be also the power against which that subject proceeds. This power must be no merely natural one, nor the mere will of a tyrant: because it is only in such case that the man is himself, so to speak, guilty of his misfortune.
       "In genuine tragedy, then, they must be powers both alike moral and justifiable, which from this side and from that come into collision. Two opposed Rights come forth: the one breaks itself to pieces against the other: in this way both alike loss: while both alike are justified, the one towards the other: not as if this were right, that other wrong."

    HEGEL. (Translated by W. Pater)

    Persons Represented


    ARTHUR, King of Britain.
    SIR KAY,The Seneschal.
    SIR LANCELOT DU LAKE.
    SIR LAMORAK DE GALIS.
    SIR TRISTRAM DE LIONES.
    SIR BEDIVERE.
    SIR LUCAN.
    SIR GERAINT.
    SIR PELLEAS OF THE ISLES.


    Princes of Orkney, Sons of King Lot and Queen Morgance.
       SIR GARETH
       SIR GAWAINE
       SIR GAHERIS
       SIR AGRAVAINE


    SIR MORDRED, Prince of Orkney, son of Arthur and Morgance.
    GUINEVERE, Queen of Britain.


    Ladies in attendance on Guinevere.
       ENID
       LIONORS
       LINET
       LAUREL


    A HERALD.
    A TRUMPETER.
    KNIGHTS, SQUIRES, YEOMEN, GUARDS, LADIES, NUNS,   The buildings, armour, and dresses are in the style of the early part of the XVth century.

    ACT I



    SCENE I.



    The Lists at Caerleon-on-Usk. Upon a daïs GUINEVERE with her four ladies, and ARTHUR, with KAY and a herald at his right hand. A little below them LANCELOT, TRISTRAM, LAMORAK, GAWAINE, and many other knights in armour; PELLEAS, MORDRED, squires, yeomen,and a crowd of folk beyond.


      Arthur. Lancelot, the Queen with all men's loud acclaim
    Hath named thee victor, and doth summon thee
    To kneel before her Grace.
          [LANCELOT kneels.
      Guinevere (laying a wreath upon his head).
    Sir Lancelot, here
    I give thee but a wisp of worthless leaves
    For honour's sake: the prize thou hast already,
    Knowing thyself unmatched.
      Lancelot. A prize, my Queen,
    Or this or that, was never in my thought;
    But one word's praise, if any toil might win it,
    From the most gracious lips in Christendom.
      Arthur. A knightly answer, fitly rounding off
    A noble contest: for in all the years
    Since Britain crowned me with Pendragon's crown
    Here at Caerleon, never have I beheld
    So great a press of splendid chivalry
    Gathered within one lists, nor ever known
    Challenge so keen, defence so strenuous,
    Valour and courtesy so justly blent.
    Thou, Lancelot, claim'st of right the victor's wreath,
    Having surpassed even thine own renown;
    Yet let me say, did'st thou not wear it better
    There are a hundred here would wear it well.
       (To KAY.) But come, 'tis ended: bid the trumpet sound,
    And let the herald cry before we part
    Our wonted proclamation.
      Kay. Sir, he is ready
    Ho! the king's herald!
          [Trumpet.]
      Herald. Oyez! oyez! oyez!
    And first if there be any in presence here
    Knight of the Table Round, that hath received
    Commission of the king for quest or war,
    And therein laboured and therefrom returned
    Now let him render up his due account
    And bide the judgment of our lord the king
    Oyez! Who comes?
      Lamorak. I, Lamorak de Galis.
      Arthur. Lamorak? Our Order knows no greater name:
    Did I not match it with a charge as great?
      Lamorak. My Lord, the charge was great: no less indeed
    Than kingship: for the full space of a year
    To rule the outland by the Northern Sea,
    Deal peace or war to the king's enemies
    And justice to his people; to command
    With Arthur's voice of thunder, and to strike
    With the swift lightning flash of Arthur's sword.
      Arthur. I do remember well, yet all this year
    I have not so much as dreamed of my wild North,
    Knowing it guarded by a hand of iron
    And golden counsels: yet for custom's sake
    Recount thy service, Lamorak.
      Lamorak. Sir, briefly summed,
    'Tis war-built peace, that will not quickly crumble.
      Arthur. Thou hast our thanks: we'll question thee anon
    Of all in order; meanwhile, peace or war,
    Thou'rt welcome, Lamorak: and since thy wars
    Have wrought our peace, twice welcome! So there come not
    Some need more pressing that the times portend,
    We'll keep thee near us.
      Lamorak. Good my lord, you heap
    Reward on praise and honour on reward.
      Arthur. Herald, again thy trumpet.
       [Trumpet.]
      Herald. Oyez! oyez! oyez!
    And next if there be any in presence here,
    Gentle or simple, woman, child, or man,
    That wishing well to live at peace with all
    Natheless hath suffered or doth suffer wrong,
    Now let the weak and poor forget their fears
    And crave the justice of our lord the king.
    Oyez! who comes?
          [A pause.]
      Arthur. (To KAY.) None? let him sound again.
      Kay. My lord, 'tis needless; up and down the realm
    The Table Round have quested year by year,
    Till there is none perverse or bold enough
    To dare the instant forfeit.
      Arthur. How say'st thou, none?
    Are there no ladies held against their will,
    No poor down-trodden, no man done to death
    By craft unknightly, no blaspheming heard
    Against our holy faith? The Golden Age
    Is come again then! Yet, why marvel I,
    Knowing my strength, whose arm is truly braced
    With triple steel, Lancelot and Lamorak
    And Tristram, betwixt whom, as all men say,
    The knighthood of the world is parted fair.
    But now to make an end, there's yet, meseems,
    One proclamation, herald.
       [Trumpet.]
      Herald. Oyez! oyez! oyez!
    And last, if there be any in presence here
    Who being but squire, yet true withal and strong,
    Doth covet knighthood, and would bind himself
    By the strait vows of Arthur's Table Round,
    Now let him come, with warrant of his worth,
    And make request unto our lord the king.
    Oyez! who comes?
      Lancelot. I, Lancelot, make request
    For my squire, Pelleas: I have proved him brave,
    Enduring, emulous, sudden and sure at need,
    And in the courtesy of service, perfect.
    Thereto his birth is princely; yet I look
    To see his life out-lustre it.
      Arthur. Enough!
    Thy suit is granted, Lancelot: and for thee
    Pelleas, that hearest of thyself such words
    From such a mouth, remember all thy days
    That Lancelot praised the promise of thy youth,
    And thou shalt surely come to more than fame.
      Gawaine. My lord, I, Gawaine, also beg thy favour
    For a young kinsman.
      Arthur. Nay, Gawaine, thou art late.
    It doth repent me, but the Table Round
    Hath but one siege unfilled, and that thou hear'st
    Is pledged to Pelleas. Thou shalt ask again
    At some more happy season.
       (To GUINEVERE) Come, my queen,
    Shall we go homeward?
    Mordred.    Ah! my lord! my lord!
    Hear me one moment's space!
       [He kneels and grasps the king's mantle.
      Arthur (his robe falling as he turns).
    And who art thou,
    So wilful-urgent that thou darest thus
    From a king's shoulder pluck his kingly robe?
      Mordred (looking fixedly at him). Mordred, the son of Morgance.
      Arthur. Ha! thou sayest?
      Mordred. Mordred, the son of Morgance.
      Arthur. Nay, I hear thee,
    And for the name's sake pardon. What's thy plaint?
    What wilt thou?
      Mordred. Knighthood of the Table Round.
      Arthur. Thou too? Hast thou not heard even now—
      Mordred. Ay, my lord,
    It was for me that Gawaine made request.
      Arthur. And thereto had his answer. What? is there more?
      Mordred. Ay, this my lord:
    Morgance, the queen, my mother, sending me
    Her youngest hither, bade me boldly ask
    This boon of knighthood, saying, "And if he doubt,
    Thou shalt entreat him by the memory
    Of his own youth, when I from Orkney came
    On a far embassage, and made with him
    That lasting treaty."
       [ARTHUR looks hard on MORDRED and is silent.
    Guinevere (aside to LANCELOT). Mark how the king is moved!
    Anger and policy divide his mind
    With more than common tumult.
      Lancelot. 'Tis no wonder:
    The habit of command so long ingrained
    Brooks not a suit urged by any mouth
    Save one, my queen.
      Guinevere (smiling). Listen!
      Arthur (half to himself). That lasting treaty!
    (aloud) Ay, Mordred, partly for that treaty's sake,
    And partly too, that something in thy face
    Stirs me with presage of a name for thee
    Beyond thy fellows, thou shalt have thy will,
    Though how, I know not yet.
       [He turns to go.
      Kay. Sir—
      Arthur. Stay me not;
    I know thy scruples, Kay; but I have sworn
    He shall be knight, knight of our Table Round,
    Though I myself must yield my place to him.
          [GUINEVERE and ARTHUR go out followed by
    ladies, knights, squires, and men-at-arms.



    SCENE II.




    Caerleon: the Queen's Bower.


       Enter GUINEVERE, with Ladies attending her.
      Guinevere. Thanks, ye may leave me now; for some short space
    I shall not need you. Enid, go not thou.
          [The others go out.
      Enid. Madam, you are tired.
      Guinevere. Ay, 'twas a weary day.
      Enid. Weary? Oh! madam, now you jest with me!
    Think you I saw not,—up on the daïs there—
    How your eyes kindled when the trumpets rang,
    And every time those two great glittering waves
    Thundered along to the shock, you clenched your hands
    And leaned a little forward, and your breath
    Caught, while the mellay clashed and clung and broke
    And clashed again; and when the warder fell
    And you, the Queen of Tourney, rose to crown
    Our noblest knight—think you I marked not then
    The happy pride that gave your quivering voice
    That deep-strung note of challenge? Dearest madam,
    Was it not so?
      Guinevere. Nay, Enid, yea and nay,
    Proud was I—yea, and who would not be proud?
    But happy! Yea, and I was happy too,
    While he was there before me, and my thought
    A moment slumbered—but to wake—to think—
    To see the one thing I have lacked in life,
    The one thing worth possession—ah! thou knowest
    That I was wed while I was half a child,
    And found not this till I had signed away
    My right to grasp it—and the slow years bring
    Nought but endurance—bitterer still, there come
    Days like to-day, poignant with needless proof
    Of loss immeasurable, and rack my heart
    With a vain longing to unravel life
    And weave the pattern fresh—and then thou sayest
    It was not weary, Enid!
      Enid. Oh! dear lady,
    Forgive me, I was blind, I should have seen—
    And I remember I have sometimes thought—
    Why did you never tell me?
      Guinevere. Only I think
    Because I never yet have felt so weak
    As to-day left me—
                        Hark! a foot without!
    Let no one enter—give me a moment yet—
    Now open—Well? Who is it?
      Enid. Madam, his page—
    He craves an audience of the queen.
      Guinevere. Why gladly
    Tell him—is it done?—and, Enid, when he comes,
    Wait thou without, dear child, and see that none
    Break in upon our conference.
      Enid. Oh! madam,
    Not—not alone! not now! you are not yourself,
    Let me stay with you—I am true and secret.
      Guinevere. Nay, Enid, trust me, 'tis the queen he seeks,
    And he shall find her!
                         There's his step without,
    I am ready.
     Enid (kissing her hand). Dearest lady!
      Guinevere. Bring him in.
          Enter LANCELOT hurriedly: ENID goes out.
      Lancelot. My Queen, I am come—(He stops abruptly.)
      Guinevere. Surely Sir Lancelot knows
    Come for what cause he may, he is welcome here.
      Lancelot. Oh! say not that, not that; for I am come
    To take farewell.
      Guinevere. Farewell?—I cannot—stay—
    What wert thou saying? My head is tired to-night,
    And thou wert strange and sudden.
      Lancelot. Yea, I am strange
    Even to myself, most strange; and suddenness
    Befits my purpose, that must do the deed
    Before repentance wakes.
      Guinevere. Why, thou art distressed:
    We'll sit awhile, and talk of this more calmly.
    Come, let me guess; the king, it may be, needs
    That his right hand should strike some distant wrong.
    Is it so far distant?
      Lancelot. I must part to-night
    For Joyous Gard.
      Guinevere. Ah, 'tis trouble calls thee home,
    Not the king's service? Then some rebel knight,
    Grudging thine overlordship, thinks it easy
    To brave an absent prince; but thou'lt be gone
    How long at most?
      Lancelot. I shall be gone the rest
    Of all my life-days.
      Guinevere. Now may God defend thee!
    But 'tis not like thy high victorious heart
    To brood on danger.
      Lancelot. Alas! you know me not!
    I have brooded long, too long, and now must fly
    Lest worse befall than danger.
      Guinevere. Thou must fly?
    When has thou fled? But stay—'tis hence thou goest;
    The peril's here, then?
      Lancelot. Ay, most truly here,
    Imminent—here and now!—farewell, my Queen,
    Farewell, I dare not linger.
      Guinevere (in a low voice). Peril here?
    I know not—what—thou sayest—
      Lancelot. You shall not know:
    Only what's weakest in me could desire
    That you should know: farewell!
      Guinevere. Stay, art thou not
    Perchance too sudden, Lancelot, too resigned
    To thine own weakness, when with patient craft
    Or help of strong alliance, even yet
    Thou might'st endure, and by enduring break
    The onset of thy foes?
      Lancelot. Oh, stay me not!
    God knows I have endured! What is there left,
    What patience, what alliance?
      Guinevere. Mine! the queen's!
      Lancelot. Oh, mockery! most unguarded stroke of all!
    Thy words against their merciful intent
    Drive the steel deeper.
      Guinevere. Nay, Lancelot, hear me yet,
    What if this secret enemy of thine
    Threatened me too? What if my life with thine
    Lay strangling in the toils, the self-same toils,
    Wild with one hope and dumb with one despair?
      Lancelot. Guinevere! Guinevere! What hast thou said ?
    I dare not understand thee!
      Guinevere. Must my tongue
    Cry it more loudly than my beating heart?
    Can'st thou not read a woman's eyes?
      Lancelot. O Death!
    Remember not my blind and faithless prayers,
    Let not the end be yet!
      Guinevere. Ah, reckless heart!
    How long before thou wilt repent again,
    And crave Death's mercy-stroke? Forget thou not
    Because a sudden gleam hath touched the world,
    That 'tis but lightning, born of the storm itself,
    And for a moment only cleaves the gloom
    That deepens round us. Canst thou still endure
    To grope in darkness, doubtful of the end,
    With but a voice to guide thy faltering feet?
      Lancelot. My Queen—let storm-clouds gather as they will
    Why should we stay to brave them? Far away
    Lies Joyous Gard: there sleeps the windless sky,
    There dreams the sunlit summer of our life.
    Come, let us seek it: art thou silent still?
    Why are thine eyes so rapt and so forlorn,
    My Guinevere?
      Guinevere. Oh! Lancelot, call me not
    By a false name: since I am Guinevere
    I am not thine: if I were thine indeed
    I were myself no more: which would'st thou have me,
    Thine, or the woman thou hast known and loved?
      Lancelot. Nay, being mine thou shalt be most thyself.
    How could'st thou truly live, when all these years
    Thy will hath been another's? Not a rose
    In all the forest comes to bud and bloom
    —Her veriest life and being—till she 'scapes
    The cold embrace of earth, and stretches forth
    Free arms to the free air. I offer thee
    —Nay, on my knees I humbly pray thee take—
    The life thou owest to thy truer self,
    The life thy soul desireth.
      Guinevere. Lancelot! Lancelot!
    I am the king's—nay, hear me to the end,
    I know thy thought—'tis true I was a child,
    'Tis true that with a child's consent I gave
    I knew not what, for that I did not need:
    Yet did I pledge my troth; and therewithal
    Took in return a true man's single faith,
    And in my keeping ever since have held
    His welfare and his peace.
      Lancelot. The bargain's nought!
    'Twas blindfold: no man's bound by such a pact.
    He, when he made it, thereby made it void
    And took thee at his peril.
      Guinevere. Yet am I bound,
    Not by my promise, if thou wilt, but still
    By that which followed: how can I escape
    The memory of his bounty?
      Lancelot. Oh, bethink thee,
    Hast thou not said even now, he gave thee nought
    But that thou did'st not need?
      Guinevere. Ah! but he gave!
    And I accepted gladly: day by day,
    Year after year, I have taken countless gifts—
    His throne, the splendour of his name, a life
    All-honoured, all-befriended and secure,
    The constant service of his silent care,
    And, greater still, to share his kingly thought
    For the land's weal: thou canst not say that these,
    These that I took, and learned at last to need,
    Deserve no payment.
      Lancelot. They were more than paid
    By grace of mere acceptance: thou hast given
    Day after day, thou say'st, and year by year,
    Gold for his silver—
      Guinevere. Lancelot, if 'twere so,
    Yet is there more between the king and me
    Than such exchange can ransom: when we wedded,
    Ay, from the day when first he saw my face
    And shrined it in his thought, he has kept for me
    In sacred dedication, the one gift
    That none can offer twice, the crown of love,
    The undivided faith of body and soul.
    Thou'rt silent—nay, I love thee but the more;
    Some challenges no man may answer to
    And not be tarnished. Oh! my peerless knight
    Enforce my will with thine, and we'll contest
    This praise with Arthur: Love's a noble name,
    But Faith's a nobler: how can thou and I
    Endure to lack it? What! Shall he be pure
    And Guinevere break troth? Shall he be strong
    And Lancelot falter? Nay, while Arthur's king,
    King of himself, no less will I be queen,
    And thou, his prince of comrades.
      Lancelot. Ha! by my life
    There's more of knighthood in a woman's heart
    Than the Round Table musters! Thou hast wrought
    Passion itself to such a generous heat
    That Love for Love's sake hath surrendered him
    Exulting into thrall.
      Guinevere. There Lancelot spoke!
    There rang the flawless shield! O lover mine,
    Since we must part, I bless thee for the word
    That makes the parting easier! Fare thee well:
    I have crowned thee twice to-day: let me not live
    To see thee less victorious.
      Lancelot. Fear it not!
    My thought is as thy thought, and all my mind
    Set to the measure of thy will. Farewell!
             [He goes out and ENID returns.
      Enid. Oh, do not weep! What is it? rest you here.
    Was it so hard then?
      Guinevere. Hard? Oh Enid! Enid!



    ACT II



    SCENE I.



    Camelot: a terrace below the Great Hall. MORDRED alone. AGRAVAINE enters presently through a gateway, but is at first unseen.


      Mordred. It shall be! it shall be! but this waiting
    Will fret my heart-strings through!
      Agravaine (aside). Ha! my brother Mordred,
    Making confession to himself—and me.
             [He withdraws under the gateway.
    Pity the sinner's young, and bears a shield
    So unbesmirched: I might have gathered else
    Something of import.
          [A silence.]
                         Well, if that's the sum,
    'Tis time for absolution.
                    [He steps forward.
                    (Aloud)
    How now, Mordred?
    Alone, man? Yet I thought a moment since
    I heard the sound of voices.
      Mordred. Ay, very likely.
    Voices there were, but all of them were mine.
    I am a very tumult, Agravaine,
    Of clamorous voices: Youth and Youth's desires,
    Hope and ambition and indignant strength
    Cry from within me, "How shall life be life
    Thus thwarted and fore-ordered?"
      Agravaine. "Thus?" If I take thee
    There's treason there.
      Mordred. What then? to tyrants' ears
    Truth may be treason.
      Agravaine. Well, 'tis truth; we are
    Somewhat—o'er-harnessed—with these vows of ours;
    He's wise who takes discretion when there's need,
    Softly to slip or break them.
      Mordred. Break? Never!
    I would destroy them!
      Agravaine. Well, destroy or break,
    There's but the difference of a word between us.
      Mordred. Not so! not so! for what thou counsellest
    I deem dishonour—misconceive me not
    As censuring thee—I know thy words were born
    Of tenderness towards my suspected fault,
    Not of self-sparing baseness—but these vows
    These laws of the Table Round—themselves indeed
    Enjoining nought of act or abstinence
    That is not noble and most justly dear
    To the soul of knighthood—in despite of that
    Are by their mere existence tyrannous,
    Unnatural, hateful!
      Agravaine. I long have held them hateful,
    But have not bent so keen a glance as thine
    To spy the wherefore.
      Mordred. Wherefore? Is it not plain?
    Life's not a mummer's dance, that we should walk it
    Stiffly composed and following one by one
    The same set figure: 'tis most orderly
    When ordered least, and only then secure
    From waywardness when each man's acts are flowers
    Of his own rooted will.
      Agravaine. Certes, my brother,
    If thou wert gardener here, the Court would yield
    A pretty posy—of somewhat diverse hues!
      Mordred. There, Agravaine, thou speak'st the common word
    Of priests and princes: but I will not hear it:—
    Look wide into the world, and mark how nature
    Guides every living thing, and never one
    But keeps the age-long customs of his kind
    By inborn virtue: is it to be believed
    That men alone come of a lawless stock
    And know not their own good? No! cease to warp
    Their free intent by covenant or command
    And thou shalt see them spring like forest trees,
    Straight, tall, and comely.
      Agravaine. Woodman and gardener too!
    But come, thou'rt in the right, I'll not dispute:
    Men are alike—all human, at the best.
      Mordred. Nay, at the worst.
      Agravaine. So be it, at the worst.
    We are agreed: what then?
      Mordred. Why then, would to God
    All Camelot, all Britain, all the world
    Were of one mind with us!
      Agravaine. Ay, but they are not:
    And casting nets too wide is like to mean
    Drawing them empty: Britain and the world
    Are nought to thee: bethink thee, man, 'tis here
    Thou standest, here amidst of Arthur's Court,
    Standest alone against the general voice
    And the king's ordinance.
      Mordred. Ha! the general voice!
    I have ever noted that what all men say
    Few think, and fewer still have thought upon.
    Mine is a reasoned faith, and soon or late
    They'll hear and hold it.
      Agravaine. Some might come to hold it
    If they would hear: but I have warned thee, Mordred,
    Thy faith is treason.
      Mordred. It shall not be for long.
    I will be wary, and begin to speak
    With none but such as owe me some regard:
    My brothers first: our kindred: here and there
    A trusted comrade; so by one and one
    I'll build myself a secret fellowship
    That may defy impeachment: what is treason
    Muttered by one mouth, earns another name
    When many shout it.
      Agravaine. True: then 'tis called rebellion.
      Mordred. I care not if it were: since time began
    Freedom hath been rebellion.
      Agravaine. Since our time began
    The end of treason hath been banishment,
    And of rebellion, death.
      Mordred. For me, neither!
    Some may betray my counsel, some turn back
    When battle's joined, but tide what will betide,
    No man may judge me, save the king himself.
      Agravaine. Judgment enough,God wot!
      Mordred. Yea, for all men else:
    But I and mine stand not within his doom.
      Agravaine. Prithee how's that?
      Mordred. I will not tell thee now.
      Agravaine. No! nor this year, nor this hundred years!
    So 'tis with youth—some slight indulgence given,
    He struts on air, and thinks to stand henceforth
    Above the law: 'tis a vain confidence,
    And will undo thee.
      Mordred. Now on my knightly honour
    I swear it is not vain!
      Agravaine. I'll trust my life
    To no man's knightly honour: mark thou!—if I
    If we, thy kindred, band ourselves with thee
    To challenge odds, and ride a desperate tilt
    Against unblunted spears, we must be told,
    In the last peril, what's this vaunted ransom
    Of price beyond refusal, to buy back
    Our forfeit lives.
      Mordred. Thou know'st our House of Orkney
    Shares the blood of Pendragon—
      Agravaine. Out! child, out!
    Back to thy toys! meddle no more with men.
      Mordred. I will not so be scorned—
      Agravaine. Our House of Orkney!
    Blood of Pendragon! Why, wert thou Arthur's son—
      Mordred. I am Arthur's son!
                      [A silence.]
      Agravaine. Thou! who hath told thee so?
      Mordred. My mother.
      Agravaine. What mother?
      Mordred. Nay, I would not would thee—
    She is mine too, remember.
      Agravaine. Tush! she's woman,
    And woman's frail, and frailty courts reproach.
    Who spoke of blame? But hear me tell thee, Mordred,
    Thou hast devised this infamous report,
    Coveting lordship—thou the last and least—
    Over thine elder brethren.
      Mordred. Get thee to Orkney,
    And ask of Morgance, if thou dar'st, the name
    Of Mordred's father!
      Agravaine. Nay, my dearest brother,
    I did but try thee, for thy news was sudden
    And full of wonder; trust me I doubt thee not;
    There's Arthur in thy face. We'll speak of this
    With Gaheris and Gawaine: Gareth too:
    We are all thy brethren still; we'll bear aloft
    The banner of thy right, and stand hereafter
    Four-square about thy throne, to lift from thee
    The weight of kingship.
      Mordred. For thy good will I thank thee.
    Yet I could almost wish—but thou'lt be close—
    We'll have more conference: for an hour or twain
    I am promised now: meanwhile speak not with any
    Till after counsel taken.
                         [MORDRED goes out.
      Agravaine. Nothing of import!
    Fool! to forget that even sinless youth
    May be a sin incarnate, damned from birth
    With him that fathered it.



    SCENE II.



    The Great Hall at Camelot. ARTHUR, GUINEVERE, and the Round Table assembled, except GAWAINE and PELLEAS.


      Arthur. Is it not hard on noon? I thought to-day
    Should bring us messengers from Constantine.
      Kay. Sir, they are come, and will be present here
    In briefest space.
      Bedivere. My lord, you did command me
    To stir your memory touching certain plaints
    From the South Marches.
      Arthur. Say on, Bedivere,
    What time is left we grant thee.
                         PELLEAS enters hastily.
      Pelleas. Where is the king?
    Justice! the king's justice on a traitor!
    Vengeance sudden and sharp! or give my sword
    Into my hand again!
      Lancelot. Pelleas?
      Kay. What noise is this,
    And whence these manners, sirrah? The king but now
    Hath opened conference with Sir Bedivere:
    Wait thou thy turn.
      Pelleas. (To ARTHUR.) Oh! bid me not wait, my lord,
    I cannot, I have been waiting all these years—
    Since daybreak—yea! since daybreak!
      Lancelot. Alas! he is mad.
    I pray you, sir, forbear him.
                         [He speaks with PELLEAS aside.
      Guinevere. Oh! call not madness
    This anguish of the heart that forces grief
    From lips unwitting! I beseech you, sir,
    Let not the poison longer work in him,
    Lest he be mad in truth. Sir Bedivere,
    As thou art courteous, stand not on thy rights—
    Yield him thy place.
      Bedivere. Madam, with all my heart,
    So that the king forbid not.
      Arthur. To-morrow then
    We'll hear thee, Bedivere, nor shall thy cause
    Lose by delay.
                   Come, Pelleas, stand thou forth.
    What is the justice thou hast claimed of us?
    Who is it hath wronged thee?
                         Nay, I hear thee not:
    Thy lips move without sound: fear not to name
    Thy foe: if there be justice under heaven
    So that thy quarrel's righteous, thou shalt find it.
      Pelleas. Gawaine! Gawaine! My lord, I slew him not,
    He's of the Table Round—oh, traitorous heart!
    All vows together broken!
      Mordred. Gawaine? Thou darest—
    My lord, hear not this madman.
      Arthur. Silence, Mordred.
    This must be heard.
                         Sir Pelleas of the Isles,
    Remember where thou standest; with what vows
    Bound to our order, and to this thy foe:
    Weigh well thy words, and even as thou hopest
    To answer thine accuser at the Doom,
    Now without malice or addition bring
    Thy charge against thy fellow.
      Pelleas. Nay, my lord,
    Indeed this passion that hath marred my speech
    Knows nought of malice: nor could very malice
    Devise addition here.
                         I think 'tis known
    Of all men present, how that many a day
    I loved and wooed a lady passing fair,
    With unrequited service.
      Guinevere. Yea, Sir Pelleas,
    And there's no gentle heart in Camelot
    But wished thee speed, and held her all too proud
    To scorn such honour.
      Pelleas. Ah! madam, of gentle hearts
    Yours is the queen, and well may speak for such.
    But hers was hard: she took my one poor gift,
    —My prize of tourney—tossed it to her squires,
    Mocked my despair, and parted from the Court.
    I following to her castle found the gates
    Thrice barred against me, that I might not gain
    Even her disdainful presence. Then there came
    This Gawaine: heard my tale, and lightly laughed,
    "I know this kind," he said, "Lend me thine arms,
    I'll say I conquered thee, and once within
    I'll draw her on to pity, thence to love thee,
    And with the second morning, come again
    To bring thee to thy triumph."
                         Oh! I was fooled!
    I clutched the shadow of hope, gave him my arms
    —Save my sword only—hid me, and watched him forth.
    He passed; I heard him parley at the gates,
    And the bridge ring beneath him: since that hour
    I have heard no more his footfall or his voice.
      Mordred. Why this is nought!
      Arthur. Let be!—Sir Pelleas,
    Thus far thou hast but justified thy pain,
    Not thy impeachment: nothing there is shown
    Against Sir Gawaine's honour.
      Pelleas. Sir, hear to the end.
    Day passed, and night: the second day came round,
    The day of promise: I waited hour by hour:
    He came not: yet I waited: evening fell:
    I waited still: at midnight, being on fire,
    I wandered to those gates, and found them wide,
    The courtyard empty, all the castle dark,
    Its chambers void: a garden lay beyond
    Wherein were three pavilions—Ah! my lord
    I cannot tell the end!
      Lancelot. Sir, give me leave,
    He hath told it in mine ear: he found them there
    In sleep together, pride by treachery:
    So turned and left them, turned and came again
    And found them sleeping, and in his heart he longed
    To slay them both: yet would not so destroy
    The High Order of Knighthood as to strike
    A sleeping man,—no! though he came on him
    At the very midnight of his thievish lust.
    This is the end—he laid his naked sword
    Athwart their throats, and left them there to sleep
    Unto a dawn of shame.
                    [A silence.]
      Guinevere. Sir, will you not
    Give him such instant comfort as you may?
      Arthur. I will do justice.
      Mordred. My lord, my brother Gawaine
    Being absent, cannot dash this slander down
    As yet he will: but even now the tale
    Shows like a rotten garment backed and pieced
    With unmatched colours: marked you Gawaine here
    Proffering a service no man ever owed
    To his most cherished friend, here rendering less
    Than his mere duty to a comrade:—now
    He founds deliberate schemes of deepest craft
    On chance, and wayward impulse; now, supine
    At the very moment of foreseen pusuit,
    He bares in guilty sleep his forfeit life
    To the stroke of vengeance!
                         Who can justly weigh
    What an eavesdropper sees through eyes inflamed
    With starved and jealous passion? 'Tis well said,
    Suspicion, like the prowling beasts of prey,
    Sees most in darkness.
      Arthur. Mordred, envenom not
    With angry countercharge this sore debate.
    Start not: I know thee full of knightly pride
    And high-strung courage, and I praise in hee
    The love thou bear'st thy brother: yet by hot words
    Thou wrong'st a cause that only truth can save,
    And not defiance.
      Pelleas. What should he make with truth?
    Where is my sword? Never before came truth
    So near his traitor's throat!
      Lancelot. Peace, friend! hear the king.
      Arthur. For thee too, Pelleas, it were wiselier done
    To leave with us thy quarrel: the third day hence
    Thou shalt be heard again, and face to face
    Challenge Sir Gawaine to the proof, nor lack
    Thine utmost right. 'Tis true thou dost accuse
    One who is kin, and hath been friend, to us,
    And for our Order's sake his spotless fame
    Is dear past utterance—yet stablish half
    Of this thy charge, and by my kingly faith
    And honour of knighthood, I will cast him forth
    To herd among his kind, and feed on husks
    In the outer desert of brute heathendom.




    SCENE III.



          Camelot. The King's Chamber. ARTHUR, KAY.


      Arthur. What would'st thou, Kay, with me?
      Kay. Your pardon, sir,
    I would not vex your study, but yourself
    Gave me command to bring young Mordred hither;
    He hath been pleased to come, and for the time
    Awaits your summons.
      Arthur. 'Tis well: bid him within.
    And leave us, Kay; I know thou lov'st him not.
      Kay. Nay, sir, indeed, my quarrel's not with him,
    But with his youth: as though the world were made
    For boys to whip their toys in!
      Arthur. Well, no matter now.
                  [KAY goes out: ARTHUR leans his head on his hand.
                       Enter
    MORDRED.
      Mordred. Sir, I am here.
      Arthur (looking up). Mordred, that which I must speak
    I have pondered long: remember if with pain
    Thou hearest it, I too have borne this grief,
    And bear it twice in wounding thine and thee.
    Gawaine hath been with me.
      Mordred. Sir, I perceive
    He has not prospered: let me then be bold
    To plead for him; to urge his old repute,
    His tried obedience and untarnished faith,
    Such as when Justice holds the balance, must
    Bear weight, and fling the oaths of unproved men
    High to the beam.
      Arthur. Nay, Mordred, I would not have it
    That Gawaine's word should fail of due account
    By a straw's reckoning: more, I have cast therewith
    The makeweight of my trust: but voice on voice
    Of unbought witness heaps the opposing scale
    So that no arm of friendship or of faith
    Can lift it longer.
      Mordred. What witness and what voices?
      Arthur. The holy prior, whose woodland cloister gave
    Sir Pelleas lodging, unto whom he bared
    His nest of hopes yet warm with fluttering life:
    The folk of yonder castle, dames and squires
    Who saw that shameful wooing: my own knights
    Who summoned Gawaine forth and bore him hither
    Still dight in Pelleas' armour, blazoned still
    With Pelleas' colours—all in fatal sequence
    Tell forth one tale.
      Mordred. A truncheon for their tale!
    Why, fifty such would splinter in the shock
    Of Gawaine's full denial!
      Arthur. I would to Heaven
    He had denied: he gave me never once
    A forthright "nay," but foiled me warily
    With question parrying question. No! past hope
    He is guilty—guilty—and to-morrow's noon
    Must hear the word that bans him.
      Mordred (with a violent gesture). Must?
      Arthur. 'Twas for this
    I called thee hither: tho' his sin be gross
    And but to think on it my indignant heart
    Hisses and glows fire-hardened—yet I cannot
    Endure to watch with just relentless eyes
    My sentence branding shame into his face
    Upturned to mine.
      Mordred. Well?
      Arthur. Mordred, as thou art liege
    To me the king, and lov'st thy brother still,
    See that to-morrow find him fled, beyond
    The sight and voice of justice: if he have sinned
    Is it not enough to suffer lifelong death?
      Mordred. If he have sinned! but that is yet to be prove.
    There's nought in all their witness: nought in the lack
    Of clear denial: not the act itself,
    But the act mistimed, mismannered, or misaimed,
    Makes up the crime: let all be granted true,
    True that he promised, true that he set forth
    To woo in Pelleas' colours, true that he won
    The lady for himself; is that to say
    He promised not in faith, or set not forth
    With honour?—laboured not till hope was past
    In Pelleas' cause, before he urged his own?
    Was not this prize a prize for all the world,
    Not Pelleas only? Nay, for all the world
    Save Pelleas only! And shall he claim to keep
    From all men else that which himself must lack,
    Or failing, cry for vengeance?
      Arthur. I too have leaned
    Upon that reed, and found it all too frail.
    What though it were not, what though Pelleas' wrongs
    Vanish in merest envy, there remains
    A blacker treason: he hath sold himself,
    Betrayed a woman's trust, and broke the chier
    Of the high vows wherewith we sought to bind
    This kingdom's weakness into sheaves of strength:—
    The vow of a chaste life.
      Mordred. Never word of mine
    Glance lightly on that sin! Yet so the more
    Do I esteem it far beyond the force
    Of vows to conquer. If I could believe
    —What I'll deny till seeing strike me dumb—
    That Gawaine so hath fallen, then, even then,
    I would entreat you leave him to the voice
    Of his own soul, that shall require of him
    Her murdered peace.
      Arthur. Alas! I must believe;
    God knows how sadly!—and for all my will
    To pardon Gawaine for our kinship's sake
    And the old-time love between us, I am the king,
    And dare not in my kingly office fail
    The common welfare.
      Mordred. I am not driven to plead
    Against the common welfare: Gawaine's cause
    Is but of private note, entangling none
    Beside himself and Pelleas.
      Arthur. I would it were so,
    But such a challenge cried in open hall
    Rings ever loud and louder, till the realm
    Through every fibre of its corporate life
    Aches with the scandal.
                         No! my mind is fixed.
    I have heard thee, Mordred, with an ear that longed
    To bear persuasion's message: none hath reached
    The inner chamber where my conscience waits
    Enthroned in steadfast anguish. Leave me now:
    Let this vain striving end.
      Mordred. By the light of heaven!
    And I will end it! There's a shaft unsped
    Within my quiver yet, that shall not miss
    To cleave this coil; though, save for life and death,
    I had not drawn it. Scandal? Wit you well
    The doom that falls on Gawaine shall not spare
    With the same stroke to hurl a greater name
    In more tremendous ruin!
      Arthur. Hold! thy words
    Are wild, without respect: for thy grief's sake
    They shall not be remembered.
      Mordred. Forgive my speech
    If it have slipped beneath so great a load.
    I rave not: hear me: Gawaine's called unchaste,
    But what far fouler name shall hiss the deed
    Of him that, honouring not his chosen bride,
    Held it not shame to rob his kinsman's crown
    Of its most treasured splendour?
      Arthur. Now in good truth
    But thou dost rave.
      Mordred. Then I am not the first
    Hath raved so—in good truth—nor yet the last
    That—in good truth—shall reckon Gawaine's fault
    White to the blackness of the hand that smites him.
                         [He points to Arthur's hand.
      Arthur. Blackness? I know not how thou darest—
                        [A pause.]
                         Nay!
    Enough! I will no longer fence with thee
    In this false twilight: thou hast struck thy point
    Upon my lifes one flaw: I do confess it.
    What then? What then? Shall I not have my will?
    Not dare do justice? Why, in all my days
    No man, no thing, no thought hath yet prevailed
    To turn me from my path, and dost thou hope
    To bear me backward with thy stripling hand?
      Mordred. Nay, I have done with hoping: by your leave
    I'll quit you now.
                         [He turns as if to go.
      Arthur. Stay, Mordred: wherefore this haste?
    I fear we are not yet so wholly at one,
    As my endeavour purposed.
      Mordred. Indeed, I think,
    We are agreed: I pray you let me go.
      Arthur. Whither?
      Mordred. To Gawaine, first.
      Arthur. Well, as thou wilt.
    But in thy counsels be deliberate still:
    Let him not part to-night.
      Mordred. No, not to-night.
                         [He goes out.



    SCENE IV.



    Camelot: a guard-room at night. AGRAVAINE in the outer chamber alone: guard within.


                  Enter Lancelot with Bedivere.
      Lancelot. What said the king to Mordred?
      Bedivere. I heard not that.
    Here's Agravaine; if it be known to any
    He'll surely tell us.
      Lancelot. Nay, do not trouble him:
    Gawaine's his brother still; I could not bear
    To gain the tidings of our rich content
    From him that's beggared by it. Yonder's the guard,
    We'll gather something.
                         [They pass in and speak with the guard.
      Agravaine (looking after them). Lancelot! I heard enough,
    I know his errand! Unbred cock of the yard!
    He would be sure his foes are maimed and spurless
    Before he crows his spite. Ha! for this once
    We'll pluck some of his plumage!
                 LANCELOT and BEDIVERE return.
      Lancelot. Still with the king?
    I marvel wherefore. Let us walk without
    And shortly come again.
      Bedivere. That would I gladly,
    But the time fails me; I am called elsewhere.
                       [They go out.
                  Enter MORDRED from within.
      Agravaine. Mordred! at last!
    (Coming quickly to meet him.) The issue, man, the issue?
      Mordred. Nought hath been promised: I have told the king
    That Gawaine's innocent.
      Agravaine. What! no more?
      Mordred. Be patient.
    He would not be convinced.
      Agravaine. Ha! ha!
      Mordred. ' I granted him
    Some part of the accusation, and besought
    That Gawaine's sin might only be avenged
    By Gawaine's conscience.
      Agravaine. Oh! prate no more of Gawaine,
    What of thy secret, man? How sped thy threat?
    Is it true? Was Arthur shaken? Have we found
    A gag to stifle judgment in his throat?
      Mordred. Be not so violent, Agravaine; thy spirit,
    For all it runs the self-same way with mine,
    Jostles and jars me still. I'll answer all,
    So thou'lt but listen. Arthur's not the man
    To stoop his pride beneath an outright threat;
    Nor did the occasion call me to declare
    The secret of my birth.
      Agravaine. What! thou hast not threatened?
    Thou hast not told him?
      Mordred. Patience! that's for a time
    When all our lives hang clutching at the brink
    Of the last sheer abyss; it was not needed
    To stay one foot from exile. Never doubt
    I told enough; beneath my visor'd helm
    The king hath seen the face of buried sin
    Glaring with dreadful eyes.
      Agravaine. If thou hast told so much
    Thou hast told him all: 'tis but a step from this
    To stumble on thy birth.
      Mordred. Nay, but he's barred
    From that one step: my mother sent him word
    Long since, his child was lost on stormy seas.
      Agravaine. Well, we shall see.
      Mordred. Ay, to-morrow thou shalt see
    I have won the game with half my stake in hand,
    And threefold profit added—Gawaine saved,
    The king half mastered, and my kindred all
    Bound to my cause.
                        Only—I grieve to war
    With Lancelot: out of all to cross the one
    Most knightly and most noble.
      Agravaine. Most sure, thou meanest,
    To prop the tottering king against our thrust.
      Mordred. For that, too, I am sorry.
      Agravaine. What say'st thou then,
    Can we not cleave between their sundered feet
    Some gulf of mortal hatred? There's a name
    We know—that both—
      Mordred. Silence! I know it not!
    But this I know, that carrion-baited snares
    Trap not the sunward eagle.
      Agravaine. Hist! who comes here?
    Lancelot again? This time we've news for him.
    Whither now, Mordred?
      Mordred. I cannot stay to seem
    Insolent, heartless: prithee come thou too.
      Agravaine. But one word and I'll follow.
       MORDRED goes out: LANCELOT re-enters alone.
      Agravaine (greeting LANCELOT). I perceive
    Sir Lancelot comes to glean what's cast abroad
    Of the king's purpose.
      Lancelot. I know, Sir Agravaine,
    Where thine affection's pledged, and so the more
    Esteem thy greeting courteous: be sure
    Were not this matter sharp with two-edged pain
    I would not part so soon. Good-night.
      Agravaine. Stay, Sir Lancelot!
    The worst I fain would spare thee; that's to hear
    Ill news from lips indifferent or unkind.
    Grief loves a sudden onset; be forewarned
    Against his ambush, front thy heart with steel,
    And—thank the friend that warned thee.
      Lancelot. What! Is there more
    Than Pelleas told me?
      Agravaine. Ay, there is more indeed,
    And harsher for thy hearing. Gawaine's guilty;
    So much is old: to-morrow thou shalt learn
    That Gawaine's free: but as thou lovest peace
    Ask me not wherefore.
      Lancelot. Guilty, thou say'st, and free?
    Then Pelleas hath forgiven? Oh! that's to gain
    More than revenge!
      Agravaine. Nay! that Pelleas may forgive
    We all must hope: but that's no matter here.
    The king will pardon Gawaine.
      Lancelot. Now God forbid!
    I am not hard, but oft 'tis giant Injustice
    That, crouched in Mercy's cloak, robs all the world
    To spare one lawful debt.
      Agravaine. I am Gawaine's brother:
    What saves him must content me: yet in truth
    Even I could wish the well-spring of this grace
    Were something purer.
      Lancelot. I cannot grasp thy clue;
    Prithee, be plainer yet.
      Agravaine. Then I must utter
    What a less generous hearer might impeach
    For sland'rous treason.
      Lancelot. Hold! I have no right to hear
    What's perilous in the speaking.
      Agravaine. Nay, tis thy right
    If but for Pelleas' sake: but thou'lt withhold it
    From all the Table Round?
      Lancelot. Ay.
      Agravaine. How to begin
    So black a tale! Thou knowest we are not wont
    To hate whom we resemble, nor to chide
    The act whose common use ourselves pursue?
    So 'tis with Arthur.
      Lancelot. I hope thou dost not dare
    To jest with me! What's thy excuse to link
    the king with Gawaine?
      Agravaine. Merely that their deeds
    Are much alike: as like as brothers are.
    But Arthur's is the elder, and, to choose,
    The far more hideous.
      Lancelot (suddenly). Aha! "While Arthur's king—
    King of himself—so long—oh! we'll contest
    This praise with Arthur."—Out, it is not true!
    Where is the proof?
      Agravaine. Thou hast seen within the hour,
    And even where thou stand'st, the living proof.
      Lancelot. Mordred?
      Agravaine. The son of Arthur, and the son
    Of Morgance, Queen of Orkney.
      Lancelot. Oh! I am rent!
    God help us all! Can it be true?
      Agravaine. Thou doubtest?
    To-morrow shall persuade thee: if thou hear'st
    True judgment portioned out in yonder hall
    To Gawaine's treason, then cry out upon me
    There, before all: but if the king shall find
    Some dark and twisted bye-way to avoid
    The path of Justice, thou shalt own me right,
    And, doubtless, grieve as I do.
                         So, good-night.
                         [He goes out.
      Lancelot. To-morrow?
                         God in Heaven!
                         Ah! Guinevere!



    SCENE V.





       Camelot: the Great Hall. Enter GUINEVERE and ENID.



      Guinevere. At last! at last!
                         But, Enid, what should this mean?
    The hall is empty: have we missed the hour
    Or is there some fresh order?
      Enid. Nay, madam, I think
    We are not here in fault; 'tis Time himself
    Hath broken tryst: when did his laggard flight
    Keep pace with beating hearts?
      Guinevere. Why should my heart beat
    More than another's? What have I to do
    With Gawaine and his sentence?
      Enid. Why,surely—surely—
    Sir Pelleas—
      Guinevere. Well, Sir Pelleas—?
      Enid. He hath been wronged;
    He is loved of all: besides, his cause is seen
    To be Sir Lancelot's own.
      Guinevere. Is it so? In faith
    Whose should it be? Lancelot's? I would it were
    And fear it is not—or I fear it should be
    And would it were not.
                         Have I not had good game
    At thy bewilderment!
                         Oh! what am I saying,
    Why come they not?
      Enid. Hush! they are here!
              Enter Lancelot.
      Guinevere. Not now!
    Lancelot, not now! I pray thee, not one word,
    Or I shall hate thee as I hate the rest.
    Where is the king?
      Lancelot. I know not, 'tis scarcely yet
    The hour appointed.
      Guinevere. Lancelot, I am distraught,
    I know not dream from daylight. Was it in sleep
    I heard the king's voice, sharp with agony
    Outcrying, "I have slain her," and thy voice
    That echoed, "I have slain her; yea, and I
    Have sunk her, earth in earth?"
      Lancelot. Dearest lady mine,
    Forget these midnight fears: here are no voices
    But one high fluttering song that greets the dawn.
    Is not the past well buried?
      Guinevere. I thought it so
    A short hour since: that, too, was while I dreamed:
    Now I am waking.
      Lancelot. Ay, waking to find
    Thy best dreams true.
      Guinevere. No, lull me not with hope,
    Let me have truth and rue it. What's their tale
    Of Arthur's guilt? The yelp of Gawaine's pack
    That see the lash descending! What's thy promise
    Of love and freedom? Gold from fairyland,
    Scattered at sunrise with the whirling leaves!
      Lancelot. How canst thou say so? Let me tell thee again
    Even as I heard it—
      Guinevere. No! no! tell me nought
    But how to win back peace, and the old dull pain
    That I had learned to live with. Let me go
    Before my strength break!
      Lancelot. Guinevere! dear heart,
    'Tis but an hour, one hour. Ha! they are coming!
          PELLEAS and other Knights enter.
    Madam, your siege is here; if it please your Grace,
    I'll bring you to it.
      Pelleas. Lancelot! Lancelot! Stay!
    A word in haste!
      Lancelot. Forgive me, seest thou not
    Another service claims me?
      Guinevere(aside to LANCELOT). Ah! thou'rt cruel.
    Go back to him.
      Lancelot. I cannot: though my tongue
    Bade him good-speed, mine eyes would rede him death.
    I am base enough, God knows I am base enough!
    But I am not yet practised.
    Enter Gawaine with Mordred and Agravaine;
    then Gareth, Lamorak, Geraint, and others. A great bell
    strikes twelve. Silence follows.

      Gawaine (loudly). Where is the king?
      Geraint (aside). Mark that!
      Lamorak. Ay, the snake dies hissing; but he dies.
      Geraint. I am not sure: there's something in that voice
    Chimes not with mere defiance.
      Lamorak. Why, where hast thou been
    These two good days? 'Tis proved upon him, proved
    Past doubt or dispensation.
      Herald. Silence! The King!
    Enter ARTHUR with KAY, BEDIVERE, and men-at-arms.
    He takes his seat and looks moodily before him.
      Arthur.
    It seems, Sir Pelleas—
      Kay. Sir, were it not best
    To follow ancient usage? Let the herald
    Summon the accuser and accused.
      Arthur. Kay! Kay!
    What's ancient usage to a heart on fire?
    Well, have it so then!
      Kay. Herald!
      Herald. In the king's name,
    Stand forth Sir Pelleas of the Isles! Stand forth
    Sir Gawaine, Prince of Orkney!
                         Dost thou still,
    Sir Pelleas, charge against thy fellow-knight
    The crimes of treachery and unchastity?
      Pelleas. Still? When a score of voices echo mine!
    Still? Ay, then! Ay!
      Herald. Sir Gawaine, thou hast heard.
    What is thine answer?
      Arthur. Hold! no more of this!
    We have had Sir Gawaine's answer: he denies.
      Kay. Yet for the form's sake—
      Arthur. Is it for the form's sake
    Thou'rt bent to thwart me, Kay? Gawaine denies.
      Pelleas. That too was in his part. So be it, my lord;
    But I have tendered witness.
      Arthur. What, Sir Pelleas!
    Art thou forgetful, or so newly come
    Thou hast not yet been taught, that in this hall
    The word of one man, one, so that he be
    Knight of our Order, drowns the federate noise
    Of all the crowd intruding?
      Pelleas. But these were brought
    By the king's own command—
      Lamorak (aside). Pelleas, art thou mad?
    Anger him not!
      Pelleas. Nay, then; I'll urge but this:
    Let the rest go; let his word bear it off
    Against a hundred; yet, my lord, forget not
    I too am knight, the fellow and the peer
    Of all men now in presence.
      Arthur. Well, sir, well!
    What follows?
      Guinevere. Sir, your pardon if I stay you
    At an unfitting moment, but meseems
    That's something tangled here, that a friend's hand,
    Being cooler, might unravel.
      Arthur. Madam, what friend?
      Guinevere. I thought I saw—Sir Lancelot—
      Lancelot. I thank your Grace,
    If the king will—I know not—at a word
    This is Sir Pelleas' drift—oath against oath
    One knight is worth another.
      Pelleas. God forbid!
    I never said so.
      Arthur. Wherefore, "God forbid"?
    Dar'st thou dispute it?
      Pelleas. Then, my lord, my wird
    Should weigh no less than his.
      Arthur. And Gawaine's word
    No less than thine—Silence!—no less than thine,
    And neither outweigh the other.
      Geraint (aside). Mark, again!
    Did I not tell thee so ? There's Pelleas lost
    In a mere ambush. Were it not the king—
      Lamorak. What, man, thou doubtest Arthur?
      Arthur. Sirs, we have heard
    Accuser and accused, our fellows both,
    And both esteemed most noble. Against the honour
    Of such as these, with us who know—
                         —who know their truth,
    No witness from without may gain belief.
    Nor here, where all are equal, may we dare
    Set comrade above comrade. Lastly, our vows
    Forbid that any knight should challenge other
    With word or weapon. And the sum of all
    Is this: that for the fame of chivalry
    And the realm's peace, I do require you both,
    Sir Pelleas and Sir Gawaine, from this hour,
    In field and hall, in council and in quest,
    To live in strait accordance: to which end
    The cause of this your quarrel, being found
    Too dark for judgment, shall be henceforth banned
    From your lips and from all men's, under pain
    Of life-long exile.
      Pelleas. Shall—
      Arthur (rising). Silence! I have said!
    Kay, Bedivere, attend me!
                    [ARTHUR and his train go out: the KNIGHTS drawing
                         apart in silence. Then
    PELLEAS looks wildly round
                         and rushes from the hall.

      Geraint (following). Come! Lamorak, Lancelot!
      Lancelot. Nay, I am commanded.
      Lamorak (bitterly). To hold thy peace! What more? Why so far forth
    We are all commanded.
                    [GERAINT and LAMORAK go out. GARETH turns and
                    looks hard upon
    GAWAINE.
      Gareth. Well, command or none,
    I follow truth! [He goes out.
      Agravaine (mocking). As brothers most are wont!
      Mordred. Peace! Agravaine.
      Agravaine. Oh! my lord Mordred's here!
    I had forgotten. Will it please your Grace
    To grant us private audience? Gawaine, come,
    Let us all away: we too will follow truth
    —Since that's the phrase—but at convenient distance!
       [They go out, leaving GUINEVERE, ENID and LANCELOT.
                         GUINEVERE'S face is buried in her hands. ENID
                         looks at her, and moves towards the door. LANCELOT
                         comes nearer to GUINEVERE.
      Lancelot. Wilt thou come, Guinevere?
      Guinevere (rising suddenly). Yea! to the world's end.




    ACT III




    SCENE I.



       Camelot: the Queen's Bower. LAUREL and LINET.



      Linet. What, still unready, Laurel, not yet cloaked?
    The horses will be waiting.
      Laurel. Waiting for whom?
    Not for us, Linet.
      Linet. Truly, not for me!
    Thou know'st me better; when the hunt is up
    He must be early who's to wait for me.
    But what's thy meaning?
      Laurel. Hast thou not been told?
    I heard an hour ago: 'tis brief enough—
    Our service is not needed.
      Linet. Ha! that's to say
    We are supplanted: what's a promise worth
    When favourites plead?
      Laurel. Well, for this time thou'rt wrong:
    If we must stay, so too must all the rest.
      Linet. And Enid?
      Laurel. Even Enid!
      Linet. Then I'm content,
    —Or half content—but prithee, what's her whim
    To go two days abroad—two days and nights—
    Without attendance? Or is he perchance
    To take our places too?
      Laurel. Truly none dare vouch
    That lies not in the future! But to-day
    There's no such pleasant news—merely her Grace
    Is pleased to change her Grace's mind, and leave
    The king to his own sport.
      Linet. So that the king
    May leave the queen hers: which is not his;
    No, nor hath been this merry year and more!
    Well, one man's loss, they say, is other's gain,
    So none need lack for comfort.
      Laurel. Thou'rt in wit,
    Fair fall the day! I would some greater folk
    Had half thy spirit, and something less than half
    Their own chill humour.
      Linet. Is she sighing still?
    Where, Laurel?
      Laurel. Within there, closeted with Enid
    And that dull thing, thy sister.
      Linet. Poor Lionors!
    She was not always dull: I can remember
    Before she wedded Gareth, how her blood
    Danced to a quicker tune than well beseemed
    A maiden's pulses; but the times are changed.
      Laurel. Why so they are, for I remember too
    It was thy hand, thy chaste considerate hand,
    That locked the same young pair of crooning doves
    So long in separate cages.
      Linet. Alas! 'tis true,
    In the old days I was cruel, but I trust
    I have made atonement.
      Laurel. If thou hast not yet,
    Thou shalt; there's matter for thy charity
    New come to hearing; worth the hearing too.
    Iseult—Iseult of Cornwall—
      Linet. Oh! I know it!
    But tell me!
      Laurel. I hear them coming.
      Linet. Quick then, quick!
    Oh! tell me, Laurel!
      Laurel. Wait, and fare the better.
    Help me in this: we'll hold a mirror up,
    And startle eyes that only look to see
    Another's picture. Ware! and mark her well!
                    Enter GUINEVERE.
      Guinevere. Linet, hath Laurel told thee, we have thought
    This late October-tide, for all its brightness,
    Too cold to lie abroad in? It repents me
    That you should lose what little pleasure comes
    In the way of service; prompt me that I stay not
    Long in your debt for this.
      Linet. I thank you, madam.
                 [GUINEVERE sits musing, LAUREL signs to Linet.
    Well, Laurel, thou hast made a grave beginning,
    I scarce dare ask the end.
      Laurel. No, no, not now.
    We should be heard, and such heart-searching news
    Is not for weary moments.
      Linet. Shall we go out then?
      Guinevere. No, do not: audience so gently asked
    Should yet be granted, were I weary indeed;
    As now I am not; this my mood is nought
    But a faint pang of autumn at the heart:
    Maybe thy tale will stir me.
      Laurel. I think it will,
    For this poor lady too was once a queen—
    Iseult of Cornwall.
      Guinevere. Once? Tell me not she is dead?
    Laurel, not dead?
      Laurel. Nay, nor is Tristram dead,
    Save to his faith and greatness.
      Guinevere. What hast thou heard?
      Laurel. Is it not black? The king hath been betrayed
    These many months, by his most valiant knight
    And by his queen and wife.
      Guinevere. No! no!
      Laurel. The sequel proves
    What hath been long suspected: all such tales
    Have the same ending. He was taken at last,
                    [GUINEVERE makes a gesture of entreaty.
    But broke his prison, and now they are fled by sea:
    'Tis said, to Joyous Gard.
      Guinevere. Oh! thou hast been told
    A wild and cruel slander! Joyous Gard?
    What shelter thinkest thou hath Joyous Gard
    For such as they are?
      Linet. Oh! Madam, wit you well
    The castle's fair, and garnished for the need
    Of the most noble, fit for Lancelot's self,—
    Yea, even for a queen royal.
      Guinevere. Ah! thou art young,
    And thy light thought is bouyed above the deep
    Where mine sinks anguished.
                         Enid! where is Enid?
    Pray you, go call her.
                  [LAUREL goes out and returns immediately.
      Laurel.
    Madam, the king desires to see your Grace.
      Guinevere. The king? Where?
                         (aside) Let him not hear this news to-day.
    Enter ARTHUR, BEDIVERE, and LANCELOT. LAUREL holds
    aside the curtain of the door.

      Arthur. Our thanks, fair lady.
                         Guinevere, I am come
    To learn thy last resolve: if 'tis for staying,
    To take my leave, but if thou'lt ride with us,
    Then to entreat thee hasten, while the air
    Still bears the softness of the noonday sun.
    Shall it be so?
      Guinevere. Indeed I would be excused:
    The year grows late: I fear to lie afield.
    But if 'tis urgent—
      Arthur. Nay, I plead not that,
    It was but for our pleasure. Well, I am sorry.
    Since then we part, the merrier cheer be yours
    Whilst we are roving.
      Guinevere. The wish is kind, farewell.
        [ARTHUR and BEDIVERE take leave, and go out, talking
         with
    LAUREL and LINET. LANCELOT follows as far
         as the door and then returns to
    GUINEVERE.
      Lancelot. Oh! could'st thou think it? to-day of all fair
    days?
      Guinevere. Art thou not bounden to them?
      Lancelot. Ay, for the going,
    Not the returning: time's my own for that.
    They mean no further journey for to-day
    Than to the king's pavilion: four long hours
    Should bring us thither, less than two will serve
    For spurring home: I'll find some clear excuse
    And be with thee by midnight.
      Guinevere. Canst thou do it?
    Is it not perilous, with the king so near?
      Lancelot. Wherefore, dear heart? These fears of thine are new:
    Ere now, he has been nearer.
      Guinevere. I never told thee,
    But oft before—'tis shame to be so weak—
    When I have been most happy, and known myself
    Twice safe with thee, I yet have felt the darkness
    Pulsing around me with the hard-held breath
    Of stealthy vengeance.
      Lancelot. Dearest, thou'rt not thyself,
    Thy present dread throws back upon the past
    These vain and monstrous shadows. Could'st thou have trembled,
    And I not know it?
      Guinevere. Can I love thee, Lancelot,
    And not forbode the end—yea! at all times,
    And most when most I love thee?
      Lancelot. Fear not the end,
    At worst 'tis Joyous Gard.
      Guinevere. Never! ah! never!
    She lied to say it must!
      Lancelot. Nay, be not distressed;
    As my Queen will.
                      But I must part in haste.
    Sweet, bear me in thy heart these tedious hours.
      Guinevere. Farewell, beloved—and if it be not safe—
    Lancelot—thou wilt not—
      Lancelot. Dear Prudence, but I will!
    I must be rash for both.
                         Come, let me go.
    Why! thou'rt all cold and shivering!
      Guinevere. Wherefore not?
    'Tis long past summer.
                         Well, if it be time
    I will not stay thee.
      Lancelot. Farewell.
      Guinevere. Bid Enid come.
    Bid them all come.
                         [LANCELOT goes out.
                         I will not think of it.




    SCENE II.



    The King's Pavilion: on a moor: bright moonlight. ARTHUR, KAY, BEDIVERE, GERAINT, MORDRED, and others.



      Arthur (standing apart and speaking half to himself).
    'Tis wondrous light: I did not think the moon
    Had waxed so near her greatest: how serene,
    With what unquestioned sovranty she walks
    Her wide aërial palace! The bright host
    Of stars, her courtiers, blink their myriad eyes
    Before her full calm gaze, and not a cloud
    Dares with rebellious darkness to usurp
    A hand's-breadth of her vast and tranquil realm.
      Bedivere. The king is sad to-night; marked you his voice
    At supper-time?
      Geraint. Ay, and yet 'twas not one voice:
    Sometimes it rose in scorn, sometimes it sank
    Weighed low with hidden meaning: now and then
    'Twas strangely gentle, as in times of grief
    A grown man speaks with children, his own pain
    Subdued to a great tenderness.
      Bedivere. Finely noted!
    That was the sound of it; and all unlike
    Our old imperious Arthur.
      Kay. Sirs, heed it not,
    All men must have their humours; his will pass
    With the first mot of the horn.
      Geraint. Well, Heaven send it so,
    And bless us from ill tidings!
      Arthur (rousing himself). Come, my friends!
    We should be elsewhere, dreaming of the game.
    Once more, all's ready? Are the tufters come?
      Geraint. Sir, two good hours ago, and kennelled yonder
    Within a stone's throw.
      Arthur. What says the harbourer?
      Bedivere. I spoke with him even now: a hopeful rogue!
    To hear him talk, the forest's all alive
    With warrantable deer: bay, tray, and ten,
    The meanest head among them!
      Arthur. Good!
      Mordred. 'Tis a fair wind,
    Light, with a tingle of the frosty North.
      Arthur. Yet 'twas a lowering sunset.
      Mordred. Ay, but the clouds
    Followed the sun and sank close after him.
    Trust me, to-morrow we shall wake to a sky
    As clear as this above us.
      Arthur. So we'll hope.
    Till then, God keep us!
      All. Good-night, my lord.
      Arthur. Good-night.
                    [They go out, leaving the KING alone.
      Arthur. I could not tell them: these two days at least
    Are something saved from the relentless fangs
    That gape to grip us. Two days! why, 'twill seem
    An age of peace hereafter. There's nought I have,
    But I would barter it to ride to-morrow
    Free-hearted one more chase. Oh! Laurel, Laurel!
    Why must she run to pour into mine ear
    Such news red-hot? Did she not love him then,
    —Tristram, whom all men loved?
                         Nay, she was right!
    I'll hate him too. Thank God! he falls alone.
                         Enter KAY.
      Kay. Sir, if I set aside your strict command
    And come at this late hour to trouble you,
    Be sure the cause is grave.
      Arthur. Why, so am I:
    The matter fits the time then.
      Kay. Nay, sir, the matter
    Is such as fits no moment in the life
    Of an all-puissant king: so full it is
    Of bold disorder.
      Arthur. a! she has told thee, too?
    What ails the woman, that with reckless hand
    She spreads contagion broadcast?
      Kay. Sir, 'twas no woman
    But one of the rangers told me this even now,
    And most discreetly, so that I am to seek
    Whence your own knowledge comes.
      Arthur. Thou'rt right: I perceive
    Our thoughts have crossed: there's something more then: come!
    I'll hear it.
      Kay. Your pardon, sir, if I begin
    To leave my resolution; at first indeed
    I thought this could not wait: but now I am fearful
    Seeing you wounded, lest another thrust
    May hurt you past endurance.
      Arthur. Delay does more!
    Fear not, be short! always my strength rebounds
    To front a second blow.
      Kay. My judgment bows.
    This is the dolorous tale then: yester-eve
    Sir Lamorak, riding home towards Camelot,
    Was in the forest yonder held to bay,
    Half-armed and helpless, by three caitiff knights
    Who pulled him from his horse, and bound him there
    To bear their heaped reproaches. At the last
    Each miscreant stabbed him with a several wound
    And fled: the ranger found him, life and sense
    Faint, but not wholly ebbed: stanched the last flow,
    And for his ghostly comfort brought the priest
    To shrive and housel him.
      Arthur. Kay, hold me not strained
    Upon the gradual rack of thy slow speech:
    In one word, all!
      Kay. Sir, at the hour of tierce
    Sir Lamorak, after full confession made
    And absolution taken, yielded up
    His sinful spirit.
      Arthur. Thou might'st have kept that word
    For who deserve it. When they dared reproach him
    —Lamorak—they dared no lesser villainy
    Than when they stabbed his body. By what vile names
    Shall they be infamous—so much he told
    Before he parted?
      Kay. No, he named them not,
    But owned their quarrel righteous—he confessed
    They were the kindred of a lady—one
    Whose life he had corrupted.
      Arthur (grasping KAY'S hand and turning away his face).
                         Kay, Kay, my father!
    Go, pray for me. The living and the dead!
    Go, stay not!
      Kay. I feared that I was wrong to speak,
    Yet the time presses: there is need of counsel,
    And order to be taken.
      Arthur. Order that none
    Come near me! For thyself get thee to sleep.
                         [KAY goes out.
    I cannot think; the freightage of my mind
    Is tossed and broken on a shoreless flood
    Of weltering passions. I have been betrayed
    By those whom most I cherished. Came there not
    Upon their hearts, even in that dark hour
    Of faith's eclipse, some grace of memory,
    Some tenderness up-smouldering at the last
    On the old altars that we built long since
    In life's most sacred places?
                         Oh! 'tis false!
    They never loved me: I have been their scorn,
    Humoured and duped. Lamorak, thou art a coward,
    Thou durst not face my vengeance; thou hast forsaken
    Thy fellow traitor!—ha! but Tristram—Tristram
    Is mine! I'll fell him with a toppling stroke
    Shall make this kingdom echo!
                         God pardon me!
    I had forgot: the realm's in peril here,
    While I sit brooding on the angry smart
    Of my own wrongs. What must I do to stay
    The creeping of this sin, that like a worm
    Eats out the heart of every tallest shaft
    Whereon my kingdom's pillared? One more snapped,
    And Britain, like a palace undermined,
    Crumbles to Chaos. Death! that I should crouch
    Dully foreboding which of my high hopes
    Shall fail me next—I that a year ago
    Laughed in my heart "My days indeed must pass,
    But I have built this Order, that shall keep
    My purpose after me, and stand unshaken
    Through all the changeful ages of the world."
    Shall it not stand? Was it not well devised?
    Will God not lend me counsel how to save
    A thing so noble? If I knew but whence
    This evil had its birth: the first to fall
    Was Gawaine—I was weak—but no man guessed,
    Or more than guessed, the fulness of his guilt:
    None knew that Mordred forced me, none could know
    With what fell weapon. No, beyond all doubt
    The mischief sprang not thence: and long ago
    I have forgiven Mordred.
                         Who dare say
    It is not so? How should I not forgive
    Whom I have found so passionately pure,
    So swift to ring the armoured heel of scorn
    On every creeping thought and the whole brood
    Of venomed sayings?
                        Yet I have not plumbed
    The secret of this Mordred. True he is,
    High-minded, clean of heart: yet ever seems
    To choose my way because it is his own
    And not from sworn obedience.
                         'Tis strange,
    But 'tis a thought that like an April cloud
    Hath often chilled the sunshine of my mind
    —Gone with a shiver—that till Mordred came—
    No, no, I will not think it! How could he,
    Whose only fault is too impetuous youth
    And unripe counsel—folly! I must be
    More weary than I knew. I'll pray awhile,
    And sleep perchance thereafter: being but man
    I dare not hope with blind and selfish cry
    To turn aside the ordering of the world
    From God's eternal purpose, yet I know
    Something divine stirs in us while we pray,
    Transforming thought to will.
                         [He kneels.
                 Enter KAY and MORDRED hurriedly.
      Kay. Back, sirrah, back!
      Mordred. I will not.
      Kay. There can be nothing
    So grave to warrant—
      Mordred. Warrant? there's that should bend
     once for all.
       (To ARTHUR, who has risen.) Sir, a messenger
    Is come from Camelot: spur never yet
    Dripped red with direr haste: let me not tell it
    If you can save me with a leap at truth.
      Arthur. Whose messenger?
      Mordred. My brother Agravaine's.
    He came not with us; for some private cause
    He had exchanged his turn, and keeps to-night
    The inner guard of the palace.
                         [He pauses.
      Arthur. Make an end:
    I am ready, Mordred.
      Mordred. He hath sent me word
    By his most trusted squire, who bears for token
    This signet ring, that when the moon was high
    Sir Lancelot came alone to Camelot,
    And passed within the palace.
       [The King starts: MORDRED looks hard at him for
          a space, and goes on.

                         Agravaine
    Setting the watch at midnight, saw him there—
    There—he returned not—even now perchance
    He is there.
                        [A silence.]
      Arthur (in a low voice). Where, Mordred?
      Mordred. With the Queen.
                         [A silence.]
      Arthur (quietly). Ay, let us go.
    Farewell, Kay; if I have been harsh with thee,
    I crave thy pardon: we will speak again
    Of Lamorak's burying.
      Kay. Sir, if you will
    —God send you peace—to-morrow.
      Arthur (half to himself). Ay, to-morrow.
    That's in another life.
      Kay. Pray you, forgive me,
    I am an old man: I have served you long:
    Put not such force upon your grief.
      Arthur. My friend,
    Thou hast misread me: I have striven to-night
    With the dread angel of my destiny:
    Henceforth I am halt for ever: but I know
    That I shall save my people.
                         Mordred, come!





    ACT IV


    SCENE I.



    Open country near Almesbury. MORDRED alone; behind, squires and yeomen resting. Enter GAWAINE.



      Mordred. Gawaine! already? But so far from folk
    I knew thine errand hopeless.
      Gawaine. A hundred times
    It might have been so, but to-day by fortune
    Here at the hand I chanced on all I sought
    And something more.
      Mordred. They have been seen then?
      Gawaine. Where is the king?
      Mordred. He was beside me but a moment since,
    Pacing and pacing like a sentinel,
    To keep his thoughts imprisoned.
      Gawaine. Ay, when I parted
    I saw how 'twas: the speed of this pursuit
    Holds sorrow breathless: when the chase is stayed
    He cannot choose but hear the instant voice
    Of that which rides behind him.
      Mordred. There thou'rt wide:
    I do not think him so much grieved as eager,
    At grip with strong resolves that will not wait
    The time for utterance.
                         But let that pass,
    Tell me thy news.
      Gawaine. I scarce had gone a mile
    Beyond the cross-roads, when I met a dwarf
    Mounted upon a pack-mule.
      Mordred. Oh! keep thy mule,
    Pack, dwarf and all! be brief, man!
      Gawaine. Well, well! to-day
    At the hour of tierce a lady and two knights
    Came to the nunnery at Almesbury
    Not seven miles hence: Lancelot and Pelleas
    (He all but told their names) tarried an hour
    To break their fast and ease their lagging steeds,
    Then took the forest southward: they're for France,
    I'll warrant it: and when we see them next
    Their faces will be turned this way, and backed
    With a rare dust of onset.
      Mordred. Then the queen—
    Where is the queen?
      Gawaine. Why there—in sanctuary—
    Fordone with flight and terror, left to hang
    Day in day out upon the altar steps,
    Sighing for rescue.
      Mordred. Rescue? Mercy of God!
    And she shall have it! Are we not all her men,
    Sworn to her service with the self-same oath
    That made us Arthur's too?
      Gawaine. Only so long
    As to be hers was still to serve the king.
    I am sorry for her, but the time has come
    To choose our ways; no man can ride at once
    Two roads cross-parted.
      Mordred. Gawaine, they are not parted,
    They must not be! Ay, wag thy tolerant head,
    I say they shall not be! What's Camelot,
    When the enchantment of that voice hath ceased
    To haunt her chambers? Whom wilt thou call king,
    When the four seas of heathendom break in
    To beat our tottering bulwark into mounds
    Of nameless ruin?
      Gawaine. Arthur will rule his own
    Without thy help or mine.
      Mordred. Not without mine!
    I am his son: I look to follow him,
    And with my will no man—not Arthur's self—
    Shall waste my heritage. There's Tristram gone,
    And Lamorak, and the twelve that died last night
    With Agravaine,—how think'st thou, is it a time
    To whet revenge, and lop the last great branch
    With all his leafage?
      Gawaine. Ha! Pelleas and the like!
      Mordred. Such like we scarce could match them, man for man;
    Half the Round Table, and their vanward chief
    No delicate ambler, but the sternest knight
    Unto his mortal foe that ever yet
    Put spear in rest.
      Gawaine. Well, Heaven defend the weak!
    Since we are the weak: for certes, mortal foes
    To all that hold with Lancelot and the queen,
    We are and must be
      Mordred. Never!
      Gawaine. Oh! Thou'rt dull to-day:
    Loved I not Lancelot? When have I been heard
    To blame the queen for choosing where she would?
    Oft-times I warned these meddlers; they are the cause
    Of their own death: I follow not revenge,
    But kings are hard to oust; and last night's work
    Forbids accordance.
      Mordred. Then what last night hath done
    To-night shall undo:—Gawaine, hear my plan,
    A plan to end all well: she is there, thou sayest,
    And Arthur knows not; let him not know yet;
    So, the time's mine: and the place too is mine—
    The abbey yonder—Kay and Bedivere
    Have word to meet us there; till darkness fall
    Their readiest speed cannot make good the tryst.
    He must await them: there's the nick of fortune
    Where the adventure dovetails with the wish.
    I'll plot their meeting—Arthur and the queen—
    For soft and pensive twilight: strange it were—
    Now that the fever's passed and left her blood
    To its noble rhythm—if she longed not
    For silence and forgiveness; passing strange
    If Arthur could deny her aught so asked
    As she will ask it.
      Gawaine. And Lancelot?
      Mordred. Time enough:
    First let me fly this pitch.
      Gawaine. When thou hast stooped
    And missed—
      Mordred. Nay! miss I shall not: Gawaine, mark!
    If—ah! if he should find it in his heart
    To judge her where he hath not judged himself,
    And to deny her fault that tenderness
    His own more loudly cries for, I'll not stand
    To see injustice done, and the fell grip
    Of this old tyranny we swore to loose
    Clenched tight and tighter on the aching throats
    That ask but leave to breathe: I saved thee once
    With half the truth; this time I'll venture all,
    Ay! and win all!
      Gawaine. Well, Mordred, go thy way.
    Thou'rt a bold spirit: if the rest of us
    Could match the sanguine colour of thy thoughts,
    Perchance we too might come to govern kings,
    And do the thing we would.
      Mordred. Hist! yonder he comes.
    Let us go meet him!
                        Remember, nought of the queen.





    SCENE II.



    Almesbury: a chapel in the Nunnery. Within the screen the Nuns at evensong: among them GUINEVERE in white clothes and black: without, ARTHUR and MORDRED.



      Nuns (chanting).
       In covertendo Dominus captivitatem Sion;
             Facti sumus sicut somniantes.
       Tunc repletum est risu os nostrum;
            Et lingua nostra exultatione.
       Tunc dicebant inter gentes;
            Magnificavit Dominus facere cum istis.
       Magnificavit Dominus facere nobiscum:
            Facti sumus læltantes.
       Converte Domine captivitatem nostram;
            Sicut rivos in Austro.
       Qui seminant in lacrimis;
            In exultatione metent.
       Qui ambulans ibat et flebat,
            Portans ad seminandum sementem:
       Veniens veniet in exultatione,
            Portans suos manipulos.
       [The nuns go out:
    GUINEVERE is left kneeling before the
            altar:
    ARTHUR and MORDRED in the ante-chapel.
      Arthur (to himself). I heard a voice which sang
    So sweetly that it seemed none earthly thing.
    "He that now goeth weeping on his way
    Shall come again: shall doubtless come with joy,
    And bring"—Ah! fair sweet Father Jesu Christ!
    If it might be!
                    Never, never again.
       [MORDRED goes softly out unperceived: GUINEVERE rises
       and comes through the screen towards
    ARTHUR.
      Arthur. Thou, Guinevere?
      Guinevere. Is it not to take me then
    That you art come?
      Arthur. I know not: I followed thee—
    I thought—I cannot tell thee—
      Guinevere. Be not at pains
    To spare me truth: I know that I am judged;
    Yea! but for shelter of this holy place
    Doomed to the death by fire.
      Arthur. That were the work
    Of mere revenge: thou knowest me, thou knowest
    That where love is, such anger and such dread
    Find but a moment's foothold: seest thou not
    My wrath is fallen? Let thy fears go with it
    Into the dark abyss from which they sprang.
                         [He pauses: she is silent.
    Doubt not; thou'rt free.
      Guinevere. Free! for the hope of that one word
    I have given all, honour and peace and name?
    And now—'tis but a word; a breath, a sound,
    That with a barren echo mocks my cry.
    Yea, and the very wish was a fool's wish,
    I know it now; what passionate revolt,
    What tears, what prayers, what fierce desire of life
    Can wholly blot the past, or sear away
    The memory of the soul? Not God Himself
    Can make undone that which hath once been done.
    Take back thy gift of freedom: were it all—
    Nay, were it half of that for which I longed,
    'Tis not for me: my just reward is death;
    I have sinned the twofold sin of them that strive
    To better wrong by wrong.
      Arthur. Have I not said
    True love desires not justice or revenge
    But only this, to love and to forgive—
    And to be loved again.
                         Ah! Guinevere!
    Hast thou then never loved me? Have my years
    Been but a dream, and thine a long-drawn lie?
    Wilt thou not speak, wilt thou not give me back
    The past, my happy past? Take not that too,
    Or truth has lost its meaning.
      Guinevere. I am not hard—
    Oh! do not think it!—but sometimes "yea" and "nay"
    Bear equal falsehood. I would tell thee all
    If I could find but words.
                         The name of love
    Is light upon the lips of many a maid
    That never knew him truly: such was I
    Then, when my father bade me give myself
    Unto a man scarce seen, and all unknown
    Beyond the common speech of courtesy.
    "Love comes," they said, and I was well content
    With that which came, as children are content
    To cling about their nurses; till they hear—
    Yea, though it be far off—the voice of her
    Whose life was one with theirs, and lo! they are fled,
    Fled with a reckless rapture past command,
    Past reason, past entreaty! Such was I,
    When at the last love came and called his own.
      Arthur. His own? Did I not love thee, too, then? Ay!
    First, longest, best? His own? Oh! stay me not,
    I heard—of speech so bitter and so bold
    I could not miss the purpose—thou hast said
    My soul through all those wedded nights and days
    Called not to thine with the true kindred voice
    That quickens passion—ah! God knows!—but thou,
    Loveless or loving, thou hadst sworn to hear
    One voice, the voice of honour. If I know thee,
    Even then the lingering echoes of that oath
    In some far chamber of thine inmost heart
    Were ringing still; I marvel passion's self
    Could so have drowned them.
      Guinevere. Marvel no more! 'tis false!
    Thou art the cause: my faith was stayed on thine
    And fell when thine had fall'n: thou did'st not know—
    When all thy mind was fierce with flaming thoughts
    That leaped to torture me—thou didst not dream
    How, long ago, the knowledge of thy sin
    Had burned my heart to ashes.
      Arthur. Thou too? thou?
    Have I not paid that debt, yea! paid it thrice
    To the uttermost? Bethink thee, is it just
    Because a boy, wilful and passionate,
    Drunk with the incense of his fame, and flushed
    With the new wine of power,—How canst thou say
    That I am he? 'Tis half a lifetime since:
    He sinned, and went his way; he is become
    A thing of dream, a shadow in the glass,
    No part of me; is it not enough that I
    Still bear his punishment, but thou must add
    The burden of thy scorn.
      Guinevere. I scorned thee not
    For any fault of boyhood, but I heard
    A man, midway upon the road of life,
    A king, for justice throned, deliberate,
    Upholding lust and treason for the sake
    Of the old-time fellowship they claimed with him.
    I heard thee: love and hate that moment broke
    The dungeon-keep of duty.
      Arthur. Guinevere,
    I am the man: but hear me—my soul too
    No less than thine, revolted—I believed—
    Yea! by God's light, which may we yet behold,
    I thought to save our Order and the realm
    From wider ruin.
      Guinevere. How should wider be?
    Lamorak, Tristram, Lancelot, Guinevere—
    These and a hundred more, in yonder hall
    Cast off their vows for ever.
      Arthur. Mordred! Mordred!
    What art thou then? God's vengeance upon earth?
      Guinevere. Not yet! Did'st thou not know then—
      Arthur. I know thee now!
    Mordred! my son! my very son! the child
    Of Youth and Doom, sent to me from the past
    With life's young glory in thy wilful eyes
    And in thine hand stark death!
                         Nay, Guinevere,
    'Tis I am judged. Think not my spirit unchanged
    Because I humble not myself with words
    And vain lamenting; but I reap alone
    That which my hand hath sowed, and all my strength
    Must stoop to bear it homeward.
                         Now farewell:
    It sets toward dusk; the hour is come to part,
    Thou to what earthly rest thy soul may find,
    I to the long night's work.
      Guinevere. Oh! blinder still!
    I knew not Arthur! Thou art king through all!
    And I that might have served thee!
      Arthur. Guinevere,
    Vex not thine heart in vain: the past is mine,
    Thy life is yet to come.
      Guinevere. Ah! never dream
    That I will live it! Here I render up
    Into thine hand the remnant of my days
    To spare or spend. Thou canst not ask of me
    That which I will not school myself to give.
      Arthur. If it might be! Nay, this one hour my heart
    Endure, endure! this too will pass!
                         Oh! woman!
    God hold from thee the cup thy hand hath mixed!
      Guinevere. What have I said? Did I not offer all
    To stead thy purpose?
      Arthur. Ay, but thou and I
    Have drifted far asunder on a tide
    That knows no hour of turning. Never sound
    Of thy voice and of mine shall meet again
    Across that homeless ocean, though we steer
    Beneath the same true stars, and win at last
    To the same haven of achieved desire.
      Guinevere. What haven? What achievement?
      Arthur. If by toil,
    By battle, by the pangs of dying hope,
    By death, by death in life, I yet may save
    This Britain from the curse that sprang from me,
    Wilt thou not—even thou—for Britain's sake
    Forgive—forgive me?
      Guinevere. Oh! thou royal heart!
    Is not this shame forgiveness? Wilt thou more?
    Thine enemies—I reck not what they be!—
    All! all! God smite them headlong from thy path!
    Farewell: forth to thy battle! Even here,
    Through these dim aisles of peace, there yet shall come
    Some wandering voice to whisper tidings dear
    Of Camelot, of Arthur's Table Round,
    Of the king, reigning as a noble knight,
    And Guinevere forgotten.
       [She passes within the screen and falls on her knees
            again before the altar.
    ARTHUR moves towards her
            for a moment: then turns suddenly away.




    ACT V




    SCENE I.




    A down between Camelford and Tintagel ARTHUR and KAY.
    A camp is seen behind them.



      Kay. 'Tis not that I esteem my counsel surer;
    Nor, so esteeming it, would I be bold
    To thrust it on you.
      Arthur. And yonder, as thou sayest,
    Lies Mordred with his force?
      Kay. Ay, my lord, yonder:
    But what I venture—
      Arthur. ell me, how is this known;
    I see no sign.
      Kay. Sir Bedivere, my lord,
    Had sent fore-riders out to skim the country,
    Who brought the news even now.
                         But with your leave—
    Merely for safe assurance,—
      Arthur. And Constantine?
      Kay. On that side, too, there is a scout-watch set,
    But nothing yet reported. Good my lord,
    Will you not hear me?
      Arthur. Why truly, if I must.
    But wit thou well, meseems to hear advice
    Being resolved already, suits no more
    With wisdom, than the way that children use,
    Who dig their gardens up to make them sure
    The seeds are sprouting.
      Kay. Nay, nay, sir, Heaven forbid
    That any word of mine should work upheaval
    In the king's mind!
      Arthur. Ay, Heaven forbid! and yet
    Let us not be too fearful; for thy peace
    I'll even risk my own. Say on.
      Kay. Sir, I have said
    'Tis merely for assurance—none can doubt
    You have considered all that could be urged
    On this side and on that, yet, my good lord—
    May I be pardoned—you have held aloof
    From all of us who serve you, taken counsel
    With no man all these days, from the first news
    Of Lancelot's flight, to this, but three nights old,
    That Mordred sets his teeth to meet rebuke
    With unashamed rebellion. 'Tis to-day
    He comes for the last time to urge his claim—
    Pardon for Lancelot, and I know not what
    Of licence for himself and those he leads—
    If that the answer—
      Arthur. "If" is out of time;
    The answer's ready.
      Kay. Let it not be thought
    I would presume to ply the king with questions,
                         [He pauses.
    Or force the privacy of his intent—
                [He pauses again: ARTHUR remains silent.
    But how can we be certain that his glance—
    That any one man's glance—hath made survey
    Of the whole field, remarked each several gap
    Where dangers peep, and reckoned with them all,
    If silence—
    If silence must be kept.
                         BEDIVERE enters.
      Arthur. Nay, content thee, Kay,
    For one hour yet. Well, Bedivere?
      Bedivere. Sir, time presses:
    Mordred's at hand: his terms are known to all,
    And there are some who love you ill at ease
    That choice so sudden should be forced upon you.
      Arthur. It cannot be too sudden.
      Bedivere. I know 'tis said
    You are resolved: 'tis true you have good right—
    If right were all in question—to repulse
    Lancelot and Mordred both: yet there is more
    If I dare speak it.
      Arthur. Ay, speak it, Bedivere.
      Bedivere. Let me be blunt then, too; there's no way left
    To deal with Lancelot, save by pardoning him.
    We've none to match him: let his force be joined—
    As 'tis in part even now—with Mordred's yonder,
    And, save what hope may hang on Constantine,
    We are merely lost.
      Arthur. But Constantine will come.
    He too is close at hand; 'tis three weeks since
    I sent him urgent summons.
      Bedivere. Ay, so urgent
    And so long since, that but for some mishap
    He had been here ere now.
      Arthur. No, no!
      Bedivere. Let us not strain
    Our eyes so blind with staring at the distance,
    They cannot measure the abyss that yawns
    One step before us. Mark you—king or churl—
    Down from life to death in a moment's fall—
    'Tis a sheer plunge, and dark!
      Kay. Sir Bedivere! My lord—
    This is no language for a king to hear—
    I go not with him there; I but approve
    His meaning, not his plainness.
      Arthur. Nay, both are honest,
    Both have my thanks: in truth, these latter days
    Death has been much remembered in my thoughts,
    And no less dreaded.
      Bedivere. He may well be dreaded
    By those who leave their country tossed between
    The wind and tide of parties. Sir, forgive me,
    This Mordred is your son.
      Arthur. That, too, Bedivere,
    I have remembered.
      Bedivere. Your only son, your heir:
    And once this gust of wilfulness were laid—
    As well it may be— there's no voice in Britain
    So like a king's. Bend to him now, hereafter
    You'll turn him to your will; but if this cloud
    Break into storm between you, either way
    There's ruin; he who wins, wins but remorse;
    Who loses, loses all.
                         [ARTHUR turns away.
      Kay (aside to BEDIVERE). There I think we touched him.
    Hold to it: press him! not to hard, but still
    As hard as may be with a due respect.
      Bedivere (aside). Nay, the hour's struck: God send I was in time!
    My lord, Sir Mordred's coming. Mark you now,
    There's something courteous and humble mixed
    With his high bearing; rebels look not so.
      Kay. Humble? Good sooth! But well, 'twas timely said.
                         MORDRED enters with GAWAINE.
      Arthur. Good morrow, Mordred.
      Mordred. Sir, God give you peace!
      Arthur. Gawaine, thou too art welcome.
      Gawaine. My lord, I thank you.
      Arthur. If ye have other friends at hand, we pray you
    Let us not lack their presence.
      Mordred. Sir, if it please you,
    They are content to wait, whilst I entreat
    The boon of private audience.
      Arthur. Why, surely,
    If such a place may serve us. Prithee, Kay,
    Go summon all the camp, and while we walk
    Apart with Mordred, bid them share thy charge.
    That Gawaine and his comrades fall not weary
    For lack of entertainment. Bedivere,
    Thou shalt attend us yonder within call.
              [KAY and BEDIVERE go out with Gawaine.
                         (To MORDERD.) Thou hast thy wish; we are alone:
    What is it
    Thou seekest further?
      Mordred. Sir, I had thought to speak
    Of Lancelot first.
      Arthur. Ah! Mordred, think again!
    Thou wilt not suffer any man to stand
    Between the clasping of thy hand and mine?
      Mordred. But this is Lancelot, but for whom long since
    The best of all of us had been full cold
    At the heart's root.
      Arthur. Ay, long since.
      Mordred. Oh! he hath sinned,
    But say not, past forgiveness: drive him not
    To justify his deed: set him again
    To climb with stronger and more patient feet
    The path he fell from; and to us his pardon
    Shall be an earnest of the gentler rule
    For which we humbly pray.
      Arthur. There thou'rt asking more—
    Far more—than Lancelot's pardon.
      Mordred. We do but crave
    For freedom; every current of the time
    Sets toward a kindly faith and tend'rer laws;
    Only these vows oppress us, crying still
    "Thou shalt not," in the ear of lusty youth,
    To whom no voice should call but Nature's own,
    "Desire and dread not; life is all too short,
    Too fair, too great, to mar with meaner hopes,
    This, this thou shalt, and this!"
      Arthur. Ay, but those to whom
    Despite of Nature these same meaner hopes
    Are still the more endeared?
      Mordred. There would be none!
    Nay then if such there might be, I would cast them
    Into the prison-house of loneliness,
    The pit of disfellowed: there to shiver
    Till penitence should give them tears enough
    To pay their ransom.
      Arthur. Thy trust were vain, ay! vain
    And perilous: there's evil in our blood
    Twin-born with good, and claiming soon or late
    His destined share of life's inheritance:
    Whom tenderness but fosters.
      Mordred. Nay, but 'tis not so:
    Put it to proof: the event shall bind us all.
      Arthur. 'Tis proved already.
      Mordred. How so?
      Arthur. In all the years
    Before thou, Mordred, cam'st,—
      Mordred. Ha! before I came
    None dared—
      Arthur. Thou sayest well, before thou cam'st
    None dared what, since thy coming, all men dare,
    What none shall dare again!
      Mordred. Then God save Britain,
    When freedom may not speak her dearest hope
    Above a crouching whisper!
      Arthur. Ay! God save Britain!
    But that's my prayer, not thine; for what sake else,
    When Gawaine fell, should I have thrust my hand
    Into the torment of that blackening shame?
    For what have I forsworn all peace—the peace
    That comes of pardoning, the peace that haunts
    Old trodden ways, the peace that at the last,
    When wife and son bend down to fading eyes,
    Lightens the dusk of death? Oh! Mordred, Mordred!
    Thou should'st have been in very deed my son!
      Mordred. I am thy son, I will be! I will wait;
    Reproach me not; thou shalt not be alone;
    Thou shalt not lose an hour of peace for me
    Henceforward all thy days!
      Arthur. And after, Mordred?
      Mordred. Nay, all thy days.
      Arthur. Ay, and when my days are done?
      Mordred. Then I thy son will take this realm in trust
    For thy son's son.
      Arthur. Ah! Mordred, if I but knew
    How thou would'st read that trust when I am dead,
    And by what oath be bounden!
      Mordred. Oath? Oath again?
    More oaths? More dust upon a parching tongue?
    Is't not enough for thee whilst thou art here
    To gag and fetter me, but thou must seek
    To bind my life upon thy tyrant's wheel
    With the dead hand? Oath? Yea then, hear my oath!
    I swear to rule this kingdom after thee
    As thou hast ruled it:—that's by my own will
    And my own reason, and my own right arm!
      Arthur. Said I not? Bedivere!
      Mordred. Stay! I have not done,
    We have not spoken of the queen.
      Arthur. Ho! there! Bedivere!
                   BEDIVERE enters.
    Bring the knights hither!
      Bedivere. All, my lord?
      Arthur. All, all!
                         [BEDIVERE goes out.
      Mordred. Thou shalt not so escape; alone or thronged
    There's that within my grasp shall reach thee yet.
    For Lancelot, as thou wilt: with his own hand
    He well may keep his head; and for myself
    I might have thought on patience: but the queen
    No man shall judge, and thou, the fount of wrong,
    Thou, least of all men: doom, and thou art doomed;
    Be just and live: why wilt thou ride apace
    To thy last battle? Seest thou not how Sin
    Follows to drag thee down, and at thy side
    Death shakes the sand-glass of thy falling hours?
    Thou'rt mastered: who can hope to be more strong
    Than Fate, that on the instant springs all-armed
    From our own deeds?
                  BEDIVERE and Knights enter.
      Arthur (to MORDRED). Silence! thy bolt is shot:
    Stand thou aside!
       (To the others.)Sirs, we have drawn you hither
    That ye may share our counsel. Time hath been
    When ye have known this kingdom's life to flow
    Tranquil and pure, with no more sound of storm
    Than a broad river on a windless noon:
    But now 'tis changed; its swollen course is fed
    By dark and roaring torrents; build we not
    Our dykes the stronger, night may hear us yet
    Swept down to ruin on a world in flood.
    I am resolved: I bid you toil with me:
    If we achieve, 'tis noble: though we fail,
    'Tis work for kings! How say ye?
      Bedivere and Arthur's Knights. Yea!
      Mordred's Party. What must we do?
      Arthur. Ye must be bound anew to keep the vows
    Of our High Order: ye must stand apart
    From whoso hath not kept them, leaving such
    To justice unappealed; and ye must swear
    Upon your hilted swords true faith and service
    To him that after me shall work my will—
    Sir Constantine.
      Mordred. What? disinherit me?
    Rob me and slay me? Nay, thou canst not do it!
    Thou canst not slay thy past! For thy life, back!
    Thou goest to the deathward!
      Arthur. Wilt thou dare me?
    Wilt thou be taught that so his heart be strong
    A fallen man may rise, and trample down
    The offspring of his rash and evil past?
    Stand from before me!
       [MORDRED'S party draw back: one of them treads upon
              an adder, and draws his sword to kill it.

      Arthur's Herald. Treason, lords! at arms!
      Arthur's Knights. At arms! at arms!
       [Both sides draw their swords. MORDRED throws
          himself between them.

      Mordred. Hold!
      Gawaine (to MORDRED). Draw man! all's afire!
    Cry "Freedom!" and set on!
       [All go out fighting in great confusion: a noise of
          trumpets and shouting is heard behind.




    SCENE II.



       Another part of the down. Enter ARTHUR attended by a trumpeter.



      Arthur. I'll breathe myself a moment; trumpeter,
    Sound me a rally: 'twixt pursuit and flight
    The long day through, our bands are too much parted,
    Yet, as I think, not broken past recall.
       [The trumpet sounds: a pause follows. ]
    They come not: God defend us! Sound again.
    How the mist hangs! I cannot see the field
    Save here and there in gaps and shifting gleams
    There's one! 'Tis Lucan: wounded, by his gait.
    Another, and another!
                         BEDIVERE enters.
    Bedivere!
    Well met! 'Tis time we drew our battle in.
    What of the southward fighting?
      Bedivere. Nay, God knows!
    Mine eyes were elsewhere: yet at times I caught,
    Between the shocks we brunted, how their fortune
    Moment by moment on the razor's edge
    Swung in a doubtful scale: forward and back,
    Forward and back: a scant hour since, their noise
    Still rang between the water and the wood,
    Then clattered inland, scattering up the cliff.
      Arthur. Inland? They pushed us then? Yet against odds
    'Twas long and stoutly held: to-night at least
    Nought threatens thence: there's silence on the right;
    And here, where first the main encounter joined,
    Men prowl like fog-blind wolves among the dead
    And fight by tens and twenties. Whence art thou?
    Hath Kay been seen? We lost him: is he strayed
    Beyond the trumpet call?
      Bedivere. Ay, beyond call,
    God rest him!
      Arthur. Kay? Ah! Bedivere, unsay it!
    They told thee false!
      Bedivere. I bore him in these arms
    Back from the vanward mellay; bound his wounds,
    And thought to leave him: even while I turned
    His voice came strong, "These braggart boys!" he cried,
    "Lock on my armour!" but with that he drooped,
    And straightway fell on sleep.
      Arthur. Such death be mine!
    So sudden, so undoubting!
                         Farewell, Kay!
    Thou leav'st a lonely world.
                         Come, Bedivere,
    Tell out thy tale: this was mine oldest friend,
    All else is lighter.
      Bedivere. Yet I had liefer take
    As many blows unshielded, than recall
    The hundred partings that to-day hath knelled.
    Who is not fallen? Pertilope died first,
    Cut off from rescue: like a lonely rock,
    Now bare, now hidden by the swinging seas
    We marked his crest awhile; then with a roar
    The full tide seethed above him. Aglovale,
    Gillimer, Driant, Griflet, Priamus,
    Fell in one charge: the dead upon their track
    Lay thick as wind-laid wheat. Then with the mist
    Confusion came: I saw young Tor and Dinas
    Hurtle together like two boars in spring,
    Till they were blotted from me: when the wind
    Brought twilight back, their arms were locked in death.
    Segwarides is gone, and Lambegus,
    Damas, and Herminde: Brandiles is shriven
    And ebbing fast: yonder's my brother Lucan
    That scarce can drag him hither.
      Arthur. Trumpeter,
    Go help Sir Lucan.
                       Oh, my noble knights,
    I am your death!
                     Hereafter, Bedivere,
    There shall be grief beyond all tears for these,
    Who now must be forgotten: counsel me,
    Which way to fling ourselves upon the flight?
    Where stand the traitors?
      Bedivere. Nowhere; Death is just,
    This side and that he reaps with equal stroke:
    They too are few and faint.
      Arthur. Then 'tis well with us—
    If aught can yet be well—thy fears are like
    To find their answer; let this fortune hold
    An hour or less, and Mordred's game is lost.
    For him stalemate's defeat, and all or nought
    His only hazard.
      Bedivere. I would it were so.
      Arthur. What else?
    What is there left?
      Bedivere. I know not, yet meseems
    His very life's a challenge.
      Arthur. Was it not thou
    This morning would'st have urged me yield his claim
    And make accord with him?
      Bedivere. There was yet time:
    Now he hath tasted blood, and will not stint
    Till he be gorged—Arthur or Constantine,
    So long as Britain lies within his spring,
    He'll reck not.
      Arthur. Bedivere, I have sworn an oath—
    God's mercy keep me from redeeming it!—
    But Mordred shall not reign.
                 Enter LUCAN, wounded.
                         Thou'rt welcome, Lucan.
    Where is thy hurt?
                       What knight was that who climbed
    So doubtfully behind thee? Knows he not
    Our rallying signal?
      Lucan. Nay, he's none of ours.
    His visor hides his face, but 'tis the frame
    Of a strong knight, and traitor though he be,
    He deals a grievous buffet.
      Bedivere (looking off). Ay, he's bold,
    He means to try us.
      Arthur. No, he seeks a parley.
    Look ye, he doffs his helm!
                       MORDRED enters.
                         Ah! Jesu mercy!
      Bedivere. Mordred! thou villain! lace that helm again
    And keep thee as thou may'st!
      Arthur. Hold! Bedivere,
    This is my deed: I could not bear to stand
    And see thee slay him.
                         Mordred, draw thy sword,
    And give thy soul into the hands of God,
    For thy time hieth fast!
       [ARTHUR and MORDRED fight, but neither is wounded:
          they draw apart for a breathing space.
    ARTHUR
          moves forward again.

      Lucan. Sir, let him go:
    Bethink you, he's your son: let him but swear
    By the five wounds of our sweet Saviour Christ,
    To quit this land for ever.
                         Ah, Sir Mordred.
    What's he that strikes against his father's life?
    Be sworn, and 'scape the curse!
      Mordred (to ARTHUR). I have more right
    To take thy life than thou could'st ever claim
    To give me mine!
      Arthur. I sinned: I will atone.
       [They fight again: MORDRED falls: ARTHUR stands
          looking down upon him.

      Arthur. 'Tis done!
                         Might I die too!
      Mordred. Thou shalt!
             [He raises himself with a last effort and
                stabs
    ARTHUR.
                O Britain!
    Life! life! One year of life—untyrannised!
          [He falls back dead: ARTHUR kneels beside him.
      Bedivere. My lord,—you are sore hurt: come hence!
             (A pause.) My lord!
    Will you not hence?
              [ARTHUR turns and looks at him.
      Arthur. Yea, Bedivere, 'tis time.
             [He turns away and covers his face again.



    SCENE III.




    Sea coast near Tintagel. Under the rocks a barge: ARTHUR
       therein with ladies tending him.
    BEDIVERE upon the shore
       at hand.




      Arthur. Bedivere
    For this last office and for all that's gone
    Thou hast my loving thanks: little enough
    For such true service: but it yet may be
    When thou hast crept from off the windy hills
    Into the ingle-nook of dreaming eld,
    Among the ember-faces my face too
    Thou shalt behold, and muse before thou sleepest
    With heart contented "Arthur leaned on me,
    And his last thanks were mine."
      Bedivere. Nay, my dear lord,
    Far be the last! You are not yet for death;
    Men say you cannot die.
      Arthur. 'Tis true, long since
    I do remember it was told of me
    I should be hurt to death and yet not slain,
    But by the will of our Lord Jesu brought
    Into another place, and come again
    To win the Holy Cross. I cannot tell;
    'Tis a dark saying: rather, as I deem,
    To-night, after the fashion of this world
    My life must change.
      Bedivere. To-night? So Britain sinks!
    Ah! my Lord Arthur, what shall save us now—
    A torn and kingless people?
      Arthur. Nay, Bedivere,
    Not kingless; tide me death betide me life,
    The realm rides high through all, with Constantine
    To hold the course I pricked. Look forward, forward,
    And let the past, with Arthur and his sins,
    Fade on the dim horizon far behind!
    Yet, even so, meseems I shall not die;
    My purpose lives, my will, that which hath been
    The life-blood of my spirit, my soul's breath:—
    What shall a man not suffer and not dare
    That this may be? Yea! shall he not for this
    Tread out the fire upon his own hearth-stone,
    For this draw steel against the child that sprang
    Of his own body? Though my name be lost
    For ever, and my race with me to-night
    Fall into dust, that which I willed remains,
    And while that lives I shall not wholly die.
    Now make me ere I pass:—Sir Constantine
    Is King of Britain: see him crowned with speed,
    And summon all true men to render him
    Such service and such faith as they would own
    Towards Arthur come again. Then shalt thou go
    Where thou may'st meet with Lancelot: let him wit
    I died full fain of him, leaning my trust
    Upon his old remembered nobleness
    That he will yet repent him. They are fallen
    Who brought the realm in peril for his sake;
    His penance waits him still: let him pray out
    His life in some lone hermitage, or pass
    Into the Holy Land where Jesu Christ
    Was quick and dead. There may his soul find peace!
      Bedivere. All this shall have fulfilment. Ah! would God
    I too had fallen first!
      Arthur. Nay, for lack of thee
    My words were lost: be thankful, work thy work,
    And wait God's end for all. My last command
    Is this, thou shalt not fail to bring the queen
    True tale how all befell: what lies beneath
    Let Silence whisper.
                         Farewell Bedivere.
    God dwell with thee. This ring to Constantine,
    Bid him be strong, and rule.
       [He falls back dying: the barge puts out to sea.


                  Finis.





    ORCHARDLEIGH, April 2, 1893.
    KENSINGTON, July 23, 1894.