The Project Gutenberg eBook of La Chanson de Roland, by Léon Gautier
The Project Gutenberg eBook of La Chanson de Roland : Translated from the Seventh Edition of Léon Gautier
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Title: La Chanson de Roland : Translated from the Seventh Edition of Léon Gautier
Translator: Léonce Rabillon
Release date: December 11, 2007 [eBook #23819]
Language: English
Credits: E-text prepared by Juliet Sutherland, Turgut Dincer, and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net)
*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LA CHANSON DE ROLAND : TRANSLATED FROM THE SEVENTH EDITION OF LÉON GAUTIER ***
E-text prepared by Juliet Sutherland, Turgut Dincer,
and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team
(http://www.pgdp.net)
LA CHANSON DE ROLAND
TRANSLATED FROM THE SEVENTH EDITION OF LEON
GAUTIER, PROFESSOR AT THE ECOLE DES
CHARTES, PARIS.
BY
LÉONCE RABILLON,
Licencié en droit, Paris University, French Lecturer at
Johns Hopkins University.
NEW YORK
HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY
1885
COPYRIGHT, 1885
BY
HENRY HOLT & CO.
W. L. MERSHON & CO.,
Printers and Electrotypers,
RAHWAY, N. J.
TO DANIEL C. GILMAN, President of Johns Hopkins University, THIS TRANSLATION
IS MOST RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED.
[vii]
PREFACE.
Several years ago, the maker of this version translated into French one
of the early works of H. W. Longfellow. This circumstance was not
forgotten by the American poet who kindly consented to listen to this
new attempt at rendering into English the "CHANSON DE ROLAND."
To his encouragement is due the present publication. The writer will
ever proudly treasure up the remembrance of his friendly welcome and
counsel....
The translator has followed, as literally as possible, the text of the
Oxford MS., as revised by Léon Gautier. The parts inclosed in
parentheses are interpolations of the learned Professor. This revised
text should be kept in hand by the English reader for comparison with
the original, which is nine centuries old. The translator may thus be
more likely to obtain the indulgence of the reader for the quaint
representation, in a modern language, of the coloring of this most
ancient poem.
[viii]The orthography of all the names, as well as their prosodic accent, has
been preserved in their ancient form; and accordingly, an index has been
appended to the work.
The seventh edition of Léon Gautier's "CHANSON DE ROLAND," contains a
vast amount of explanatory notes, grammatical and historical, to which
the reader is referred.
HISTORY OF THE POEM.
On the 15th of August, 778, in a little Pyrenean Valley, still known in
our days by the name of Ronceval, a terrible event took place.
Charlemagne, returning from his expedition to Spain, crossed that valley
and the Pyrenees, leaving his rear-guard in command of Roland, Prefect
of the Marches of Brittany. His main army had passed unmolested; but at
the moment when the rear-guard advanced into the defiles of the
mountain, thousands of Gascons rushed from their ambush, fell upon the
French army and slaughtered the whole guard to the last man. So perished
Roland.
Eginhard, the historian of Charlemagne, terminates his narrative with
these words: "The House-intendant, (Regiæ mensæ præpositus), Eggihard,
Anselm, Count of the Palace, Roland, Prefect of the Marches of Brittany
(Hruolandus britannici limitis præfectus), with many more, perished in
[ix]the fight. It was not possible to take revenge on the spot. The
treacherous attempt once perpetrated, the enemy dispersed and left no
trace." (Eginhard's Life of Charlemagne, Vol. I., p. 31; edition of the
Société de l'histoire de France.)
From the moment of the defeat of Ronceval, legend commenced its labor
upon this truly epic event which, in its origin, is absolutely French,
but has found its echoes throughout Europe, from Iceland to Eastern
regions.
The commentators generally agree in dating the composition of the Poem
before the first crusade in the year 1096. The author, it is
ascertained, was Norman, the dialect used by him being Norman
throughout. Whether this author was really Turoldus, named in the last
line of the Poem, is a point which Léon Gautier refuses to affirm. We
refer the reader to the very interesting preface of Genin, and to the
learned introductions of Léon Gautier, for more complete information.
The word "Aoi," which is placed at the end of every stanza, and found in
no other ancient French poems, is interpreted differently by the
commentators. M. Francisque Michel assimilated it at first to the
termination of an ecclesiastical chant—Preface, xxvii.—and later to
the Saxon Abeg, or the English Away, as a sort of refrain which the
"jongleur" repeated at the end of the couplets. M. [x]Génin explains it by
ad viam, a vei, avoie, away! it is done, let us go on!
M. Gautier, with his skeptical honesty, declares the word unexplained.
See Note 9, p. 4, of his seventh edition.
MANUSCRIPTS.
The most complete and ancient is that of Oxford, in the Bodleian
Library, marked "Digby, 23," a copy of the XIIth. century. All others
are Rifaccimenti, Refashionings.
Two in Venice, in St. Mark Library, XIIIth. century; French MSS., No. 4
& 7.
In the National Library, Paris, No. 860, XIIIth. century.
The Versailles MS., now deposited in the Library of Chateauroux, a copy
of which is in Paris Nat. Library; 15, 108; XIIIth. century.
In the Lyons Library, 964; XIVth. century.
In Cambridge, Trinity Collage, R. 3-32; XVIth. century.
One called the Lorrain, a fragment found near Metz.
The Karlomagnus Saga, an Icelandic copy of the Oxford MS.; XIIIth.
century.
In M. Petit de Julleville's Introduction to his version can be found a
chronological list of the [xi]works which concern the "CHANSON DE ROLAND,"
the translations of it, and dissertations on the subject in France and
Germany.
There are twenty-one translations in different languages:
Four in German, by Th. Müller, Hertz, Boehmer, Eug. Kölbing.
One in Polish, by Mad. Duchinska.
One in Danish, by Unger.
One in Icelandish, Karlomagnus' Saga.
Twelve in French, by Francisque Michel, Bourdillon, Delécluze, Génin, P.
Paris, Vitet, Jônain, de Saint-Albin, d'Avril, Petit de Julleville,
Lehugeur and Léon Gautier, of whose translation seven editions were
issued.
Two in English, one in England by J. O'Hagan, and one in America, the
latest and present one.
Besides, a version from Vitet's French paraphrase, by Mrs. Marsh.
Carle our most noble Emperor and King,Hath tarried now full seven years in Spain,Conqu'ring the highland regions to the sea;No fortress stands before him unsubdued,Nor wall, nor city left, to be destroyed,Save Sarraguce, high on a mountain set.There rules the King Marsile who loves not God,Apollo worships and Mohammed serves;Nor can he from his evil doom escape.Aoi.
The King Marsile abides in SarraguceWhere underneath an orchard's leafy shade,Upon a terrace with blue marble paved[2]He rests. Around him twenty thousand menAnd more are ranked. His Dukes and Counts he calls:"Oyez, Seigneurs, what gath'ring ills are ours:Great Carle, the Emperor who rules Sweet FranceComes to this land to 'whelm us with his might.To give him battle I no army have,Nor people to array against his host:Your counsel give me, Lords, as my wise men,And so defend your King from death and shame;"But answer none a single Pagan gave,Save Blancandrin del Castel Val-Fondé.Aoi.
Blancandrin, 'midst the wisest Pagans wise,Who, in his vassalage a valiant knight,Most prudent counsels gave to help his lord,Said to the King:—"Be not by this dismayed!To Carle the proud, the fierce, send messengersWith words of faith and love. Send to him giftsOf bears and lions, packs of dogs; presentSeven hundred camels also, fifty scoreOf molted1 falcons, and four hundred mulesWith heavy weight of gold and silver packed;[3]Then fifty chariots with their burthens heaped:Well can this treasure all his soldiers pay.Within this land he long enough has camped.To France—to Aix let him at last return;There will you join him on Saint-Michael's feast,Accept the Christian law, and swear to beHis man in faith and honor. Should he askHostages, ten or twenty grant, to lureHis trust; let us send our wives' sons. Mine—althoughHe die, I give. Far better that their headsShould fall than we lose honor and domain,Than we ourselves to beggary be brought."Aoi.
He further said:—"By this right hand of mine,And by the beard the air waves on my breast,Soon shall you see the host of Franks disperse;To France, their land, the Franks will take their way.When each has gained the shelter of his home,King Carle will in his chapel be at Aix,[4]To celebrate Saint Michael's solemn feast.The day will come, the term allowed will pass,And from us shall he hear nor word nor news.The King is fierce, his soul is hard; and thusEach hostage head beneath his sword shall fall.'Twere better far that these should lose their headsThan we for aye lose glorious Spain the Fair,And suffer so great ills and doleful woes."Then say the Pagans:—"This may be the truth."Aoi.
Hereat the King Marsile the council closed.Then summon'd he Clarin de Balaguer,Estramarin and Eudropin his peer;With Priamon Guarlan the bearded knight,And Machiner together with MahenHis uncle, Joïmer and Malbien bornBeyond the sea, and Blancandrin, to hearHis words. These ten, the fiercest, he addressed:"Seigneurs Barons, ye shall go toward Carl'magne;He to Cordrès, the city, now lays siege.Bear in each hand a branch of olive-treeIn token of humility and peace.[5]If by your arts his favor you can gain,I give of gold and silver, lands and fiefsTo each, whatever he may ask of me."The Pagans answer all:—"[Well said our lord!"]Aoi.
Marsile his council closed:—"My Lords, ye shallSet forth;—an olive branch bear in each hand:And in my name adjure King CarlemagneThat by his God he mercy have on me;And ere a month be past, he shall beholdMe follow with a thousand faithful knights,There to submit myself to Christian lawAnd be his man in love and faith; and ifHe hostages require, them shall he have."Quoth Blancandrin:—"Good treaty will be yours."Aoi.
Marsile then ordered forth the ten white mulesThe King of Sicily once sent to him;—Golden their bits—their saddles silver-wrought—[6]And on them mounted his ambassadors.Thus holding each a branch of olive-tree,They rode away and came to Carle of France.Nor can he from the treacherous snare escape.Aoi.
Cheerful and blithe the Emp'ror, for CordrèsHas been subdued, its massy walls o'erthrown,Its towers by mighty catapults destroyed;And there his knights have found abundant spoilsOf gold and silver, and rich garnitures.Nor was one Pagan in the city leftAlive, who did not own the Christian Faith.Now is the Emperor within a wideAnd spreading orchard; there around him standRollánd and Olivier, Samsun the Duke,And Anseïs the bold, Gefrei d'Anjou,Gonfaloneer of Carle, and also thereGerin and Gerier. Where these were, cameOf others many more. In all, from France[8]Were gathered fully fifteen thousand knights.Upon white pallies2 sit these chevaliers;They play at tables3 to divert themselves;The wiser and the elder play at chess.In mimic sword-play strive the joyous youths.Under a pine-tree, near an eglantine,Is placed a faldstool of pure gold whereonSits he, the King—great Ruler of Sweet France.White is his beard, his head all flowering white;Graceful his form and proud his countenance;None need to point him out to those who comeThe Pagan messengers, dismounting, stoodBefore him, proffering humble faith and love.Aoi.
Blancandrin was the first to speak, and saidUnto the king:—"Hail! in the name of God,The Glorious One we must adore! To youI bring this message from Marsile the brave:Well has he studied your Salvation's Law;And would upon you lavish his great wealth.[9]Bears—lions—packs of hounds enchained he gives,Seven hundred camels also—fifty scoreOf molted falcons—mules, four hundred, packedWith gold and silver—fifty carts to carryThese gifts, and bezants4 of the purest goldHe also sends, which will your soldiers pay.Too long within our land you have remained;To France—to Aix he wills you straight return.There will he follow you: so says my lord."To God the Emperor uplifts his hands;Bends low his head and counsel takes in thought.Aoi.
The Emperor sat silent with drooped head.Ne'er rash in words, he never speaks in haste.At last he rose. Proudly he looked and spakeUnto the messengers:—"Ye have well saidThat King Marsile e'er stood my greatest foe!On these fair-seeming words how far can IRely?" The crafty Saracen replied:[10]"Would you have hostages? you shall have ten,Fifteen, yea, twenty. Though his fate be deathMy son shall go, and others nobler still,I deem. When to your lordly palace, homeReturned—when comes Saint Michael del Peril,His feast, my Lord will follow to those springs,He says, brought forth by God for you, and thereBaptized, a faithful Christian will become!"Carl'magne makes answer:—"He may yet be saved!"Aoi.
The eve was soft and fair, the sunset bright;The ten mules stabled by the King's command;In the great orchard a pavilion raisedTo house the messengers, his Pagan guests.Twelve sergeants to their service were assigned,And there they rested till the dawn repelledThe night. With day the Emperor arose;Heard mass and matins first, then having goneBeneath a stately pine, he summons allHis wisest barons, council grave to hold,Thus ever guided by the men of France.Aoi.
Beneath a pine the Monarch has repaired;His barons to the council called: the DukeOgier—Archbishop Turpin—old Richard,Also his nephew Henri, and the braveCount Acelin of Gascuïgne—TedbaldDe Reins—his cousin Milon—Gerier,Gerin, together with the Count Rollánd,And Olivier, the brave and noble knight.One thousand Franks of France and more were met—Then Ganelon came, who treason wrought; and nowWas opened that ill-fated council thus:Aoi.
"Seigneurs Barons," began the Emp'ror Carle,"The King Marsile his messengers hath sentTo offer me large store of his great wealth;Bears—lions—hounds in leash;—of camels heGives seven hundred—falcons, fifty score—Four hundred mules packed high with Arab gold,And more than fifty chariots loaded full;[12]But he demands that I return to France.There will he follow: then arrived at Aix,Will in my palace take Salvation's Faith,Will Christ obey, and hold his lands from me;But what is in his heart, I do not know."The French exclaim:—"Of him we must beware!"Aoi.
The Emp'ror ended thus. But Count RollándApproving not the terms, stands forth and speaksUnto the King with arguments adverse:"Trust never more Marsile. 'Tis full seven yearsSince we came into Spain. For you I tookBoth Noplés and Commiblés; gained ValterneAnd all the land of Pine, and Balaguer,And Tuele and Sebile—yet King MarsileStill plotting treachery, sent from his hordeOf Pagans, fifteen men; each bore in handLike these, a branch of olive-tree, and spakeThe self-same words. On that you counsel tookFrom your too lightly flattering French; two CountsOf yours you to the Pagan sent, the one,Bazan, Bastile the other, and their headsHe struck off near Haltoie. As you began,[13]War on! To Sarraguce your army lead,Besiege her walls, though all your life it take,And thus avenge the knights the felon slew."Aoi.
At this the Emperor, bending low his head,Twists his mustache and plucks his hoary beard,Answering his nephew neither yea nor nay.The Franks keep silence—all save GanelonWho rose and stood before the King, and spakeBold words and haughty:—"Put not faith in fools,Nor me nor others; follow your own rede!Since King Marsile makes offer to becomeYour man, with hands joined; furthermore will holdSpain as a fief from you; yea, will receiveOur law as his law, he who counsel givesSuch proffer to reject, cares not a whitWhat death we die. No counsel take of pride;Let pass the fools and listen to the wise."Aoi.
And now Duke Naimes arose: his beard and hairAs white as drifted snow. In all the court[14]No better vassal stood; and to the King:"Have you marked well the words Count GanelonIn answer spoke but now? His plan is wise;Follow it then. This King Marsile in warIs overcome, his strongholds all pulled down;By warlike engines are his walls destroyed,His cities burned, his men subdued;—when nowHe for your mercy prays, foul sin it wereTo press him harder. Since he, furthermoreWill bind his word by gift of hostages,[One of your barons also send to him.]In truth no longer this great war should rage."The French all cry:—"Duke Naimes has spoken well."Aoi.
"Seigneurs Barons, which of you shall we sendTo meet the King Marsile in Sarraguce?"Duke Naimes responds:—"I, with your leave will go;Give me the glove and staff."—"Nay," quoth King Carle,"A sage you are in council, well I know:By this mustache and by this beard of mine,So far away from me you shall not go.Back to your seat, since none hath summoned you."Aoi.
[15]"Seigneurs Barons, which of you shall we sendAs messengers to Sarraguce where rulesMarsile?"—Rollánd responds:—"Behold me here!""—You shall not, by my troth!" cries Olivier,"Your pride too fierce, and courage far too hot;I fear some misadventure from your zeal.Should our King grant me but his leave, 'tis IWill go!"—The King exclaimed:—"Be silent both—Nor you, nor he, shall yonder set your foot!Ay, by this hoary beard of mine, I swear,Not one of my twelve Peers shall thither go."The French are dumb—-all silenced by these words.Aoi.
Turpin de Reins arises from the ranksAnd to the King he says: "Let your Franks stay,To this land seven years ago you came,And they have suffered much of toil and pain.Give me the glove and staff, and I will go[16]And speak my mind to that proud Saracen."With anger great the Emperor replies:"Back to your seat on yonder pallie whiteNor speak another word, save by command!"Aoi.
Then said the Emperor:—"Chevaliers of France,Choose ye for me a baron of my realm,One who can bear my words to King Marsile!"Rollánd rejoins:—"Let my step-father go;If he remain, no wiser man is found."The French say:—-"Well can he fulfill the task:[If the King wills, 'tis right he should be sent."]Aoi.
Thus spoke the King:—"Sire Ganelon, draw near:Receive the glove and staff—you heard the FranksPass judgment, and on you their choice has fallen."Said Ganelon:—"All this Rollánd has done!My life-long, never will I love him more,Nor Olivier, his comrade and his friend,Nor the twelve Peers, for that they love him well.Here in your presence, I defy them all!"[17]The King replied:—"Too wroth you are. At onceYou shall depart.—I spoke it."—"Sire, I go,Although for me there is nor shield nor guard:Basile had none, Bazan, his brother, none!Aoi.
"To Sarraguce I go, and know full wellWho thither goes, may ne'er return. Nay more,Your sister is my wife, and I by herHave one fair son, Baldewin, the goodliest childWho [if he live] will be a noble knight.To him I leave my fiefs and honors: guardHim well, for him these eyes no more shall see."Carle answers:—"Much too tender is your heart;Since I command, your duty 'tis to go."Aoi.
Count Ganelon, at this, rose full of wrath,And, casting from his neck his zibellineOf fur, stood forth, clothed in his silk blialt.5Gray were his eyes and very fierce his face;Graceful his form—his breast, of mighty mold.So fair was he, all eyes upon him rest.[18]"Rollánd," he said, "wherefore this foolish wrath?Since thy step-father, 'tis well known, I am,For this thou choosest me to seek Marsile!'Tis well. If God but grant me safe return,I such ill fortune hurl on thee, shall smiteThy life from now and ever with a curse."Rollánd replies:—"Mad words and proud I hear.All know it well, I care for no man's threat;But since a wise man must this message bear,If the King wills it, in your place I go."Aoi.
"Thou shalt not take my place," said Ganelon;"My vassal art thou not, nor yet am IThy lord; and since the King hath given meCommand this service I should take, I shallGo to Marsile. But once in SarraguceWill I with fuel feed my heart's fierce ire."Rollánd, on hearing this, began to laugh.Aoi.
When Ganelon saw the laughter of Rollánd,It seemed as though his breast would burst with wrath;[19]His brain was well-nigh maddened by his rage.Unto the Count he cried:—"I love you not;This judgment have you caused on me to fall!Right Emp'ror, in your presence, lo! I stand,And I am ready to fulfill your word."Aoi.
The King presents to him his right hand glove;But Ganelon would well have ne'er stood there,For ere he touched the royal glove, it fell.The French exclaim:—"What bodes this omen? ShallThis embassy not have a woeful end?—""Seigneurs," said Ganelon, "you will hear of this!"Aoi.
Said Ganelon:—"Give me dismissal, Sire!Since I must go, my time is precious." ThenAdjured the King:—"For Jesus' sake and mine!"With his right hand he Ganelon absolvedAnd blessed, deliv'ring up the brief and staff.Aoi.
[20]Count Ganelon his own house seeks, to makeEquipment and prepare his arms: his choiceThe best that he can find. With golden spursHe clasps his heels; belts to his side his sword,Murgleis, and mounts his courser Tachebrun.His uncle Guinemer the stirrup held;There many a chevalier you might have seenIn tears, who said: "Baron, such evil fateWas yours. You, in the King's Court so long, and thereRevered as liege-man high!—The man who judgedThat you should go, not Carle himself shall cureOr save; the Count Rollánd bethought him notOf that high lineage whence you sprang!"—And theyEntreat:—"My lord with you take us along!"But Ganelon replies:—"Lord God forbid!Better to die alone than with me fallSo many brave!—Lords, to sweet France ye will go.Salute for me my wife, and Pinabel,My friend and peer, and my son Baldewin whomYe all know—guard him—hold him for your lord."The Count departs and goes upon his way.Aoi.
The Count rides on beneath tall olive treesAnd joins the messengers of King Marsile.To meet him Blancandrin has checked his speed:With skillful words each to the other spake.Blancandrin said: "A wond'rous man is CarleWho conquered Pouille and overran Calabre,Crossed the salt-seas to England, and from thenceGained tribute for Saint-Pierre. In this our landWhat claims he?" "Such his might," said Ganelon,"No man shall ever match with him in arms."Aoi.
Said Blancandrin: "The Franks are noble, butThose Dukes, those Counts harm much their lord, who give[22]To him such counsels, wronging him and all."Ganelon answered: "No man, save Rollánd,Know I, who should this blame incur; it wasBut yestermorn, the King sat in the shade,When Rollánd came before him, all encasedIn glittering arms, fresh from the siege and sackOf Carcasonne, holding an apple red;And thus his uncle greeted: 'Sire, behold!I lay the crowns of all Kings at your feet.'Swift punishment should overtake such pride,For ev'ry day he blindly runs to death.Were he but slain, all lands might rest in peace."Aoi.
Blancandrin said: "Most cruel is RollándWho makes all nations cry for mercy thus,And will o'er all the lands his power impose.Upon what people doth he then relyFor such attempt?" Ganelon said: "The French!...They love him so, they fail him ne'er in aught.Lavish is he of gifts: Silver and gold,Mules, chargers, silken robes and garnitures,He gives the King himself all that he craves;From here to the far East, all lands must fall!"Aoi.
Blancandrin with Count Ganelon rode on,Until together had they pledged their faithTo snare Rollánd and lead him to his death.Thus on they rode through vales and mountain-paths,Till Sarraguce was reached. Beneath a yewThey lighted: a faldstool by shady pinesO'erhung, was spread with Alexandrine silk.There sat the King who ruled all Spain, and stoodAround him twenty thousand Saracens,Who neither spoke nor breathed, to hear the news;And lo! came Blancandrin with Ganelon.Aoi.
Blancandrin stepped before the Pagan KingWith Ganelon the Count held by the wrist.Thus to Marsile he said: "Mohammed saveThe King! Apollo, too, whose holy lawWe keep. We bore your message to Carl'magne;Both hands he lifted, praying to his God;No other answer gave.—He sends you here[24]One of his noble Barons, a rich Frank.Learn from his lips if it be peace or war."Responds Marsile: "Then let him speak. We hear!"Aoi.
Then Ganelon, who well had weighed his thoughts,Begins to speak as one of knowledge vast,And says unto the King: "By God be saved,The Glorious God we must adore! Carl'magneThe Baron, sends his message to Marsile:The holy Christian Faith if you receive,One half of Spain he grants to you in fief.These terms refuse, and your fair SarraguceHe will besiege, and drag you forth in chainsTo Aix, his royal city, there to meetA felon's doom."—Quivering with rage and fear,The King Marsile, who held a gold-winged dart,Aims it at him; but others stayed his hand.Aoi.
The King Marsile turned pale, and full of wrath,Brandished the shaft of his winged dart on high.Ganelon saw, laid hand upon his sword,[25]And quick unsheathed two fingers' breadth of blade,Saying: "Sword of mine you are most fair and bright;As long as by me borne in this King's court,Never shall say the Emperor of FranceGanelon died alone in foreign land,Ere a high price for you the best have paid!"The Pagans cry in haste: "Check this affray."Aoi.
The wisest Pagans urged the wrathful King,Till, yielding, on his throne he has resumedHis seat. The Kalif said: "Great wrong you broughtUpon us, menacing to strike the Frank.You should have hearkened to his words." "This wrong,"Said Ganelon, "I calmly will endure;But for the gold that God hath made all wealthStored in this land, I would not leave untold,While I have power of speech, the message sentBy Carle, the mighty Emperor, through meHis messenger, to thee his mortal foe."Ganelon on the ground his mantle droppedOf Alexandrine silk, and richly lined[26]With zibelline; Blancandrin took it up:But from his sword the Count would never part;And his right hand still grasps the golden hilt.The Pagans say:—"Behold a Baron true!"Aoi.
Then Ganelon strode nearer to the KingAnd said:—"All idle is this wrath of yours.This is the message of King Carle of France;Hear his command:—"Receive the Christian law"—One half of Spain he grants to you in fief,And to Rollánd, his nephew, he will giveThe other half. (A haughty partner heWill prove.) To this agreement should you notConsent, 'gainst Sarraguce his host will layThe siege; by force you will be tak'n and bound,And brought to Aix, the royal seat. Hope notTo ride on palfrey, nor on steed, on muleFemale or male;—on a vile beast of burdenYou shall be thrown, and doomed to have your headStruck off.—Behold the Brief our Emp'ror sends!"With his right hand he gives it to the King.Aoi.
White with exceeding wrath, the King MarsileHas brok'n the seal, let fall the wax on earth,And, glancing on the Brief, has read the script:"I learn from Carle who holds France in his sway,That I should bear in mind his ire and grief:Bazan—Basile, his brother, they whose headsI took on Mount Haltoïe, his anger's cause.If I my body's life would save, to himThe Kalif, my good uncle, I must send,Or else can he ne'er be my friend."—Then spakeTo King Marsile his son:—"This Ganelon,"Said he, "speaks madly, and such wrong hath done,That he should live no more. Now give him upTo me, that I to him quick justice deal!"Ganelon, hearing this, unsheathed his sword,And set his back against a branching pine.Aoi.
Into his orchard King Marsile repaired,Attended only by his wisest men;Came thither too the gray-haired Blancandrin[28]With Turfaleu his son and heir; with themThe Kalif, brother and good friend of KingMarsile.—Said Blancandrin:—"Recall the Frank;To serve us he has pledged his faith."—The KingReplied:—"Go, bring him hither."—Then he tookGanelon's fingers into his right hand,And brought him to the grove before the King;And lo! was woven there the traitor's plot.Aoi.
The King Marsile said:—"Fair Sire Ganelon,Unwise and all too hasty was I, whenIn my great wrath I poised my lance to strike.This gift of sables take as your amends:More than five hundred marks their weight in gold.Before to-morrow-eve the boon is yours."Ganelon answers:—"I reject it not.May God, if 'tis his will, your grace reward."Aoi.
Marsile spake thus:—"Sire Ganelon, believe,Much I desire to love you, and of Carle[29]I crave to hear. Is he not old, his primeHas he not passed? Men tell me he has livedMore than two hundred years; his body draggedThroughout so many lands; so many blowsUpon his shield!—So many mighty KingsTo beggary reduced!—When will he ceaseTo march on battle-fields?"—Then GanelonResponded:—"Such is not King Carle; no manAlive who sees and knows him but will tellHow our great Emperor is Baron true.I could not praise and honor him enough,For no man lives so valiant and so good.His valor ... who on earth could ever tell?His soul God with such virtue has illumed,I'd rather die than quit my noble lord!"Aoi.
The Pagan said:—"Amazed am I at CarleSo old and so white-haired; his age, I know,Two hundred years and more. His limbs he toiledAcross so many lands; so oft was struckBy swords and spears; so many kings compelledTo beg!—When will he cease to war?"—"Carle?—ne'er!"[30]Ganelon answered, "while his nephew lives:No vassal like him 'neath the starry arch;And bold as he his comrade Olivier.The twelve Peers held by Carle so dear, behold!The vanguard form of twenty thousand knights;With them King Carle is safe, and fears no man."Aoi.
Again the Pagan:—"I am wonder-struckOn knowing Carle so old and so white-haired!Methinks he passed two hundred years; by armsHe won so many lands—so many woundsIn battle he received from trenchant swords!So many powerful kings on battle-fieldsConquered or slew!—When will he cease to war?""—Never!"—said Ganelon, "while lives Rollánd:From here to farthest east no knight his peerE'er lived: his comrade too, Count Olivier,Is brave; and the twelve Peers, so dear to Carle,The van-guard make of twenty thousand knights.Carle may have peace, and fears no living man!"Aoi.
"Fair Sire," said King Marsile to Ganelon,"Than mine no fairer people can you see:[31]Four hundred thousand knights I can arrayIn combat 'gainst King Carle and 'gainst his Franks."—Ganelon says:—"The time has not yet come,Yea, and great loss your people then will have.But leave this folly, and to wisdom hold;Offer the King of treasures such a storeThat all the French will marvel at the gift.For twenty hostages that you will send,Back to Sweet France will Carle ere long repair.His rear-guard, notice well, will rest behind:There will Rollánd, his nephew, be, I trow,With Olivier the brave and courteous knight.Trust to my counsel and both Counts are doomed,Nay, Carle shall see his lofty pride cast downAnd never more shall covet war with you."Aoi.
[Thus King Marsile] said:—"Fair sire Ganelon,What means have I to kill the Count Rollànd?"Ganelon answered:—"This can I well say:The King will reach the wider pass of SizreAnd leave his rear behind, where great RollàndEke Olivier, whom both he greatly trusts,Will be the chiefs of twenty thousand Franks.[32]On these your hundred thousand Pagans throw,And let them straightway make an onset fierce:Stricken and slain shall be the men of France;I say not that of yours none shall be slain,But follow up this fight with like attack,And Count Rollánd cannot escape them both,Then will you deeds of chivalry achieve,And free your life from war for evermore."Aoi.
"Who could contrive that there Rollánd should die,Would strike off Carle's right arm. Then on the fieldThat wond'rous host in death shall lie. No moreThereafter could King Carle such forces raise,And the Great Land at last would rest in peace."Marsile, this hearing, kissed him on the neck,And then began his treasures to display.Aoi.
Exclaimed Marsile:—"What further [shall I say?]No good adviser he of faith unsure.[33]Swear if Rollánd be there that he shall die!"Thus answered Ganelon:—"Your will be done."Upon the relics of his sword MurgleisThe treason swore; thus forfeited himself.Aoi.
An ivory-faldstool there was set. MarsileThe order gives to bring a book before it,Mohammed's law and that of Tervagant,The Spanish Saracen thus took his oath:"If in the rear-guard Count Rollánd be found,He will attack him there with all his men;And, if it may be, there Rollánd shall die."Ganelon answers:—"May [our treaty thrive!]"Aoi.
Behold a Pagan, Valdabrun, who armedMarsile a Knight; with cheerful smile he saidTo Ganelon:—"Take this my sword; no manE'er drew its peer; the hilt alone is worthMore than a thousand marks.—For love I give it,But lend us help against the Count Rollánd,And show us how to find him in the rear.""—So shall it be," replies Count Ganelon;Whereon they kissed each other's chin and face.
Another Pagan came. 'Twas ClimorinWho gayly smiling, said to Ganelon:"My helmet take—None better have I seen,But help us now against Marchis RollándThat we may throw dishonor on his name.""—Well shall it be," responded Ganelon,And then they kissed each other's lips and cheek.Aoi.
And now behold, comes Bramimunde the Queen;"Sire Ganelon," said she, "I love you much,You, by my sire and all our men esteemed.Two necklaces unto your wife I send,With jacinths and with amethysts and goldAdorned, worth more than all the wealth of Rome;Jewels so rich your Emp'ror never had."The Count receives and puts them in his hose.Aoi.
The King calls up Malduit, his treasurer:"Hast thou prepared my gifts for Carle the King?"[35]Malduit responds:—"Yea sire, the whole are there:Seven hundred camels with their loads of goldAnd silver; then of hostages a score,The noblest ever lived beneath the stars."Aoi.
Marsile took by the shoulder GanelonAnd told him:—"Thou hast wisdom and art brave.By that great law ye hold the best, bewareThy heart fails not. Rich treasures will I giveTo thee: ten mules laden with purest goldFrom Araby; each year shall bring the like.Meantime of this great city take the keys,And in my name present this wealth to Carle.But let Rollánd be ordered to the rear.If in the pass or mount I find the knight,I swear to give him combat to the death."Says Ganelon:—"Methinks too long I stay."—He mounts his horse and goes upon his way.Aoi.
The Emperor nears his realm, and reaching nowThe city of Valterne sacked by Rollànd[36]And left in ruins, which thereafter layA hundred years a desert; there he waitsFor news of Ganelon, and tribute dueBy the great land of Spain. One morning whenThe early dawn was brightening into day,Count Ganelon drew nigh unto the camp.Aoi.
In early morn the Emperor arose.Having attended mass and matins both,Upon the verdant grass, before his tentHe stood, surrounded by the Count Rollánd,The valorous Olivier, and the Duke Naimes,With many more besides. There also cameThe perjurer, the treacherous Ganelon,Who, stepping forth, with most perfidious tongueBegan to speak:—"Hail! God save Carle the King!—I bring you here the keys of Sarraguce:Great treasures follow through my care conveyedWith hostages a score. So, guard them well.The King Marsile the brave bears not the blameIf I bring not the Kalif unto you.Myself three hundred thousand men in armsBeheld, with hauberks clad, and helmets clasped,[37]Swords by their sides, hilts bright with gold inlaid,Who with him crossed the sea, not to submitTo Christ's law which they will not hold nor keep.But scarce five leagues had they sailed on the main,When wind and tempest rising, down they sank.All perished!... Never shall you see them more.Had but the Kalif lived, I would have broughtHim hither. For the Pagan King, know well,Ere you shall see this first month pass away,Your vassal will he be, with joinèd hands,And hold the realm of Spain a fief from you."Thus said the King:—"Thanks be to God for this!Well have you done, and great your recompenseShall be."—He bids a thousand trumpets sound...The camp is struck:—the Franks then load their mulesAnd set forth on their journey to Sweet France.Aoi.
King Carle the Great has made a waste of Spain,The cities violated, the castles seized.Now saith the King his war is at an end,And toward Sweet France the Emperor directsHis steed.... The Count Rollánd the pennon whiteHas planted on a hill, high 'gainst the sky.In all the country round the Franks their tentsAre pitching, while the Pagans ride alongThe mighty vales. In hauberk clad—their backsIn armor cased; with helmets clasped—sword girtOn thigh—shields on their necks—each lance in rest,Within a thicket on the mount they halt.Four hundred thousand men there wait the dawn.The French yet know it not. Ah God! what woe!Aoi.
Passes the day; the shades of night have fallen.Carle the great Emp'ror sleeps; and in a dreamHe marches through the deep defiles of Sizre.In his right hand his ashen spear he holds,Which suddenly Count Ganelon has snatchedFrom him, and shook and brandished in such wiseThat, breaking, high tow'rd Heav'n the splinters flew.Carle sleeps—naught from his slumber can arouse him.Aoi.
Another vision followed hereupon:He is in France, in his Chapelle, at Aix.A bear his right arm caught with such sharp fangs[That from the bone the flesh is torn away.]From toward Ardennes he saw a leopard come,Which in his dream, made on him fierce attack;But then a greyhound dashes from the hall[40]Unto Carle's rescue, swift of leap and bound;First from the treach'rous bear the hound tears offAn ear, then with the leopard combat makes."See!" cry the French, "what battle fierce is here."But they know not which of the two will winThe field—Carle still asleep naught can awake.Aoi.
Vanished the night, and the clear dawn appeared.With noble mien the Emperor mounts his steed,And 'mid the host one thousand trumpets sound:"Barons," said Carle:—"You see those deep defilesAnd narrow passes—judge who in the rearWill take command." Said Ganelon:—"Rollánd,My step-son, whom among your valiant knightsYou prize the most." Carle hearing this, uponHim sternly looked:—"Thou art the devil's self,"Said he, "or else a mortal rage has stungThy heart! Say, who before me in the vanWill march? 'Twill be Ogier de Dannemarche!You have no better Baron for the post."Aoi.
When hears the Count Rollánd the lot has fallenUpon himself, as loyal knight he speaks:—"You, sire step-father, dear and well belovedMust be, since you have named me for the rear;Nor shall Carl'magne, the King of France, lose aught,Nor palfrey, nor fleet steed, if knowledge trueI have, nor male nor female mule that manCan ride, nor beast of burden, horse or ass,Unreckoned for with these good swords of ours."Said Ganelon:—"The truth you speak, I know."Aoi.
When hears Rollánd the rear shall be his lot,To his step-father thus in wrath he speaks:—"Ah! traitor, evil man of race impure,Thou thought'st to see me here let fall the gloveAs thou erst dropped the staff before the King!"Aoi.
The Count Rollánd [addressing thus Carl'magne:]"Give me the bow that now your hand doth hold,[42]For, to my knowledge, none will e'er throw blameOn me for dropping it, as fell on earthYour right hand glove, when he received the staff."With head declined the Emperor remains:Oft plucks and twists the beard on lip and cheek,Nor can his eyes restrain their falling tears.Aoi.
Naimes after came—no better ever wasA vassal in the court. He said to Carle:"You hear him; greatly wroth is Count Rollánd;The rear guard is assigned to his command;No baron have you that with him would makeExchange. Give him the bow and your hand has bent,And look for those who best may lend him help."Carle gives the bow which Count Rollánd receives.Aoi.
The Emperor calls to Rollánd and says:—"Fair sire, my nephew, truly you must knowHalf of my army will I leave with you;[43]Keep them; in their good help your safety lies."Then said the Count:—"Of this will I do naught!May God confound me, ere my race I shame;But twenty thousand valiant knights I keep!Through the defiles you can in safety passAnd fear no harm from man while yet I live."Aoi.
Rollánd sits on his steed, and nigh him ridesHis comrade Olivier. There came Gerin,Gerier the brave, Othon and Berengier;There came Sansun, Anseïs the fierce; there cameAlso Gerard de Roussillon the old,Together with the Gascuin Engelier.The Archbishop said:—"I, by my head, will go!""—And I with you," exclaimed the Count Gualtier;"Rollánd's own man am I, and follow him!"From all are chosen twenty thousand knights.Aoi.
The Count Rollánd calls up Gualtier de l'Hum:"One thousand Franks of France, our land, array,And with them cover heights and passes, that[44]The Emperor may lose none of his host."Responds Gualtier:—"This am I bound to doFor you."—Forthwith one thousand Franks of FranceO'errun each height and pass.—None shall descendDespite ill news, ere seven hundred swordsUnsheathe. That very day King AlmarisWho rules Belferne, met them with battle fierce.Aoi.
High are the mounts, the valleys murky-dark—The rocks are black, the gorges terrible.The French toiled through them painfully; their marchWas heard for fifteen leagues; then the Great landReaching, they viewed Gascuigne, their lord's estate,And sweet remembrance felt of honors, fiefs,Of lovely maidens and of noble wives:Not one is there but weeps from tenderness;But more than all is Carle distressed; he mournsHis nephew left in the defiles of Spain....By pity moved he cannot choose but weep.Aoi.
The twelve Peers staid in Spain. A thousand scoreOf Franks are under their command, to whomUnknown is wavering fear or dread of death.Carl'magne to France returns—within his cloakHe hides his face—Naimes, riding near, inquired:"What thought, O King, weighs now upon your heart?"—"Who questions me doth wrong. So sad am II can but mourn. Sweet France by GanelonShall be destroyed. An angel in my sleepAppeared, and, dreaming, I beheld my lanceBroken up within my hand by him who namedMy nephew for the rear guard ... and I leftHim in a foreign land;—O mighty God,Should I lose him, I ne'er should find his peer!"Aoi.
Carle the great King, no more restrains his tears:One hundred thousand Franks great sympathyGive him, with strangest fear for Count Rollánd.Vile Ganelon, the wretch, this treason wrought![46]He, from the Pagan King received rich giftsOf gold and silver, silk and ciclatons,Lions and camels, horses, mules. Behold,King Marsile summons all his Counts from Spain,His Viscounts, Dukes and Almazours; with theseThe Emirs, and the sons of noble Counts;Four hundred thousand gathered in three days,In Sarraguce are beaten all the drums;Mohammed's image to the loftiest towerIs raised on high.—No Pagan but adoresAnd prays before him.—They then madly rideThroughout the land, o'er mountain and o'er vale.At last they see the gonfalons of France;It is the rear-guard of the twelve compeers:Nor will they fail to give them battle now.Aoi.
Hastes to the front the nephew of Marsile,Goading the mule that bears him, with a staff.Says to his uncle, gayly laughing loud:"Fair King, till now I served you well; for youEndured hard pain and grief.—The only feeI ask is this:—To strike Rollánd! I swearTo give him death with my good trenchant sword,[47]And if his help Mohammed will bestow,On me, forever shall all Spain be free,From the defiles of Aspre to Durestant.Carle then will yield,—the Franks, surrender all;No more in all your life will you have war."The King Marsile bestows on him the glove.Aoi.
The nephew of Marsile holds in his graspThe glove, and to the King with haughty prideSpeaks:—"Fair Sire King, your gift I dearly prize;Choose you for me eleven of your Knights,And I will go and combat the twelve Peers."The first response was that of Falsaun:He was the brother of the King Marsile.—"Fair nephew, we shall go, both you and I;In battle side by side, we shall engage.The rear of Carle's great host is doomed to die!"Aoi.
King Corsalis stands on the other side;He comes from Barbary; a soul of guile.Still speaks he there not unlike vassal trueWho would not for the gold of heav'n be base:[48]"If there I find Rollànd, we meet in fight.I am the third; now choose ye out the fourth."See you the spurring Malprimis de Brigal,Faster on foot than runs the fastest steed?Before Marsile in a loud voice he cries:"I shall my body take to Ronceval;If there I find Rollànd, by me he dies."Aoi.
An Emir now is there, from Balaguer.Of handsome form, with proud and cheerful face,When on his steed he vaults, well doth he showWith what great pride his armor's mail is borne.For truest vassalage he is renowned;Were he but Christian, 'twere a baron true.Before Marsile he stands and loudly cries:"My body I will take to Ronceval;If there I face Rollànd his doom is sure,Eke Olivier and the twelve peers, all die.The Franks shall perish in despair and shame.Carl'magne is old and dotes. O'erwhelmed, at lastHe will give up this waging war, and SpainForever shall be kept beneath our sway."The King Marsile on him bestows great thanks.Aoi.
Then from the Moorish land an AlmazourSteps forth. All Spain can show no greater wretch.Before Marsile he makes a boastful vaunt:"To Ronceval will I my people lead—Full twenty thousand men with lance and shield.If I Rollànd find there, I pledge his death;No after-day shall dawn but Carle shall weep."Aoi.
From elsewhere comes Turgis de Turteluse.He is a count, and o'er this city wieldsHis sway; hate unto Christians has he vowed,And stands with all the rest before Marsile.He thus addressed the king: "Ne'er be dismayed!More worth Mohammed than Saint Pierre of Rome;But serve him well, the honor of the field[Is ours]. I'll meet Rollánd at RoncevalWhere none can guard him. Mark this sword of mine;Its blade, so good and long, in desperate fightWill cross with Durendal; and you will hearWhich of the two shall win the victory.[50]Abandoned unto us the French must die.The old King Carle will have both grief and shame,And never more on earth will wear a crown."Aoi.
Comes up besides Escremiz de Valterne,A Saracen, and of that country lord.Before Marsile among the throng he cries:"To Ronceval I go, to crush the proud;Nor shall Rollánd, if there, bear off his head,Nor Olivier, chief of the other knights;The twelve peers, all are doomed to perish there.The French shall die, and France become a waste.Of such good vassals Carle will see the loss."Aoi.
And came with Esturgant, Estramaris,His friend; both wretches, traitors, villains are....Thus spake Marsile: "Come forth, Seigneurs; ye bothTo Ronceval's defiles shall go and helpMe there to lead my host." Both answer: "King,At your command, Rollánd and Olivier[51]Will we assault. No power can the twelve peersFrom death defend against our trenchant swordsWhose blades shall redden with hot blood. The FrenchAre doomed to death and Carle to doleful life.France, the Great Land, shall through our arms becomeYour realm. Come, King, to see this verified;The Emperor's self a captive we'll present."Aoi.
There hastens Margariz de SibilieWho holds the country toward the distant sea.His beauty such, all ladies are his friends;Not one looks on him but to smile, nor canRestrain her laughing joy. No Pagan elseMore glorious deeds of chivalry achieved;Pressed through the crowd, he cries above the restUnto the king: "Be not dismayed, for ITo Ronceval will go to kill Rollánd,And Olivier shall not escape alive;To martyrdom the twelve Peers are condemned.See my good sword with gold-embossèd hilt,Given me by the Amiralz of Prime;[52]I pledge my faith it will be dyed in blood.The French shall perish, France be steeped in shame,And Carle the old, with beard all blossom-white,Shall see no day uncursed by grief and wrath.Before one year we shall have conquered FranceAnd slept beneath the roofs of Saint-Denis."At this, the Pagan king bowed low his head.Aoi.
Next you can see Chernubles de [Val-neire].His hair so long, it sweeps the earth, and heCan, for his sport, lift greater weight than bearFour hundred loaded mules.—In his [far-land]They say—the sun ne'er shines, corn cannot grow,The rain falls not, the dew wets not the soil;No stone there but is black, and it is saidBy some that in that land the demons dwell.Thus said Chernubles:—"My sword hangs at my belt;At Ronceval I will dye it crimson! shouldI find Rollánd the brave upon my path,Nor strike him down, then trust to me no more;[53]This my good sword shall conquer Durendal,The French shall die, and France must be destroyed."At these words, rally King Marsile's twelve Peers,And lead one hundred thousand SaracensWho for the battle hasten and prepare,Arming themselves beneath a grove of pines.Aoi.
The Pagans put their Moorish hauberks on;The greater part are triply lined; they laceTheir helms of Sarraguce, gird to their thighsSwords of Vienna steel; bright are their shields;Their lances from Valence; their banners whiteAnd blue and crimson. Mules and sumpter-beastsAre left behind. They mount their battle steeds,And forward press in closely serried lines.Clear was the day, and brilliant was the sun;No armor but reflected back the light.A thousand clarions sound their cheering blastsSo loud, the French can hear—. Says Olivier:"Rollànd, companion, hearken! Soon, methinks,[54]We shall have battle with the Saracens!"To which Rollánd: "God grant it may be so.Here must we do our duty to our King;A man should for his Lord and for his causeDistress endure, and bear great heat and cold,Lose all, even to his very hair and skin!'Tis each man's part to strike with mighty blows,That evil songs of us may ne'er be sung.The wrong cause have the Pagans, we the right.No ill example e'er shall come from me."Aoi.
Olivier from the summit of a hillOn his right hand looks o'er a grassy vale,And views the Pagans' onward marching hordes;Then straight he called his faithful friend Rollánd:"From Spain a distant rumbling noise I hear,So many hauberks white and flashing helmsI see!—This will inflame our French men's hearts.The treason is the work of GanelonWho named us for this post before the King.""Hush! Olivier!"—the Count Rollánd replies,"'Tis my step-father, speak no other word."Aoi.
Count Olivier is posted on a hill[56]From whence Spain's Kingdom he descries, and allThe swarming host of Saracens; their helmsSo bright bedecked with gold, and their great shields,Their 'broidered hauberks, and their waving flags,He cannot count the squadrons; in such crowdsThey come, his sight reached not unto their end.Then all bewildered he descends the hill,Rejoins the French, and all to them relates.Aoi.
Said Olivier: "I have seen Pagans moreThan eyes e'er saw upon the earth; at leastOne hundred thousand warriors armed with shields,In their white hauberks clad, with helmets laced,Lances in rest, and burnished brazen spears.Battle ye will have, such as ne'er was before.French Lords, may God inspire you with his strength!Stand firm your ground, that we may not succumb."The French say: "Cursed be those who fly the field!Ready to die, not one shall fail you here."Aoi.
Olivier said: "So strong the Pagan host;Our French, methinks, in number are too few;Companion Rollánd, sound your horn, that CarleMay hear and send his army back to help."Rollánd replies:—"Great folly would be mine,And all my glory in sweet France be lost.No, I shall strike great blows with Durendal;To the golden hilt the blade shall reek with blood.In evil hour the felon Pagans cameUnto the Pass, for all are doomed to die!"Aoi.
"Rollànd, companion, sound your olifant,That Carle may hear and soon bring back the host.With all his Baronage the king will give[58]Us held!"—Replied Rollánd:—"May God fore-fendThat for my cause my kindred e'er be blamed,Or that dishonor fall upon sweet France.Nay, I will deal hard blows with Durendal,This my good sword now girt unto my sideWhose blade you'll see all reeking with red blood.Those felon Pagans have for their ill fateTogether met—yea, death awaits them all."Aoi.
"Companion Rollánd, sound your olifant!If Carle who passes through the mounts shall hear,To you I pledge my word, the French return."Answered Rollánd:—"May God forbid!—Ne'er beIt said by living man that Pagans couldCause me to blow my horn, to bring disgraceUpon my kin!—When on the battle field,I'll strike one thousand seven hundred blows,And Durendal all bleeding shall you see.[The French are brave and bravely will they strike.]Those Spanish Moors are doomed to certain death."Aoi.
Olivier said:—"To me there seems no shame;I have beheld the Moors of Spain; they swarmO'er mountains, vales and lands, hide all the plains;Great is this stranger host; our number small."Rollánd replies:—"The more my ardor grows.God and his [blessed] angels grant that FranceLose naught of her renown through my default.Better to die than in dishonor [live.]The more we strike the more Carle's love we gain!"Aoi.
Rollánd is brave and Olivier is wise;Both knights of wond'rous courage—and in armsAnd mounted on their steeds, they both will dieEre they will shun the fight. Good are the CountsAnd proud their words.—The Pagan felons rideIn fury on!—"Rollánd," said Olivier,"One moment, look! Our foes so close, and CarleAfar from us—you have not deigned to blowYour horn! If came the king, no hurt were ours.Cast your eyes toward the great defiles of Aspre;[60]There see this most unhappy rear-guard. [ThoseWho here fight, ne'er shall fight on other fields."]Rollànd retorts:—"Speak not such shameful words.Woe unto him who bears a coward's heartWithin his breast. There firm shall we remain;The combat and the blows from us shall come."Aoi.
Now when Rollánd the battle sees at hand,More than a leopard's or a lion's prideHe shows. He calls the French and Olivier:"Companion, friend, pray, speak of this no more.The Emperor who left his French in trustTo us, has chos'n those twenty thousand men.Right well he knows none has a coward's soul.A man should suffer hurt for his good lord,Endure great cold or scorching heat, and giveEven to his flesh and blood—Strike with your lance,And I with Durendal, my trusty sword,Carle's gift. If here I die, may he who winsIt, say:—'Twas once the sword of a brave knight."Aoi.
Turpin the Archbishop from another side,Spurring his courser, mounts a hill and callsThe French around. This sermon to them speaks:"Seigneurs Barons, Carle left us here: for him,Our King, our duty is to die, to aidIn saving Christendom, the Faith of ChristUphold. There, battle will ye have, for thereBefore your eyes behold the Saracens.Confess your sins, and for God's mercy pray!For your soul's cure I absolution give....If you should die, as holy martyrs yeWill fall, and places find in Paradise!"The French alight and fall upon their knees;The Godly Archbishop grants them benison,Giving for penance his command to strike.Aoi.
The French arise. They stand assoiled and quitOf all sins, blessed by Turpin in God's name.On swift destriers they mount, armed cap-a-pieAs Knights arrayed for battle. Count Rollánd[62]Calls Olivier:—"Companion, sire, full wellYou know, it is Count Ganelon who hasBetrayed us all, and guerdon rich receivedIn gold and silver; well the Emp'ror shouldAvenge us! King Marsile a bargain madeOf us, but swords will make the reck'ning good."Aoi.
Through the defiles of Spain hath passed RollándMounted on Veillantif, his charger swiftAnd strong, bearing his bright and glitt'ring arms.On goes the brave Rollánd, his lance borne upSkyward, beneath its point a pennon bound,Snow-white, whose fringes flap his hand.Fair is his form, his visage bright with smiles.Behind him follows Olivier his friend;The French with joy, him as their champion, hail.He on the Heathens throws a haughty glance,But casts a sweet and humble look uponHis French, and to them speaks with courteous tone:"Seigneurs Barons, march steadily and close.These Pagans hither came to find a grave;[63]We here shall conquer such great spoil to-dayAs never yet was gained by Kings of France."Even as he spoke the word, the armies met.Aoi.
Said Olivier:—"No care have I to speak,Since you deigned not to blow your olifant,All hope of help from Carle for you is lost.He knows no word of this; the fault lies notIn him, nor are yon Knights to blame—ride onAnd gallop to the charge as best you can.Seigneurs Barons, recoil not from the foe,In God's name! bearing ever this in mind,Hard blows to deal and hard blows to endureForget we not the war-cry of King Carle!"At this word all the French together shout.Who then had heard the cry, "Montjoie!" had knownWhat courage is. Then all together rushRight onward; God! with what an onset fierce!Deeply they spur their steeds for greater speed;They burn to fight. What else can they desire?The Saracens stand firm and nothing fear....Behold the Franks and Pagans hand to hand....Aoi.
The nephew of Marsile—his name Aëlroth,Forward the first of all spurs on his horseAgainst our French, hurling forth insulting words:"To-day, French villains, ye will joust with us;Who was to guard you, has betrayed you; madMust be the King who left you in the pass.So now the honor of sweet France is lost,And Carle the great shall lose his right arm here."Rollànd heard.—God! what pain to him! He drivesHis golden spurs into his courser's flanks,And rushes at full speed against Aëlroth;His shield he breaks, dismails the hauberk linked;Cleaving his breast, he severs all the bones,And from the spine the ribs disjoint. The lanceForth from his body thrusts the Pagan's soul;[65]The Heathen's corse reels from his horse, falls downUpon the earth, the neck cloven in two halves.Rollánd still taunts him:—"Go thou, wretch, and knowCarle was not mad. Ne'er did he treason love,And he did well to leave us in the pass.To-day sweet France will not her honor lose!Strike, Frenchmen, strike; the first sword-stroke is ours;We have the right, these gluttons have the wrong!"Aoi.
Then comes a Duke whose name is Falsarun;He is the brother of the King Marsile.The lands of Dathan and of AbirunHe holds: no viler wretch lives under Heaven.Vast is his forehead, and the space betweenHis deeply sunken eyes is half a foot.Seeing his nephew dead, in grief he boundsForth from the serried ranks, and shouts aloudThe Pagan war-cry, furious 'gainst the French."To-day," he cries, "at last sweet France shall loseHer fame!"—When Olivier heard this, in wrathHe pricks with golden spurs his charger's flanks,And, like true baron, lifts his arm to strike,[66]Shivers the Pagan's shield, his hauberk tearsApart. The pennon's folds pass through his breastAs with the shaft he hurls him from the selle,A mangled corpse;—here lies he on the ground.Unto the prostrate body OlivierSays proudly:—"Wretch, to me thy threats are vain!Strike boldly, Franks! The victory shall be ours!Montjoie!" he shouts, the battle-cry of Carle.Aoi.
A king, named Corsablis, from Barbarie,A distant land, is there.—The Pagan hostHe calls;—"The field is ours with ease: the FrenchSo few in numbers we may well disdain,Nor Carle shall rescue one; all perish here.To-day, they all are doomed to death!" TurpinThe Archbishop heard him; lived no man on earthHe hated more than Corsablis; he pricksHis horse with both his spurs of purest gold,And 'gainst him rushes with tremendous force.[67]The shield and hauberk split; and with a strokeOf the long lance into his body driven,Corsablis lifeless drops across the path;Him, though a corpse, Turpin addresses thus:"Thou, coward Pagan, thou hast lied! Great CarlMy lord, was ever and will ever beOur help; and Frenchmen know not how to fly.As for thy fellows, we can keep them here;I tell you, each this day shall die.—Strike, Franks,Yourselves forget not. This first blow, thank God,Is ours! Montjoie!" cries he, to hold the field.Aoi.
Gerin attacks Malprimis de BrigalWhose good shield now was not a denier worth:The crystal boss all broken, and one halfFall'n on the ground. Down to the flesh GerinHis hauberk cleaves, and passes through his heartThe brazen point of a stout lance. Then fallsThe Pagan chief and dies by that good blow;And Sathanas bears off the wretched soul.Aoi.
Gerier, his comrade, strikes the Amurafle,Breaks his good shield, his hauberk white unmails,Plants in his heart a spear's steel point with suchGood aim, one blow has pierced the body through;And his strong lance-thrust hurls him dead to earth.—Said Olivier: "A noble combat ours!"Aoi.
Duke Sansun rushes on the Almazour;He splits the shield with painted flowers and goldEmbossed. The strong-mailed hauberk shelters not,As he is pierced through liver, heart and lungs.For him may mourn who will—death-struck he falls:"That is a Baron's stroke!" the Archbishop cries.Aoi.
Anseïs gives his steed the rein, and chargesFierce on Turgis de Turteluse; beneathThe golden boss asunder breaks the shield,[69]Rips up the hauberk double-linked; so trueThe thrust, that all the steel passed through his breast.With this one blow the shaft has struck him dead.Rollánd exclaimed: "The stroke is of a Knight!"Aoi.
Then Engelier, the Gascuin of Burdele,Spurs deep his horse, and casting loose the rein,Rushes upon Escremiz de Valterne;Breaks down the buckler fastened to his throatAnd rends his gorget-mail; full in the breastThe lance strikes deep and passes in betweenThe collar bones; dead from the saddle struckHe falls.—And Turpin says: "Ye all are lost!"Aoi.
Othon assails a Pagan, Estorgant,His thrust hits hard the leather of the shield,Effacing its bright colors red and white,Breaks in his hauberk's sides, and plunges deepWithin his heart a strong and trenchant spear,From off the flying steed striking him dead.This done, he says:—"No hope for you remains!"Aoi.
And Berengier smites now Estramaris,Splits down his shield, shivers his coat of mailIn shreds and through his bosom drives a lance.Dead 'midst one thousand Saracens he drops.Of their twelve Peers now ten have breathed their last:Chernuble—Margariz, the Count, survive.Aoi.
Most valiant Knight is Margariz. 'Mid allBeauteous, strong, slender, quick of hand. He spursHis horse and charges Olivier; beneathThe boss of purest gold his shield breaks down,Then at his side a pointed lance he aims;But God protects him, for the blow ne'er reachedThe flesh. The point grazed only, wounding not.Then Margariz unhindered rides awayAnd sounds his horn to rally his own men.Aoi.
The battle rages fierce. All men engage.Rollánd, the dauntless, combats with his lance[71]As long as holds the shaft. Fifteen good blowsIt dealt, then broke and fell; now his good sword,Loved Durendal, he draws, spurs on his steed'Gainst Chernubles, splits his bright helm adornedWith gems; one blow cleaves through mail-cap and skull,Cutting both eyes and visage in two parts,And the white hauberk with its close-linked mail;Down to the body's fork, the saddle allOf beaten gold, still deeper goes the sword,Cuts through the courser's chine, nor seeks the joint.Upon the verdant grass fall dead both knightAnd steed. And then he cries: "Wretch! ill inspiredTo venture here! Mohammed helped thee not....Wretches like you this battle shall not win."Aoi.
The Count Rollànd rides through the battle-fieldAnd makes, with Durendal's keen blade in hand,A mighty carnage of the Saracens.Ah! had you then beheld the valiant Knight[72]Heap corse on corse; blood drenching all the ground;His own arms, hauberk, all besmeared with gore,And his good steed from neck to shoulder bleed!Still Olivier halts not in his career.Of the twelve Peers not one deserves reproach,And all the French strike well and massacreThe foe. The Pagans dead or dying fall.Cries the Archbishop: "Well done, Knights of France!Montjoie! Montjoie! It is Carle's battle cry!"Aoi.
Olivier grasps the truncheon of his lance,Spurs through the storm and fury of the fight,And rushes on the Pagan Malsarun,Breaks down his shield with flowers and gold embossed,Thrusts from their orbs his eyes; his brains dashed outAre crushed and trampled 'neath the victor's feet;With seven hundred men of theirs he fell.The Count next slew Turgis and Estorgus;But now the shaft breaks short off by his hand.Then said Rollánd: "What mean you, Compagnon?[73]In such a fight as this 'tis not a staffWe need, but steel and iron, as I deem.Where now that sword called Halteclere, with hiltOf gold and crystal pommel?" "I lack timeTo draw it," valiant Olivier replies,"So busy is my hand in dealing blows!"Aoi.
Lord Olivier then his good sword unsheathed,For which Rollánd entreated him so much,And showed it to his friend with knightly pride;Strikes down a Pagan, Justin de Val-Ferrée,Whose head is severed by the blow; cuts throughTh' embroider'd hauberk, through the body, throughThe saddle all with studs and gold embossed,And through the back-bone of the steed. Both manAnd steed fall on the grass before him, dead.Rollánd exclaims: "Henceforth, you are indeedMy brother! These, the strokes loved by King Carle!"And echoes round the cry: "Montjoie! Montjoie!"Aoi.
The Count Gerin sits on his horse, Sorel,And his companion Gerier, on Passe-Cerf,They loose the reins, and both spur on againstA Pagan, Timozel. One strikes the shield,The other strikes the hauberk;—in his heartThe two spears meet and hurl him lifeless down.I never heard it said nor can I knowBy which of them the swifter blow was struck.—Esperveris, son to Borel, was nextBy Engelier de Burdele slain. TurpinWith his own hand gave death to SiglorelTh' Enchanter who once entered hell, led thereBy Jupiter's craft. Turpin said:—"Forfeit paidFor crime!"—"The wretch is vanquished," cried Rollánd,"My brother Olivier, such blows I love!"Aoi.
The combat paused not. Franks and Pagans vieIn dealing blows; attacking now, and nowDefending. Splintered spears, dripping with blood[75]So many; o'er the field such numbers strewn:Of banners torn and shattered gonfalons!So many valiant French mowed in their prime,Whom mothers and sweet wives will never seeAgain, nor those of France who in the PassAwait them! Carle for these shall weep and mourn.But what avails? Naught can he help them now.Ill service rendered Ganelon to themThe day when he to Sarraguce repairedTo sell his kin. Ere long for this he lostBoth limb and life, judged and condemned at Aix,There to be hanged with thirty of his raceWho were not spared the punishment of death.Aoi.
The battle rages. Wonders all perform;Rollánd and Olivier strike hard; TurpinTh' Archbishop, deals more than a thousand blows;The twelve Peers dally not upon the field,While all the French together fight as ifOne man. By hundreds and by thousands fall[76]The Pagans: none scapes death, save those who flyWhether they will or no, all lose their lives.And yet the French have lost their strongest arms,Their fathers and their kin they will ne'er seeAgain, nor Carle who waits them in the Pass.Meantime in France an awful scourge prevails:Wind, storm, rain, hail and flashing lightning boltsConflict confusedly, and naught more true,The earth shook from Saint Michiel-del-PerilAs far as to the Saints, from BesançonUnto the [sea-port] of Guitzand; no houseWhose walls unshaken stood; darkness at noonShrouded the sky. No beam of light aboveSave when a flash rips up the clouds. DismayedBeholders cry:—"The world's last day has come,The destined end of all things is at hand!"Unwitting of the truth, their speech is vain....'Tis dolour for the death of Count Rollánd!Aoi.
The French [strike] hard; they strike with all their force.In multitudes—by thousands die their foes;[77]Not two out of one hundred thousand nowSurvive. [Turpin] says:—"Brave are all our men;—None braver under Heaven—In the GesteOf France 'tis writ true vassals have our Kings."Seeking their friends, they overrun the field.Their eyes are filled with tenderness and tearsFor their dear kindred they so fondly loved....Now King Marsile with his great host appears....Aoi.
Marsile advances 'midst a valley deep,Surrounded by the mighty host he brought,In twenty squadrons mustered and arrayed.Bright shine the helmets strewn with gold and gems,And shields and hauberks graved. They sound a chargeWith seven hundred clarions sending forthLoud blasts throughout the land—Thus said Rollánd:"Companion Olivier, my brother, friend,The traitor, Ganelon, has sworn our death....His treason is too sure; the Emp'ror Carle[78]For this vile crime will take a vengeance deep.A long and cruel battle we shall have,Ere this unknown to man. There, I will fightWith my good Durendal; you, friend, will strikeWith Halteclere—Those noble swords we boreThroughout so many lands; such combats wonBy them, vile strains must never chant their deeds."Aoi.
When the French see the Pagan cohorts swarmThe country o'er, they call on Olivier,Rollánd and the twelve Peers to guard their lives.Unto them now the Archbishop speaks his mind:"Barons, be not unworthy of yourselves!Fly not the field, for God's sake, that brave menSing not ill songs of you! Far better dieIn battle. Doomed, I know, we are to death,And ere this day has passed, our lives are o'er.But for one thing ye can believe my word:For you God's Paradise stands open wide,And seats await you 'mid the blessèd Saints."These words of comfort reassure the French;All in one voice cry out:—"Montjoie! Montjoie!"Aoi.
There was a Saracen from SarraguceLord of one half the city—Climorin,Unlike a Baron; he received the faithOf Ganelon, and sealed the treacherous bondBy pressing on his lip a kiss—BesidesUnto him gave his sword and carbuncle."I will," said he, "put your great France to shameAnd from the Emperor's head shake off the crown!"Mounted on Barbamouche that faster fliesThan hawk or swallow on the wing, he spursHis courser hard, and dropping on its neckThe rein, he strikes Engelier de Gascuigne;Hauberk nor shield is for him a defense:Deep in the core the Pagan thrusts his spearSo mightily, its point comes out behind,And with the shaft o'erturns him on the fieldA corse;—he cries. "Fit for destruction these!Strike, Pagans, strike, and let us break their lines!"The French cry: "God! to lose so brave a Knight!"....Aoi.
The Count Rollánd calls Olivier: "You know,Companion, sire, Engelier is no more....[80]No better Knight had we"—The Count replies:"God grant that I avenge him well!" He drivesHis golden spurs into his charger's flanks;And waving Halteclere's blood dripping blade,The Pagan he assails, and deals a blow....O'erthrown is Climorin. The fiends of hellBear off his soul. The Knight then slays the DukeAlphaïen, beheads Escababi,Unhorses seven Arabs with such skillThey rise no more to fight. Then said Rollánd:"Wroth is my sire, and by my side achievesRenown! by such good blows Carl's love is gained.Strike, Chevaliers! strike on!"—he cries aloud.Aoi.
From otherwhere is Valdabrun who armedMarsile a Knight; lord of four hundred ships.There is no sailor but swears by his name;'Twas he by treason took Jerusalem,Who there the shrine of Solomon profaned,And slew before the Fonts the Patriarch;'Twas he, received Count Ganelon's vile oathAnd gave him with his sword a thousand marks;[81]Faster than falcon in its flight his steedNamed Graminond. He sharply spurs his flanksAnd rushes 'gainst the mighty Duke Sansun,Breaks down his shield—the hauberk rends, and thrustsWithin his breast the pennon of the flag;The shaft o'erthrows him from the saddle, dead."Strike Pagans! strike, for we shall conquer them!"The French say:—"God! what Baron true we lose!"Aoi.
When Count Rollánd sees Sansun lifeless fall,You may well know what grief was his. He spursHis horse down on the Pagan. DurendalMore worth than precious gold he lifts to strikeWith all his might; gold studded helm, head, trunk,Hauberk asunder cleaves; the blow, e'en throughThe gold boss'd saddle, strikes the courser's back,Killing both horse and man. Blame or approveWho may. The Pagans say:—"Hard is this blow!"Retorts Rollánd:—"For yours no pity canI feel—With you the vaunting and the wrong!"Aoi.
An African fresh from the desert landWas there, Malquidant, son of king Malcud;His armor highly wrought in beaten goldOutshines all others in the sun's bright rays.Mounted upon his horse named Salt-Perdut,He aims a blow at Anseïs' shield, and cutsThe azure and vermillion all away.His hauberk rives asunder, side from side,And through his body pass both point and shaft.The Count is dead.—His last breath spent and flown.The French say:—"Baron, such great woe for you!"Aoi.
The Archbishop Turpin rides across the fields;No shaven priest sang ever mass so wellAs he, and showed such prowess in his deeds.He to the Pagan:—"May God send all illsTo thee, who slew the knight my heart bewails!"Turpin spurs hard his good steed 'gainst the wretch;One blow strikes down his strong Toledo shield:The miscreant dead upon the green sward falls.Aoi.
Elsewhere stands Grandomie who is the sonOf Capuel king of Cappadoce. He sitsA steed named Marmorie, than flying birdMore swift. Loosening the rein, and spurring deep,To smite Gerin with all his force he rides;Torn from the neck which bears it, shattered fallsThe purple shield, through the rent mail he drivesThe whole blue pennon in his breast. GerinDrops lifeless by this blow, against a rock.The Pagan also slays Gerier, his friend,And Berengier, and Gui de Saint-Antoine;Assailing then the noble Duke AustoireWho holds Valence and fiefs along the Rosne,He strikes him dead. The Saracens extolTheir triumph, but how many fall of ours!Aoi.
Hearing the Frenchmen's sobs, the Count RollándGrasps in his hand his sword, all reeking blood.His mighty heart nigh breaking with his grief,Cries to the foe:—"May God all evils send[84]On thee! him hast thou slain for whom thou shaltMost dearly pay!—" He spurs his flying steed....Conquer who may—these two fight hand to hand.Aoi.
A wise and valiant knight was Grandonie,Virtuous and fearless vassal. 'Mid his wayEncountering Count Rollánd, though never seenBefore, at once he knew 'twas he, as wellBy his proud mien and noble beauty, asBy his fair countenance and lofty look.Awe-struck, despite himself, he vainly triesTo fly, but rooted to the spot he stays.The Count Rollánd smites him so skillfully,He splits in two the nazal, helm, nose, mouth,And teeth, the body and mailed-armor, thenHews through the golden selle, both silver-flaps;With a still deeper stroke the courser's backIs gashed. So both are slain past remedy.The men of Spain cry out all sorrowful;But say the French:—"Well our defender strikes."Aoi.
Marv'lous the battle, and the tumult fierce;The French of strength and fury full, raise highTheir swords: backs, ribs and wrists are slashed; the fleshCut through rent garments to the quick; alongThe verdant soil the red blood runs in streams.The Pagans cry:—"We cannot more endure!Great land, Mohammed curse thee!—More than allThis people bold."—Not one who does not cry"Marsile! ride on, O King, thy aid we need!"Aoi.
A battle fierce and wonderful!—Hard strikeThe French with glittering lance, and there you mightHave seen what miseries man can suffer: MowedAnd heaped in bloody mounds, all gasping outTheir lives, some on their backs, some on their teeth—The Saracens give way, willing or not;By the French lances forced, they fly the field.Aoi.
Marsile his warriors massacred beholds,And, bidding all his horns and trumpets blow,Rides forward, and his whole van rides with him.In the van rode a Saracen, Abisme,The vilest wretch among his men, sunk deepIn crimes and shame, who has no faith in God,Sainte Marie's son; as black as melted pitchHis face; more fond of blood and treason foulThan of the gold of all Galice. None sawHim laugh or play; for courage and rash deedsHe pleased the vile Marsile whose dragon flagHe bears. No pity can the Archbishop feelFor him, and at his sight he craves to tryHis arm, all softly saying to himself:"This Saracen is but a heretic;Far better die than not to give him death.Ne'er cowardice nor coward I endured!"Aoi.
The Archbishop gives the signal for the fight;He rides the horse he captured from Grossaille,[87]A King he slew among the Danes: a horseOf wondrous fleetness, light-hoofed, slender-limbed;Thigh short; with broad and mighty haunch; the flanksAre long, and very high his spine; pure whiteHis tail, and yellow is his mane—his earsAre small—light brown his head. This paragonOf all the beasts of earth has not his peer.The Archbishop, baron-like, spurs on the horse,Full bent upon the encounter with Abisme;He gains his side and hard he strikes his shieldGlittering with gems, topaz and amethyst,Crystals and carbuncles, which to him gaveThe Emir Galafés—a demon's giftTo this in Val-Metas. Him Turpin smitesNor mercy shows; 'gainst such a blow availsThe shield but little; sheer from side to sidePasses the blade ... dead on the place he falls.At such exploit amazed, the French exclaim:"The archbishop's crosier in his hand is safe!"Aoi.
The Count Rollánd calls Olivier: "With me,Companion, sire, confess that 'mong brave knights[88]The archbishop upon earth or under Heav'nHas not his peer in casting spear or lance."Olivier answers:—"To his rescue on!"At this the French once more resume the fight.Hard are the blows, rough is the strife—MeantimeThe Christian host in greatest sorrow mourn.Aoi.
Whoever could this fight describe? RollándAnd Olivier vie with Turpin in skillAnd glorious deeds—The slain can counted be;In charts and briefs their numbers are enrolled:More than four thousand fell, so says the Geste.Four times the French arms were victorious,But on the fifth, a cruel fate they met;The knights of France found there a grave, exceptThree more whose lives God saved; yet those brave knights,Ere falling, their last breath will dearly sell.Aoi.
Seeing so many warriors fall'n around,Rollánd unto his comrade OlivierSpoke thus: "Companion fair and dear, for GodWhose blessing rest on you, those vassals trueAnd brave lie corses on the battle-field:Look! We must mourn for France so sweet and fair,From henceforth widowed of such valiant knights.Carle, 'would you were amongst us, King and friend!What can we do, say, brother Olivier,To bring him news of this sore strait of ours!"Olivier answers:—"I know not; but thisI know; for us is better death than shame."Aoi.
Rollánd says;—"I will blow mine olifant,And Carle will hear it from the pass. I pledge[90]My word the French at once retrace their steps."Said Olivier:—"This a great shame would be,One which to all your kindred would bequeatheA lifetime's stain. When this I asked of you,You answered nay, and would do naught. Well, nowWith my consent you shall not;—if you blowYour horn, of valor true you show no proof.Already, both your arms are drenched with blood."Responds the Count:—"These arms have nobly struck."Aoi.
"The strife is rude," Rollánd says—"I will blowMy horn, that Carle may hear."—Said Olivier:—"This would not courage be. What I desired,Companion, you disdained. Were the king here,Safe would we be, but yon brave men are notTo blame"—"By this my beard," said Olivier,"I swear, if e'er I see again sweet Aude,My sister, in her arms you ne'er shall lie."Aoi.
Rollánd asked Olivier—"Why show to meYour anger, friend!"—"Companion, yours the fault;[91]True courage means not folly. Better farIs prudence than your valiant rage. Our FrenchTheir lives have lost, your rashness is the cause.And now our arms can never more give CarleTheir service good. Had you believed your friend,Amongst us would he be, and ours the field,The King Marsile, a captive or a corse.Rollànd, your valor brought ill fortune, norShall Carle the great e'er more our help receive,A man unequaled till God's judgment-day.Here you shall die, and dying, humble France, ...This day our loyal friendship ends—ere fallsThe Vesper-eve, dolorously we part!"Aoi.
The Archbishop heard their strife. In haste he drivesInto his horse his spurs of purest gold,And quick beside them rides. Then chiding them,Says:—"Sire Rollánd, and you, Sire Olivier,In God's name be no feud between you two;No more your horn shall save us; nathless 'twereFar better Carle should come and soon avenge[92]Our deaths. So joyous then these Spanish foesWould not return. But as our Franks alight,Find us or slain or mangled on the field,They will our bodies on their chargers' backsLift in their shrouds with grief and pity, allIn tears, and bury us in holy ground:And neither wolves, nor swine, nor curs shall feedOn us—" Replies Rollánd:—"Well have you said."Aoi.
Rollánd raised to his lips the olifant,Drew a deep breath, and blew with all his force.High are the mountains, and from peak to peakThe sound re-echoes; thirty leagues away'Twas heard by Carle and all his brave compeers.Cried the king:—"Our men make battle!—" GanelonRetorts in haste:—"If thus another daredTo speak, we should denounce it as a lie."Aoi.
The Count Rollánd in his great anguish blowsHis olifant so mightily, with suchDespairing agony, his mouth pours forth[93]The crimson blood, and his swoll'n temples burst.Yea, but so far the ringing blast resounds;Carle hears it, marching through the pass, Naimes harks,The French all listen with attentive ear."That is Rollánd's horn!—" Carle cried, "which ne'er yetWas, save in battle, blown!—" But GanelonReplies:—"No fight is there!—you, sire, are old,Your hair and beard are all bestrewn with gray,And as a child your speech. Well do you knowRollánd's great pride. 'Tis marvelous God bearsWith him so long. Already took he NobleWithout your leave. The Pagans left their wallsAnd fought Rollánd, your brave Knight, in the field;With his good blade he slew them all, and thenWashed all the plain with water, that no traceOf blood was left—yea, oftentimes he runsAfter a hare all day and blows his horn.Doubtless he takes his sport now with his peers;And who 'neath Heav'n would dare attack Rollánd?None, as I deem. Nay, sire, ride on apace;Why do you halt? Still far is the Great Land."Aoi.
Rollánd with bleeding mouth and temples burst,Still in his anguish, blows his olifant;Carle hears it, and his Franks. The king exclaims:"That horn has a long breath!" Duke Naimes replies:"Rollánd it is, and in a sore distress,Upon my faith, a battle rages there!A traitor he who would deceive you now.To arms! Your war-cry shout, your kinsman save!Plainly enough you hear his call for help."Aoi.
Carle orders all the trumpeters to soundThe march. The French alight. They arm themselvesWith helmets, hauberks and gold hilted swords,Bright bucklers, long sharp spears, with pennons whiteAnd red and blue. The barons of the hostLeap on their steeds, all spurring on; while through[95]The pass they march, each to the other says:"Could we but reach Rollánd before he dies,What deadly blows, with his, our swords would strike!"But what avails?—Too late they will arrive.Aoi.
The ev'n is clear, the sun its radiant beamsReflects upon the marching legions. Spears,Hauberks and helms, shields painted with bright flowers,Gold pennons all ablaze with glitt'ring hues.Burning with wrath the Emperor rides on;The French with sad and angered looks. None thereBut weeps aloud. All tremble for Rollánd.The King commands Count Ganelon be seizedAnd given to the scullions of his house.Their chief, named Bègue, he calls and bids: "Guard wellThis man as one who all my kin betrayed."Him Bègue received, and set upon the CountOne hundred of his kitchen comrades—best[96]And worst;—they pluck his beard on lip and cheek;Each deals him with his fist four blows, and fallsOn him with lash and stick; they chain his neckAs they would chain a bear, and he is thrownFor more dishonor on a sumpter mule,There guarded so until to Carle brought back.Aoi.
High are the mountains, gloomy, terrible,The valleys deep, and swift the rushing streams.In van, in rear, the brazen trumpets blow,Answ'ring the olifant. With angry lookRides on the Emp'ror; filled with wrath and grief,Follow the French, each sobbing, each in tears,Praying that God may guard Rollánd, untilThey reach the battle-field. With him what blowsWill they not strike? Alas! what boots it now?Too late they are and can not come in time.Aoi.
Carle in great anger rides—his snow-white beardO'erspreads his breast-plate. Hard the Barons spur,[97]For never one but inwardly doth rageThat he is far from their great chief, Rollánd,Who combats now the Saracens of Spain:If wounded he, will one of his survive?O God! What Knights those sixty left by him!Nor King nor captain better ever had....Aoi.
The Count Rollánd casts o'er the mounts and valesA glance: French corses strew the plains in heaps;He for them mourns as gentle chevalier.At such a sight the noble hero weeps:"Seigneurs, to you may God be merciful!To all your souls may He grant Paradise,And there may they on beds of heavenly flowersRepose!—No better vassals lived! so longHave ye served me! So many lands for CarleYe won!—The Emperor for this ill fateHas nurtured you!—O land of France, most sweetArt thou, but now forsaken and a waste.Barons of France, to-day I see you dieFor me; nor can I save or e'en defend[99]Your lives. Be God your aid, who ne'er played false!Olivier, brother, I must not fail thee!If other death comes not, of grief I die.Come, sire companion ... come to fight again!"Aoi.
Soon to the field returns the Count RollándWith Durendal in hand; as a true knightHe fights. Faldrun del Pin he cleaves in halfWith twenty-four among the bravest foes.Never was man so bent upon revenge.As run wild deer before the chasing hounds,Before Rollánd the Pagans flee.—"Well done!"The Archbishop cries, "Such valor a true KnightShould have, when mounted, armed, on his good steed!Else, not four deniers is he worth: a monkIn cloister should he be, and spend his lifeIn praying for our sins!...." "Strike," said Rollànd,"No quarter!"—At the word the French renewThe combat ... yet the Christian loss was great.Aoi.
When soldiers on the battle-field expectNo quarter—desperate they fight; and thusThe French, like lions, fiercely stand at bay.Like a true baron King Marsile rides forthUpon his steed Gaignon, and spurs him onAgainst Bevum, of Belne and Digun lord,His buckler cleaves, his hauberk with a blowShatters, and lays him dead upon the field.Then fall beneath the Pagan King, IvoireAnd Ivun; then Gerard de Roussillon.—The Count Rollánd is nigh and cries aloud:"God give damnation unto thee who thusSo foully slay'st my friends! But ere we part,Dearly shalt thou abye it, and to-dayShalt learn the name my good sword bears."—He strikesThe King a true Knight's stroke, and his right handLops at the wrist; then Turfaleu the fair,Marsile's own son, beheads. The Pagans say:"Aid us, Mahum! Avenge us, Gods of ours,On Carle, who brought such villains to our land,As rather than depart will die."—And each[101]To each cries: "Let us fly!"—Upon the word,A hundred thousand turn in sudden flight.Whoever calls them, ne'er will they return.Aoi.
Alas, it not avails! If Marsile flies,His uncle Marganice unhurt remained.'Tis he who held Carthage, Alferne, Garnaille,And Ethiopia, a land accursed;Chief of the Blacks, a thick-nosed, large-eared race.Of these he more than fifty thousand leads,Who ride on proudly, full of wrath, and shoutThe Pagan war-cry.—"Here," said Count Rollànd,"Here shall we fall as martyrs. Well I knowOur end is nigh; but dastard I count himWho sells not dear his life. Barons, strike well,Strike with your burnished swords, and set such priceOn death and life, that naught of shame shall fallOn our sweet France. When Carle, my lord, shall comeUpon this field, and see such slaughter hereOf Saracens, fifteen to one of ours,Then will he breathe a blessing on his Knights."Aoi.
When sees Rollánd this tribe accursed, more blackThan ink, with glist'ning teeth, their only gleamOf white, he said:—"Truly I know to-dayWe die! Strike, Frenchmen, that is my command."And Olivier, "Woe to the laggards," cries.These words the French hearts fired to meet the fray.Aoi.
The Pagans, when they mark how few the French,Are filled with pride and comfort, and they sayOne to the other:—"Their King Carle is wrong!"—Upon his sorrel steed sits Marganice;Urging him hard with pricking spurs of gold,Encounters Olivier—strikes him behind,[103]Drives his white hauberk-links into his heart,And through in front came forth the pointed lance.The Kalif cries:—"That blow struck home! Carlmagne,For thy mishap, left you to guard the Pass!That he has wronged us, little may he boast.Your death alone for us a vengeance full!"Aoi.
Olivier knows his death-wound. In his handHe grasps Halteclere's bright steel, and strikes a blowWell aimed upon the Kalif's pointed helm;He scatters golden flow'rs and gems in dust.His head the trenchant blade cleaves to the teeth,And dead the Kalif falls.—"Pagan accursed,"He cries, "not here shalt thou say Carle lost aught;To wife nor lady shalt thou ever boastIn thine own land, that thou hast reft from CarleOne denier's worth, or me or others harmed!"And then he called Rollànd unto his aid.Aoi.
Olivier feels that he is hurt to death.No vengeance can suffice him; Baron-likeHe strikes amid the press, cuts shields embossedAnd ashen shafts, and spears, feet, shoulders, wristsAnd breasts of horsemen. He who saw him thusDismember Saracens, corse over corseHeap on the ground, would of a vassal trueRemembrance keep. Nor does he now forgetThe rallying cry of Carle:—"Montjoie!" he criesLoudly and clear; then calls Rollánd, his friendAnd compeer:—"Sire companion, stand by me!This day our breaking hearts forever part!"Aoi.
Rollánd looks Olivier full in the face;Pale, livid, colorless; pure crimson bloodDrips from his body, and streams on the earth."God!" cried Rollánd, "I know not what to do,Companion, friend, thy courage was betrayedTo-day; nor will such courage e'er be seen[105]In human heart. Sweet France, oh! how shalt thou,As widow, wail thy vassals true and brave,Humbled and wrecked! The great heart of King CarleWill break!" He spake and on his saddle swooned.Aoi.
Behold Rollánd, there, fainting on his steed,While Olivier stands wounded to the death.So great the loss of blood, his troubled eyesSee naught afar or near, nor mortal manCan recognize. Encount'ring there Rollánd,Upon his golden-studded helm he struckA dreadful blow, which to the nose-plate cleft,And split the crest in twain, but left the headUntouched. Rollánd at this, upon him looks,And softly, sweetly asks:—"Sire compagnon!Was that blow meant for me? I am RollándBy whom you are beloved so well; to meCould you by any chance, defiance give?"Said Olivier:—"I hear your speech, but seeYou now no more. May God behold you, friend!I struck the blow; beseech you, pardon me."[106]Rollánd responds:—"I am not wounded—hereAnd before God I pardon you." At this,Each to the other bends in courtesy.With such great tenderness and love they part.Aoi.
Olivier feels the agony of death;His vacant eyes roll wildly in his head,And all his hearing and his sight are lost.Dismounting, on the ground he lies, and smitesHis breast, aloud confessing all his sins;With joined hands tow'rd Heaven lifted upHe prays to God to give him Paradise,To bless Carl'magne, sweet France, and far beyondAll other men, Rollánd, his compagnon.His heart fails—forward droops his helmet—proneUpon the earth he lies—'tis over now....The Count is dead. Rollánd, the Baron, mournsAnd weeps as never mortal mourned before.Aoi.
When sees the Count Rollánd the breath of lifeGone from his friend, his body stretched on earth,[107]His face low in the dust, his tears gush outWith heavy sobs. Then tenderly he speaks:"Alas! for all thy valor, comrade dear!Year after year, day after day, a lifeOf love we led; ne'er didst thou wrong to me,Nor I to thee. If death takes thee away,My life is but a pain." While speaking thus,The Marchis faints on Veillantif, his steed.But still firm in his stirrups of pure gold:Where'er Rollánd may ride, he cannot fall.Aoi.
Scarce hath the Count recovered from his swoon,When all the great disaster meets his sight;The French lie on the field; all lost to himSave the Archbishop and Gualtier de l'Hum,Who had descended from the mountain heightWhere he the men of Spain all day withstoodTill all his own fell 'neath the Pagan swords.Willed he or not, he fled into the vale,And now upon Rollánd he calls for aid;"Most gentle Count, most valiant, where art thou?Ne'er had I fear where'er thou wert!—'tis I,[108]Gualtier, who conquered Maëlgut, who amOld gray-haired Droün's nephew; till this dayMy courage won thy love. So well I foughtAgainst the Saracens, my spear was broke,My shield was pierced, my hauberk torn and wrung,And in my body eight steel darts I bear.Done are my days, but dear the last I sold!"The words of that brave knight Rollánd has heard,Spurs on his steed and gallops to his help.Aoi.
With grief and rage Rollánd's great heart is full;Amidst the thick ranks of a swarming foeHe rides. He fights—and twenty Pagans fallSlain by his hand; by Gualtier's six, and fiveBy the Archbishop's. Loud the Pagans cry:"Vile wretches these! Let none escape alive!Eternal shame to them who dare not makeAttack; foul recreants those who let their flightAvail."—Renewing then their hues and cries,The Pagans rush from all parts 'gainst the knights.Aoi.
The Count Rollánd was ever great in war;Most valiant is Gualtier de l'Hum; TurpinThe Archbishop, of a valor proved: each leavesThe other naught to do, and 'mid the throngStrikes Pagans down, who though one thousand footAnd forty thousand horsemen mustering, yetDare not approach, forsooth; but from afarAgainst them hurl their jav'lins, spears and darts,Their lances and winged arrows. First of allIs slain Gualtier; Turpin de Reins' good shieldIs pierced, his helmet broken, and his headWounded, his hauberk shattered and dislinked;Four spears have pierced his body; his good steedDies under him. Alas! the Archbishop falls.Aoi.
Hardly had Turpin fallen on the earth,By four spear-shafts transfixed, when the brave knightSprang quickly to his feet once more. His lookSought for Rollánd to whom he ran in haste.One word he said:—"Unconquered yet am I!While life doth last, a true knight yields it not!"He draws Almace, his sword of burnished steel,And rushing 'mid the throng, one thousand blowsAnd more he deals.—Carle said in after days,Turpin spared none, as dead upon the fieldHe saw four hundred men, some cut in twain,Some with lopped heads: so says the Geste of France,And one who saw the field, the brave Saint-GilleFor whom God showed his might; who in the cloisterOf Loüm wrote the record of these deeds.Who knows not this, he knows not any thing.Aoi.
As hero fights the Count Rollánd; but allHis body burns with heat and drips with sweat;[111]His head is torn by pain; his temple burstBy that strong blast he gave the olifant.Still would he know if Carle returns; once moreHe blows his horn—Alas, with feeble blast.Carle caught the distant sound, and, list'ning, waits:"Seigneurs," cried he, "great evils fall apace;I hear his dying blast upon his horn.If we would find him yet alive, we needUrge on our steeds. Let all our trumpets blow!"Then sixty thousand trumps rang forth their peals;The hills reëcho, and the vales respond.The Pagans hear—and stay their gabbling mirth.One to the other says:—"'Tis Carle who comes!"Aoi.
The Pagans say:—"The Emperor returns;These are the clarions of the French we hear.If Carle should come, 'twill be our doom; if livesRollánd, the war begins anew, and SpainOur land is lost to us for evermore."Four hundred warriors well armed cap-a-pie,The bravest of the host, then closed their ranksAnd dashed in fierce attack against Rollánd.Mighty the deeds the Count must now achieve!Aoi.
As they draw near, Rollánd calls up his prideAnd summons all his strength to meet the charge.No foot of ground he yields while life remains.Firm on his courser Veillantif he sitsAnd gores his flanks with spurs of purest gold.Into the thickest ranks he and TurpinThe Archbishop rush. And now the Pagans allUnto each other cry: "Hence, friends, away!The horns of those of France we now have heard,Carlemagne the mighty Emperor returns!"Aoi.
Ne'er could the Count Rollánd a coward love,Nor proud, nor wicked men, nor faithless knights.He calls to the Archbishop: "You, on foot,And I on horseback, sire! For love of youI by your side will stand; together weWill share or good or ill; I leave you notFor aught of human mold. This day we shallHurl back the Pagan charge, and Durendal[113]Shall deal his mightiest blows!"—To this repliesThe Archbishop: "Traitor he who strikes not well!King Carle returns—Great shall his vengeance be!"Aoi.
The Pagans say: "For such ill were we born!What fatal morn this day for us has ris'n!Dead lie our lords and Peers! With his great hostKing Carle returns, the mighty Baron—Hark!His clarions sound, and loud the cry 'Montjoie;'Rollánd has so great pride, no man of fleshCan make him yield, or vanquished fall. 'Twere bestWe pierced him from afar, and left him lyingUpon the field!"——'Twas done: darts, lances, spears,Javelins, winged arrows flew so thick,That his good shield was pierced, his hauberk rentAnd torn apart—his body yet unharmed.Veillantif, pierced with thirty wounds, falls deadBeneath the Count.—The affrighted Pagans fly.The Count Rollánd stands on the field, alone.Aoi.
Raging in wrath the Pagans fly, and towardThe land of Spain they haste. The Count RollándPursues them not, for Veillantif lies dead.On foot he stands whether he will or not.To help Turpin, the Archbishop, fast he ran,His helm unclasped, removed the hauberk whiteAnd light, then ripped the sides of his blialtTo find his gaping wounds; then tenderlyPressing him in his arms, on the green swardHe laid him gently down, and fondly prayed:"O noble man, grant me your leave in this;Our brave compeers, so dear to us, have breathedTheir last—we should not leave them on the field;I will their bodies seek and gather here,To lay them out before you."—"Go, and soonReturn," the Archbishop said; "the field is yoursAnd also mine, thanks to Almighty God!"Aoi.
Alone the Count Rollánd retraced his stepsThroughout the field. Vales, mounts, he searched, and foundGerin and his companion Gerier, thenBerengier and Otun; here Anseïs,There Sansun, then beyond, Gerard the oldDe Roussillon he found—one after oneHe bore each knight within his arms, and placedThem gently, side by side, before the kneesOf Turpin who cannot restrain his tears;With lifted hands he blesses them and says:"Most hapless Knights!—May God the GloriousReceive your souls, and in his Paradise'Mid holy flowers place them!—In this hourOf death, my deepest grief is that no moreThe mighty Emperor I shall behold!"Aoi.
Rollánd turns back, and searching through the field,Has found, alas! his comrade Olivier....He pressed him 'gainst his bosom tenderly,And, as he could, returning to Turpin,Stretched on a shield he lays him down among[116]The other knights. The Archbishop then assoilsAnd signs him with the holy cross. The griefAnd pity were more sore than heart can bear....Then said Rollánd:—"Fair comrade Olivier,Son of the good Count Renier, he who heldThe marches to the distant shores of Gennes;To break a lance, to pierce a shield, the braveTo counsel, traitors to dismay and foil,No land e'er saw a better chevalier."Aoi.
When Count Rollánd beheld his Peers lie dead,And Olivier, that friend so tenderlyBeloved, his soul by pity was o'erflowed;Tears from his eyes gush out, his countenanceTurns pale; distressed, he can no longer stand.Would he or not, he swooned and fell to earth.The Archbishop said: "Baron, what woe is yours!"Aoi.
The Archbishop, when he saw Count Rollánd swoon,Felt keener grief than e'er he felt before;[117]Stretched forth his hand, and took the olifant.—Ronceval there is a running stream;Thence will he water bring to Count Rollánd.Staggering, with feeble steps, thither he goes,But loss of blood has made him all too weak:Ere he has gone an acre's length, his heartFails, and he sinks in mortal agony.Aoi.
Meantime the Count Rollánd revives.—ErectHe stands, but with great pain; then downward looksAnd upward. Then he sees the noble lordThe Archbishop, holy minister of God,Beyond his comrades lying on the swardStretched out.—He lifts his eyes to Heav'n, recallsHis sins, and raising both his joinèd hands,He prays Our God to grant him paradise.—Turpin, Carle's Knight, is dead, who all his life,With doughty blows and sermons erudite,Ne'er ceased to fight the Pagans. May the LordGrant him His holy blessing evermore!Aoi.
The Count Rollánd sees lifeless on the fieldThe Archbishop lie; gush from the gaping woundsHis entrails in the dust, and through his skullThe oozing brain pours o'er his brow.—In formOf holy Cross upon his breast RollándDisposes both his hands so fair and white,And mourned him in the fashion of his land:"O noble man! O knight of lineage pure!To the Glorious One of Heav'n I thee commend;For ne'er was man who Him more truly served,Nor since the Apostles' days, such prophet, strong,To keep God's law and draw the hearts of men.From ev'ry pain your soul be freed, and wideBefore it ope the Gates of Paradise!"Aoi.
Rollánd now feels his death is drawing nigh:From both his ears the brain is oozing fast.For all his peers he prays that God may callTheir souls to Him; to the Angel GabrielHe recommends his spirit. In one handHe takes the olifant, that no reproachMay rest upon him; in the other graspsDurendal, his good sword. Forward he goes,Far as an arblast sends a shaft, acrossA new-tilled ground and toward the land of Spain.Upon a hill, beneath two lofty trees,Four terraces of marble spread:—he fallsProne fainting on the green, for death draws near.Aoi.
High are the mounts, and lofty are the trees.Four terraces are there, of marble bright:[120]There Count Rollánd lies senseless on the grass.Him at this moment spies a SaracenWho lies among the corpses, feigning death,His face and body all besmeared with blood.Sudden he rises to his feet, and boundsUpon the Baron.—Handsome, brave and strongHe was, but from his pride sprang mortal rage.He seized the body of Rollánd, and graspedHis arms, exclaiming thus:—"Here vanquished Carle'sGreat nephew lies!"—"This sword to ArabyI'll bear."—He drew it;—this aroused the Count.Aoi.
Rollánd perceived an alien hand would robHim of his sword; his eyes he oped; one wordHe spoke:—"I trow, not one of us art thou!"Then with his olifant from which he partsNever, he smites the golden studded helm,Crushing the steel, the head, the bones; both eyesAre from their sockets beaten out—o'erthrownDead at the Baron's feet he falls:—"O wretch,"He cries, "how durst thou, or for good or ill,[121]Lay hands upon Rollánd? Who hears of thisWill call thee fool. Mine olifant is cleft,Its gems and gold all scattered by the blow."Aoi.
Now feels Rollánd that death is near at handAnd struggles up with all his force; his faceGrows livid;—[Durendal, his naked sword]He holds;—beside him rises a gray rockOn which he strikes ten mighty blows through griefAnd rage—The steel but grinds; it breaks not, norIs notched; then cries the Count:—"Saint Mary, help!O Durendal! Good sword! ill starred art thou!Though we two part, I care not less for thee.What victories together thou and I,Have gained, what kingdoms conquered, which now holdsWhite-bearded Carle! No coward's hand shall graspThy hilt: a valiant knight has borne thee long,Such as none shall e'er bear in France the Free!"Aoi.
Rollánd smites hard the rock of Sardonix;The steel but grinds, it breaks not, nor grows blunt;Then seeing that he can not break his sword,Thus to himself he mourns for Durendal:"O good my sword, how bright and pure! AgainstThe sun what flashing light thy blade reflects!When Carle passed through the valley of Moriane,The God of Heaven by his Angel sentCommand that he should give thee to a Count,A valiant captain; it was then the greatAnd gentle King did gird thee to my side.—With thee I won for him Anjou—Bretaigne;For him with thee I won Poitou, le MaineAnd Normandie the free; I won ProvenceAnd Aquitaine, and Lumbardie, and allThe Romanie; I won for him Bavière,All Flandre—Buguerie—all Puillanie,Costentinnoble which allegiance paid,And Saxonie submitted to his power;For him I won Escoce and Galle, IrlandeAnd Engleterre he made his royal seat;[123]With thee I conquered all the lands and realmsWhich Carle, the hoary-bearded monarch, rules.Now for this sword I mourn.... Far better dieThan in the hands of Pagans let it fall!May God, Our Father, save sweet France this shame!"Aoi.
Upon the grey rock mightily he smites,Shattering it more than I can tell; the swordBut grinds.—It breaks not—nor receives a notch,And upwards springs more dazzling in the air.When sees the Count Rollánd his sword can never break,Softly within himself its fate he mourns:"O Durendal, how fair and holy thou!In thy gold-hilt are relics rare; a toothOf great saint Pierre—some blood of Saint Basile,A lock of hair of Monseigneur Saint Denis,A fragment of the robe of Sainte-Marie.It is not right that Pagans should own thee;By Christian hand alone be held. Vast realms[124]I shall have conquered once that now are ruledBy Carle, the King with beard all blossom-white,And by them made great emperor and Lord.May thou ne'er fall into a cowardly hand."Aoi.
The Count Rollánd feels through his limbs the graspOf death, and from his head ev'n to his heartA mortal chill descends. Unto a pineHe hastens, and falls stretched upon the grass.Beneath him lie his sword and olifant,And toward the Heathen land he turns his head,That Carle and all his knightly host may say:"The gentle Count a conqueror has died...."Then asking pardon for his sins, or greatOr small, he offers up his glove to God.Aoi.
The Count Rollánd feels now his end approach.Against a pointed rock, and facing Spain,[125]He lies. Three times he beats his breast, and says:"Mea culpa! Oh, my God, may through thy grace,Be pardoned all my sins, or great or small,Until this hour committed since my birth!"Then his right glove he offers up to God,And toward him angels from high Heav'n descend.Aoi.
Beneath a pine Rollánd doth lie, and looksToward Spain—He broods on many things of yore:On all the lands he conquered, on sweet France,On all his kinsmen, on great Carle his lordWho nurtured him;—he sighs—nor can restrainHis tears, but can not yet himself forget;Recalls his sins, and for the grace of GodHe prays:—"Our Father, never yet untrue,Who Saint-Lazare raised from the dead, and savedThy Daniel from the lions' claws—Oh, freeMy soul from peril, from my whole life's sins!"His right hand glove he offered up to God;Saint Gabriel took the glove.—With head reclined[126]Upon his arm, with hands devoutly joinedHe breathed his last. God sent his Cherubim,Saint-Raphaël, Saint Michiel del Peril.Together with them Gabriel came.—All bringThe soul of Count Rollánd to Paradise....Aoi.
Rollánd is dead: God has his soul in heaven.To Ronceval the Emperor has come.There, neither road nor any path is seen,Nor vacant space, nor ell, nor foot of landThat mounds of mangled bodies cover not,Pagans or French.—The Emperor exclaims:"Fair nephew, where art thou? The Archbishop, where?And Olivier, alas, where are they all?Gerin, Gerier, the two companions, whereAre they? And where is Otes and Berengier,Ives and Ivoire both to my heart so dear?The Gascuin Engelier, Sansun the Duke,Anseïs the rash, Gerard de RoussillonThe old, and my twelve Peers I left behind,[128]What fate is theirs?"—What boots it? None replies."—"—God,"cries the King, "what grief is mine to think"I stood not here the battle to begin."He tears his beard with anger; all his knightsAnd barons weep great tears; dizzy with woeAnd swooning, twenty thousand fall to earth.Duke Naimes feels pity overflow his heart.Aoi.
No baron is there now, no chevalierWho, in his pity, sheds not tears for sons,For brothers—nephews—friends—and for liege-lords.Many have fallen swooning on the earth,But Duke Naimes bore himself as valorous knight:He foremost said to Carle:—"Behold two leaguesAway!—The roads are dark with clouds of dust.There swarm the Pagan tribes.... Ride on them now,Avenge this bitter woe."—"O God," said Carle,"Are they already flown so far?—our rightsAnd honor shield! Those Pagans took from me[129]The flower of my Sweet France!"—The King commandsGebuin, Otun, Tedbalt de Reins and CountMilun:—"Watch ye the field, the vales, the mounts;The slain, leave to their rest; see that no beastNor lion, squire nor page approach. I chargeYou, let no man upon them lay his handUntil, with God's assistance, we return."They lovingly and with sweet tone reply:"Thus shall we do, just Emperor, dear sire!"Upon the field they keep one thousand knights.Aoi.
Now bids the Emperor his trumpets blow,Then forward at the head of his great hostHe rides, that Baron true. Of those of SpainHe finds the tracks, points out the road; in quickPursuit all follow Carle.... When sees the KingThe eve decline, he on the verdant grassDismounts, and prostrate prays to God our LordThe sun to stay, the shades of night hold backAnd longer make the day. To him appearsA Counselor-Angel with the swift command;"Ride on, O King, nor fear that night shall fall![130]God knows that thou hast lost the flower of France;But vengeance canst have now upon that hordeOf unbelievers." Thus the Angel spake.The Emp'ror rises and remounts his steed.Aoi.
To Carlemagne Our Lord now showed his might;The sun stays in its course. The Pagans fly,And fast the French pursuing, overtakeThem in the Val-Tenebre. They drive them onToward Sarraguce, while close behind them fallThe upraised swords, and strew the ground with dead.No issue, no escape, by road or pass!In front deep Ebro rolls its mighty waves:No boat, no barge, no raft. They call for helpOn Tervagant, then plunge into the flood.Vain was their trust: some, weighted with their arms,Sink in a moment; others are swept down,And those most favored swallow monstrous draughts.All drown most cruelly. The French cry out:"For your own woe wished ye to see Rollánd!"Aoi.
When Carle sees all the Pagans dead—some slain,The others drowned, his chevaliers enrichedWith spoils, the noble King dismounts, on earthProstrates himself and offers thanks to God.When he arose, the sun had set. "'Tis time,"He said, "to think of camping now. Too lateIt is for our advance to Ronceval.Our horses are all weary and foredone:Unsaddle them and take the bridles off;And let them roam at large about these meads."The French reply: "Sire, you have spoken well."Aoi.
The Emperor makes here his harborage.The French dismount, take off the golden curbsAnd saddles from their steeds, and turn them looseIn the green mead, amid the plenteous grass:No other care they need. Upon the groundThe over-wearied cast themselves and sleep.No watch was set in all the host that night.Aoi.
The Emperor reposes on the field,His mighty lance hard by his pillow planted,For he, on such a night will not disarm.His hauberk white, with orfreyed-marge he wears,His helmet, rich with gold and gems is laced,Girded Joyeuse, the sword without a peer,Who thirty times a day can change his hue.Many a time you all heard of the lanceWherewith Our Lord was pierced upon the cross,The steel whereof Carle has, thanks be to God,Closed in the golden pommel of his sword.For this great glory and exceeding worthThe brand was called Joyeuse. This all French KnightsShould bear in mind, for it was hence they tookTheir war-cry of Montjoie, and for this causeNo other people can resist their arms.Aoi.
Clear is the night, bright shines the moon; at restLies Carle; but grief is with him for Rollánd,And Olivier is heavy on his heart;[133]The twelve Peers, too, and all the men of France,Left stark and bloody there at Ronceval.He cannot help but weep, and sob, and prayThat mighty God be keeper of their souls.Tired is the King, his toils being very great;Deeply asleep he falls, and can no more.Through all the fields the scattered French sleep sound,Nor there a horse has strength enough to stand;If one need grass, he bites it as he lies.Right wise is he that's wise in lore of woe.Aoi.
Carle sleeps as man by toil outdone. God sendsSaint Gabriel down, the Emperor to guard.All night beside his head the Angel stands,And in a dream forebodes that 'gainst the FrenchA battle is prepared, and its portentExplains; then glancing up tow'rd Heav'n, King CarleSees thunder-clouds and winds, hail, raging stormsAnd wond'rous tempests—smould'ring fire and flamesReady to burst forth. Suddenly on all[134]His people falls the blast. Their spears with shaftsOf apple-tree or ash—those shields ablazeUnto their golden rings—shafts from their pointsBreak off—Steel helms and hauberks clash and clang.He sees his Knights in dire distress. MeantimeDevouring pards and bears rush on them; snakesAnd vipers—dragons, fiends—and with them moreThan thirty thousand griffons. 'Mong the FrenchNone can escape this hideous horde.—"Carlemagne,Come to our help!" they cry. With pity seized,Fain would he thither, but his steps are stayed:Deep from a wood a lion huge comes on.The beast is haughty, fierce and terrible,And, springing, seeks his very body out.Each wrestles with the other in his arms;But which shall fall, which stand, this no man knows.Never a jot the Emperor awakes.Aoi.
Another vision follows this: in FranceAt Aix he is:—Upon a marble step[135]He stands, and holds in two-fold chains a bear.From towards Ardennes he sees rush forth a packOf thirty other bears which speak as men.They say:—"To us restore him, Sire! Not rightIt were that you should keep him longer; helpOur kin we must."—Then from his palace runsA greyhound fair which on the verdant grassAssails the fiercer of the other beastsBefore them all. The King a wond'rous fightBeholds: but who shall win or lose, none knows.This is a dream God's Angel showed to Carle,Who sleeps until the morrow's morn appeared.Aoi.
By rapid flight Marsile reached Sarraguce.—Dismounting 'neath a shady olive-tree,He strips himself of breast-plate, helmet, sword,And sinks upon the sward with ghastly look.His right hand severed from the wrist whence bloodIs gushing forth, has made him swoon with pain.Before Marsile, his spouse, Queen Bramimunde,Bursts into tears, and cries, and woeful moans.Around stand more than twenty thousand men[136]Who with one voice accuse Sweet France and Carle;Apollo's grotto seek they, and with taunts,Profane, insulting words, their God revile:"What ails thee, evil God, to shame us thus,And to confusion bring our Lord the King?Who serves thee well vile guerdon gains from thee!"Despoiled of crown and scepter, by the handsThey hang him on a column—neath their feetThey roll him down.—They with great clubs defaceAnd beat him; then from Tervagant they snatchHis carbuncle; Mohamed in a ditchThrow down—there bitt'n, trampled on, by swine and dogs.Aoi.
Recov'ring from his swoon, the King MarsileCommands they lead him to his vaulted roomAll bright with color and inscribed with verse.There weeping bitterly, Queen BramimundeTearing her hair, aloud proclaims her grief:"O hapless Sarraguce, thou art bereftOf the most gentle King that was thy Lord![137]Our gods betrayed our trust, they who this mornIn battle failed us;—the Emir coward wereWould he not fight these people bold who areSo proud they care not for their lives. Carl'magne,The Emperor, whose beard is strewn with gray,Among his men has dauntless Knights; if e'erHe fight, no step he yields. Great woe it isThat there is no man who can give him death."Aoi.
By his great power the Emperor in SpainFull seven years remained; he castles tookAnd many cities, bringing sore distressTo King Marsile. The year had scarce begunBefore his word went forth to seal the briefsWhich summoned Baligant from Babylone,(The aged Emir, he whose life outlivedHomer and Virgil). Now the King MarsileHad begged the Baron's help for Sarraguce.Should he not come, gods, idols, once adoredHe will renounce, the holy Faith of ChristEmbrace, and join in friendship with King Carle.Afar was Baligant, and tarried long;From forty realms his people had he called[138]And ordered to prepare his dromonds vast,Barks, galleys, ev'ry vessel. In the portOf Alexandria the fleet had met;In May it was, the first of summer-days,A mighty host he launched upon the deep.Aoi.
Great are the forces of their hostile horde;They swiftly skim the waves, and steer, and sail;Their masts and yards so blazing with the lightOf carbuncles and lanterns, night gives upIts darkness and still fairer shows the sea.As they approached the shores of Spain, the landWas all aglow, and tidings reached Marsile.Aoi.
The Pagans halt no moment; soon they leaveThe deep, and in fresh water steer; MarbreiseAnd then Marbruse is passed; along the shoresOf winding Ebro glides the armament,Setting the night aflame with carbunclesAnd lights: the same day reached they Sarraguce.Aoi.
Clear is the day and bright the sun; descendsThe Emir from his ship. EspanelizWalks forth upon his right; a train of KingsIn number seventeen, with Dukes and CountsInnumerable, follow. 'Mid the plainGrows a great laurel, and beneath its shadeThey spread a pallie of white silk uponThe verdant grass, and place a faldstool thereOf ivory. In this sits BaligantThe Pagan. All the others stand. First spakeThe chief:—"Oyez, all ye, most valiant Knights!King Carle, the Emperor, who leads the Franks,Shall eat not, save by my command. ThroughoutAll Spain, 'gainst me a cruel war he waged:Now I will seek him in sweet France, nor, whileMy life lasts, cease until he dies the death,Or, living, yields, and mercy begs." He spakeAnd struck his right-hand glove upon his knee.Aoi.
His word once spoken was to him a law:Though it cost all the gold beneath the sky,[140]Yet would he march to Aix, where Carle was wontTo hold his court. Some praise him, even giveHim counsel. Two from out his host of KnightsHe summons, Clarien, and Clarifan:"Ye are the sons of King Maltraïen,A willing message bearer: 'tis my willYe go to Sarraguce; there in my nameGive ye this message to the King Marsile:I have come to succor him against the French,And if I find them, great the fight will be.Give him this gold-embroidered glove, and place itOn his right hand; give him this staff of gold;And when he comes to pay me homage, asA vassal to his lord, I then will leadMy force to France to fight with Carlemagne.If he fall not before my feet to prayFor mercy, and abjure the Christian law,I from his head will tear away the crown."The Pagans answer all:—"Well spoken, Sire."Aoi.
"Barons! to horse!" said Baligant. "Bear thouThe glove, and thou the staff." The two reply:"Dear Sire, thus shall we do." So fast they rode[141]They soon reached Sarraguce. Beneath ten gatesThey pass, four bridges cross, ride through the streetsWhere stand the burghers. But on drawing nearThe lofty citadel, they heard great noiseAbout the palace, where were thronging crowdsOf Pagans with loud wails and shrieks of woe,Crying out against their gods, on Tervagan,Mahum, Apollo, who avail them naught.Each says to each, "Ah, caitiffs, what shall nowBefall us, miserable? for we have lostThe King Marsile whose hand Rollánd struck off;For aye we are bereft of TurfaleuThe Fair, his son. This day the land of SpainInto the Christian hands will fall enslaved!"The message-bearers reach the royal gates.Aoi.
Beneath an olive tree they halt, and soonTwo Pagans take their curbed steeds in charge.The messengers, each holding by the cloakThe other, hasten to the highest tower.Entering the vaulted hall where lay Marsile,An evil greeting offer with good will:[142]"May Tervagan, Apollo, he who holdsUs in his service, and our Sire Mahum,Preserve our king and guard the queen!"Whereat cried Bramimunde:—"What folly this!Our gods are false; too well in RoncevalThey showed their evil power, and let our knightsBe slain—amid the battle-field forsookMy lord the king with his right hand struck offBy mighty Count Rollánd. The realm of SpainWill fall enslaved beneath the sway of Carle.What shall become of me, most miserable?Alas! is there no man to give me death!"Aoi.
Said Clarien:—"Lady, speak not thus—Behold,Messengers we, from Baligant, who swearsTo free Marsile, and to him sends his gloveAnd staff as tokens—on the Ebro floatFour thousand galleys, skiffs and swiftest boats;More sails than can be numbered! Rich and greatThe Emir.—Carle, pursued to France, shall bePer force, or still, or dead, or penitent."Said Bramimunde:—"Yea, greater ills will come.To meet the Franks you need not go so far;[143]Carle seven years in Spain has tarried. BraveIs he in battle, and a Baron true;Ready to die ere he will quit the field;No king on earth but is to him a child.Carle's spirit yields before no living man."Aoi.
"Let all that be!" cried to the messengersThe King Marsile—"Seigneurs, speak but to me,You see me now crushed unto death. No sonNor daughter have I left, nor other heir;One son I had, who yestereve was slain.Say to my Lord his coming I beseech.Some rights to Spain the Emir has; to himI grant the realm in full, if he accept.Let him defend this land against the French,To meet Carlemagne good counsel I will give,And victor he will be before this dayA month. Bear him the keys of Sarraguce;Thence, if he trust my words, he ne'er will beExpelled." They answer:—"Sire, you speak the truth."Aoi.
"The Emperor Carle," said King Marsile, "has slainMy men, ravaged my land, shattered and stormedMy cities; now on Ebro's banks he camps,But seven counted leagues away. Bid yeThe Emir march up all his force. Bear himMy order for the fight." With this he givesInto their hands the keys of Sarraguce.Upon these words the messengers bent lowIn last salute, took leave, and went their way.Aoi.
The messengers upon their horses mountAnd gallop from the city in hot haste.With terror struck, both to the Emir come,Deliv'ring up the keys of Sarraguce.Said Baligant:—"What found ye there? Where isThe King Marsile whom I commanded forth?"Clarien makes answer:—"He is hurt to death;The Emp'ror yesterday marched through the passUpon his homeward way into sweet France.For greater honor, in the rear, Rollánd,His nephew, had a post with Olivier,All the twelve Peers and twenty thousand knights.The King Marsile, the valiant Baron, foughtAnd fierce encounter had with Count Rollánd,[145]Who dealt with Durendal so dire a blow,The king's right hand was severed from his arm.Slain was the son he loved so tenderly,With all the Barons he had brought with him;Unable to resist, he took to flight,And Carle, the Emperor, followed close behind.Now give your help to King Marsile, who cravesYour aid, and as your guerdon all the realmOf Spain receive." But Baligant remainsDeep sunk in thought, nigh maddened by his grief.Aoi.
"Sire Emir," Clarien said, "on yesterdayA battle raged in Ronceval; RollándAnd Olivier are dead, and the twelve PeersTo Carle so dear, with twenty thousand FranksHave perished; King Marsile lost his right hand,And fled in hottest speed pursued by Carle.In all the land no Knight remains but slainOr in the waters of the Ebro drowned.Upon its banks the French encamp—So nigh—Had you the will, unsafe would be their flight."Then Baligant looks at him full of pride;And his heart swells with courage and fierce joy.[146]Sudden from his footstool he springs, and loudHe cries:—"Delay not—disembark! To horse!And forward! Now, unless Carlemagne the oldBy flight escape, the King Marsile shall beAvenged. For his right hand Carle's head shall pay."Aoi.
Out of their skiffs the Arab Pagans spring,And mounting mules and horses, march; what elseBut this for them to do? When forward movesThe host in serried lines, the Emir callsOn Genalfin, his chosen friend: "To theeCommand of all my armies I confide."—He said—and straight on his bay destrier mounts;Four Dukes rode with him, and so fast he sped,Ere long they entered into Sarraguce.Before a marble terrace he dismounts,Four Counts his stirrup held, and by the stepsWhich led up to the palace he ascends.To him runs Bramimunde:—"What cruel doleIs mine, oh, woe! How shamefully," she cried,"Have I now lost my lord!"—And at his feetProstrate she fell. The Emir raised her up,And, grieving, both into the chamber went.Aoi.
The King Marsile, on seeing Baligant,Summoned two Spanish Saracens, and badeHis body to be raised that he might sit.With his left hand he took a glove, and thusHe spoke:—"Sir King and Emir, all my landsAnd kingdoms, Sarraguce, domains and fiefsBut wreck and ruin—Subjects, wealth—all lost."Answered the Emir:—"I, so much the more,Grieve for thy sorrow; but for longer speechI can not stay; for Carle, I know, will notBe still. But, nathless, I receive the glove."O'erwhelmed with sorrow, weeping he departs;The palace steps descending, mounts his horseAnd spurs him towards the waiting hosts so fast,That of the foremost ranks he takes the lead;And cries aloud, going from man to man:"Haste, Pagans! On!—Already flee the Franks."Aoi.
At earliest morn, just as the dawn appeared,From sleep awakes the Emp'ror Carlemagne;Saint-Gabriel, his guardian, sent by God,[148]With hands uplifted signed him with the cross.The King arises, takes his armor off,And all the host disarm.—The mounted knightsThen ran at speed back o'er the trampled ways,The weary roads, to view the woeful lossOnce more, on Ronceval's bloody battle-field.Aoi.
Arrived upon the field of Ronceval,Where lay so many slain, Carle wept, and saidUnto the French:—"Seigneurs, move slowly here;For I alone, will forward go in searchOf my fair nephew lost among the dead.Erst when at Aix on Christmas' solemn feast,My valiant bachelors, in warlike deedsTheir exploits vaunting, I could hear RollándSay, should he ever die on foreign soil,Before his peers and men he should be foundFacing the foe, true Baron, conqu'ror still."A few steps further than a staff's throw, CarleFar in advance of all, ascends a hill.Aoi.
When sought the Emperor his nephew there,Amid the field, and found so many plantsWith blossoms crimsoned by our Barons' blood,[149]By pity moved he can not choose but weep.Mounting the hill, beneath two trees, he knewThe blow upon the three rocks Rollánd struck,And saw his nephew lying on the sward,A mangled corse—No wonder Carle is wroth;Alights in haste and lifting in his armsThe Count, broken by grief upon him faints.Aoi.
From his deep swoon the Emperor revives.Duke Naimes, Count Acelin, Geffrei d'AnjouHis brother Tierri raise the King, and placeHim resting 'gainst a pine. There on the earthHe sees his nephew lying dead, and mournsO'er him with gentle words and tender looks,"Sweet friend, Rollánd, God's mercy unto thee!Such peerless knight none ever yet has seen,For noble combats ordered and achieved!Mine honor turns to its decline!—" Once moreCarle's will and strength succumb.... He faints away.Aoi.
Again King Carle recovers from his swoon....Four of his Barons, with their hands support[150]His form. His downcast looks see stretched on earthHis nephew's corpse. Discolored was the brow,Yet proud the look; the dimmed and sightless eyesTurned up.... In faith and love King Carle laments."Sweet friend Rollánd, may God enshrine thy soulAmong the Glorified, amidst the flowersOf Paradise! For thy mishap, Seigneur,Camest thou to Spain.... No future day shall dawnFor me, on which I mourn thee not.... Now fall'nMy strength and power! Who now will e'er supportMy royal fiefs? Thou wast for me 'neath Heav'nThe one true friend! though other kindred mine,Was none so brave and wise."—He tore his hairIn handfuls from his brow. So great the griefOf those one hundred thousand Franks, that noneThere was, of all, who wept not bitter tears.Aoi.
"Beloved Rollánd, to France I now return.When in my chamber I shall be at Loün,[151]And foreign men come from afar to askWhere lives Rollánd the Captain, I shall say'He lieth dead in Spain;' and I henceforthShall hold my realm in bitter pain. No dayShall dawn for me unmarked by tears and moans."Aoi.
"Sweet friend Rollánd, brave Knight and beauteous youth,When I return to Aix, in my Chapelle,And men shall come to hear me speak of thee,What strange and cruel news I then shall haveTo greet them with! 'My nephew who for meSuch conquests made ... is dead.' And Saxons nowWill rise against my power, and Hungres, and BugresWith other foes—the men of Rome, of Pouille,And all those of Palerne; and those who holdAffrike and Califerne. Day after dayMy pain will grow—Who then shall lead my hostWith such an arm of might, since he is dead,Who was our chief and head so long. Alas![152]Sweet France, bereft art thou! So great my griefI would not live!"—he plucks out his white beardAnd tears his hair with both hands from his head.Swoon on the earth one hundred thousand Franks—Aoi.
"Sweet friend," he cried, "Rollánd, thou art no more:Oh! may thy soul have place in Paradise!Who gave thee death brought grievous shame to France.Such is my grief, I would not longer live.My kinsmen died for me! I pray Our Lord,The Blessed Mary's son, before I reachCizra's defiles, from mortal life to takeMy soul away, and let it rest with theirs.I would my body lay beside their own!"And, weeping sore, he tears his hoary beard....Then said Duke Naimes:—"What cruel pain is Carle's!"Aoi.
"Sire Emperor," spoke forth Geffrei d'Anjou,"Yield not so much to sorrow—Orders give[153]To seek our men throughout the battle-field,In combat killed by those of Spain, and layThem in one grave"—Carle said: "Then sound your horn."Aoi.
Geffrei d'Anjou obeyed and blew his horn;The French dismount, such was the king's command,And all their friends found slain upon the fieldTogether in one charnel wide inter:A crowd of bishops, abbots, canons, monksAnd tonsured priests there gathered, in the nameOf God assoil and bless; incense and myrrhAre burned in reverence and love beforeThe dead who, buried there with honors great,Are left alone—what more was there to do?Aoi.
The Emp'ror Carle gives order that a watchBe kept around Rollánd, Count OlivierAnd the Archbishop Turpin; bade their breastsBe oped before him, and their hearts enwrapped[154]In silken cloths—in tombs of marble whiteInurned; the bodies of the Barons thenPerfumed with wine and fragrant herbs; the threeSeigneurs in wrappings of stag's hide were cased;By Carle's decree Tedbald and Gebuin,Marchis Othon and Count Milon escortThem on their way, upon three chariots borne,And covered well with palls of glazèd silk.Aoi.
King Carle about to start, sees suddenlyEmerge the Pagan van. From Baligant,The battle to declare, two messengersAdvance:—"Proud king, from here thou must not go;Behold, the Emir to thine encounter comesAnd brings a mighty host from Araby.This day will prove if truly valiant knightThou art." Carl'magne, the king, plucks his gray beard;So cruel is the memory of allHis grief and wrong, proudly he casts a lookUpon his knightly host, and with loud voiceExclaims:—"Seigneurs Barons! To horse! To arms!"Aoi.
First of them all the Emperor is armed.Quick donned his hauberk,—laced his helm—Joyeuse,Whose brightness vies with the sun's dazzling rays,Is girded on—a shield of Girunde hangsUpon his neck,—his lance, forged in BlanduneHe wields, and mounts his good steed TencendurWhich nigh the ford below Marsune he won,When he struck dead Malpalin de Nerbune.Quick to a gallop spurred, rein loosed, the steedSped on, before one hundred thousand men.Carle calls on Rome's Apostle and on God.Aoi.
Spread o'er the field the men of France dismount.More than one hundred thousand arm themselvesTogether—Brilliant their array! Their steedsAre fleet, arms gleaming; bright the pennons floatAbove their helms: The foe once found, they giveThem certain battle. Mounted thus, how brave[156]Their show! When Carle beholds their faces bright,Joseran de Provence he calls, the braveDuke Naimes, also Anselme de Maience:"In knights so good behooves men to have faith,And mad indeed who doubts of the event.Should not the Arabs their approach repent,Rollánd's death I to them will dearly sell."Responds Duke Naimes:—"May God vouchsafe your prayer."Aoi.
Carl calls Rabel and Guineman:—"Seigneurs,I will that ye should take the place of CountsRollánd and Olivier—One bear the sword;The olifant, the other—Be the chiefsOf fifteen thousand bachelors of France,In youth and valor famous among all—As many more will follow after these,Conducted by Gebuin and by Laurant."Duke Naimes and Joseran the Count with speedAnd care these hosts in full array dispose.Let them encounter, great will be the fight.Aoi.
These first two cohorts were from out the FrenchComposed; and after those a third was formed:[157]The vassals of Baviere—Their numbers mountTo thirty thousand knights who ne'er would blenchBefore the foe. Beneath the sky live notA people dearer to the heart of Carle,Save those of France, the conquerors of realms.The Count Ogier de Danemarche, the brave,Will lead—What beauty sits upon their brows!Aoi.
Now has the Emp'ror Carle three squadrons; NaimesThe Duke, then forms the fourth with truly braveBarons from Allemagne, who left La Marche.These, twenty thousand count, so all report;Well furnished with good steeds and arms; for dreadOf death in battle they will never yield.Herman the Duke of Thrace, their chief, will dieBefore he guilty proves of cowardice.Aoi.
Duke Naimes and Joseran the Count, have formedThe fifth of Normans, twenty thousand men,[158]Say all the Franks. Their arms are bright, and fleetTheir steeds. These welcome death ere they succumb.None under Heav'n more valiant in the fight.Richard the old will lead them on the field,—And with his trenchant lance will bravely strike.Aoi.
Composed of Bretons the sixth squadron was:Full forty thousand chevaliers are they;Barons in mien when mounted thus, each lanceIn rest, its pennon rolled. Their lord is namedOedun: These led by Nevelon the Count,Tedbald de Reins and the Marchis Othon—"My people guide," said Carle; "in ye my trust."Aoi.
King Carle has now six squadrons on the field.Barons d'Alverne and Peitevins Duke NaimesHas mustered in the seventh. They may count[159]Full forty thousand knights. How good their steeds,How finely wrought their arms! They stand aloofWithin a shady vale. With his right handHe gives to these his blessing. JoseranAnd Godselmes their appointed leaders are.Aoi.
Barons of Frise and Flamengs Naimes enrolledFor the eighth legion. Knights in number moreThan fifty thousand, men who never yieldIn battle. Thus the king: "My service theseWill do, Rembalt and Hamon de GaliceShall lead them forward in all chivalry."Aoi.
Duke Naimes and Joseran the Count equipThe ninth battalion,—brave among the brave.Those warriors from Lorraine and Burgundy:In number fifty thousand knights; close helmed,In hauberk mailed—a stout short-handled lanceEach wields. Should Arabs not from combat shrink,Lorrains and Bourguignons will deal hard blows;Tierri Duke of Argonne will be their chief.Aoi.
Barons of France make up the tenth. They areOne hundred thousand captains 'mong the best;Hardy and stout, of features proud, hair fleckedWith gray, and beard all white; in hauberk cladAnd linèd coat of mails, girt with their swordsOf Spain and France; for shelter, brilliant shieldsWith various blazons decked, among them known.They mount their steeds and clamor for the fight:"Montjoie!" they cry.—Comes now Carlemagne the king!Geffrei d'Anjou bears up the oriflammeCalled Roman once, but since the day Saint PierreMade it a standard, it is named Montjoie.Aoi.
The Emperor Carle dismounts, prostrates himselfUpon the verdant grass, invoking GodWith eyes uplifted toward the rising sun:"O father true, this day be my defense!Thy hand it was saved Jonas from the whaleWithin whose body he was swallowed up;Thou sparedst too the king of Niniva;[161]And Daniel didst thou save from cruel painWhen thrown among the lions. By thy mightStood the three children safe in burning flames,This day grant also unto me thy love,Merciful God! List to my prayer; vouchsafeThat I avenge my nephew, dear Rollánd!"Thus having prayed, he stands erect and marksHis forehead with the sign of might: Then mountsA fleet-hoofed courser. Naimes and JoseranCarle's stirrup hold—With buckler on his armAnd trenchant lance in rest; strength, beauty, graceSat on his countenance and visage fair.Then firmly seated on his horse he rides....Clarions in rear and front reëcho 'round....But above all rings out the olifant.Meantime the French weep ... mourning for Rollánd.Aoi.
Most nobly on the Emp'ror Carle proceeds.His long beard flowing o'er his coat of mail,And so, for love of him, the knights, whereby,[162]Are surely known the hundred thousand Franks;They march through mountains and o'ertopping peaks,Deep vales, defiles of frightful look. At lastLeaving the narrow pass and wasted land,They reach the Spanish bourne and make a haltAmid a plain. Meanwhile to BaligantReturn his vanguard scouts; a Syrian spyHeralds the news,—"We saw the proud King Carle.His warriors fierce will never fail their King.To arms—Within a moment look for fight!"Baligant cried:—"Good news for our brave hearts!Sound all your trumps and let my Pagans know!"Aoi.
Throughout the camp the drums sonorous beat,With bellowing horns and blasts of trumpet clear.The Pagans arm themselves, and least of allThe Emir would th' advance delay—He wearsA hauberk saffron—'broidered round the sides,And clasps his helm with gold and gems inlaid.On his left side a sword whereto, in pride,He gave a name, as Carle had named his sword,[163]And called the blade his Precieuse. This nameShall be the battle-cry his warriors shout——Hangs from his neck a large and spreading shieldWhose golden boss shines with a crystal ring;The strap of silk with rosy 'broidery;The lance he bears is named Mallet, the shaftOf which so huge, more than a beam it looks,And steel so strong, beneath its weight a muleWould groan. Upon his steed mounts Baligant;His stirrup held by Marcule d'Ultremer.Mighty the Emir's stride across the selle;Thin-loined, wide-flanked, deep-chested, all his formWell molded; broad his shoulders; clear his eye,His visage haughty, curls around his brow.White as a summer blossom he appears;His valor proved by many feats of war.God! what a Baron, had he Christian faith!He spurs his horse until the crimson bloodReddens its flanks, and lightly bounds acrossA mighty chasm full fifty feet in width.The Pagans cry:—"He can defend his marche.With him none 'mong the French can cross a lance;Will they or not, their lives are forfeit now.Yea Carle was mad who did not shun the field."Aoi.
The Emir, Baron-like, wears on his chinA beard as white as summer flower, and gainedAmong the wisest of his creed a fame;In battle fierce and proud. His son MalprimeOf knightly soul, and from his noble raceHolding a valiant heart and strength of arm,Addressed his father:—"Sire, to horse! to horse!Against them! I much wonder whether CarleWe e'er shall meet."—"Yea," answered Baligant,"Carle is a valorous knight; his glorious deedsAre writt'n, but now his nephew is no more;Against our strength no other man's can stand."Aoi.
"Fair son, Malprime," said th' Emir Baligant,"Yesterday fell in death the noble knightRollánd, and Olivier the wise and brave,And the twelve Peers by Carle so dearly loved,With twenty thousand combatants of France;Not at a glove's worth hold I all the rest.Anon my Syrian messenger reports[165]The emperor's approach; ten armies CarleHas called in close array; the knight who bearsThe olifant, with clear resounding blastLeads his companions, riding in the front;Together with them fifteen thousand menOf France, all bachelors, whom Carle is wontTo call his children. These as many followWho for the fiercest combat seem prepared."Thus said Malprime: "The first stroke I demand!"Aoi.
"Fair son," said Baligant, "to you I grantYour full request. Against the French at onceEngage. Let your companions be TorleuThe Persian King, and Dapamort who rulesLeutis. If you subdue the vaunting Carle,A portion of my kingdom shall you haveIn fief from the Orient to Val-Marchis."Responds Malprime: "To you, O sire, all thanks!"And stepping forward, he receives the boon.This land had once been swayed by King Fleuri,But by Malprime was neither ruled nor seen.Aoi.
The Emir Baligant rides through the ranksOf all his host, escorted by his son[166]Of giant stature, and the Kings TorleuAnd Dapamort. In line of battle soonStand thirty legions ranked. Countless the knights,And fifteen thousand strong the weakest bandCan number. First are those of Butentrot,The next of Misnia: enormous headsO'ertop the spine enrooted in their backs,Their shaggy bodies bristling with coarse hairLike boars; the third, of Nubles and of Blos;The legion fourth of Bruns and Esclavos;The fifth of Sorbres and Sorz; from the ErminesAnd Mors is formed the sixth; from JerichoThe seventh, and the eighth from those of Nigre.Of Gros the ninth, and from Balide-la-Fort,The legion tenth, men never good for aught.With strongest oaths the Emir swears aloudBy all Mohammed's might and body, "CarleOf France rides like a madman to his doom,For combat we shall have; recoils he not,His brow shall never more wear golden crown."Aoi.
Ten other legions are arrayed: the firstOf Canelieux—ill-visaged people, come[167]Athwart, from Valfuit; Turks the next; the thirdPersians; the fourth, Persians and Pinceneis;The fifth from Soltras come and from Avers;Englez and Ormaleis make up the sixth;The seventh scions are of Samuel's race;The eighth from Braise; Esclavers form the ninth;As for the tenth, a horde perverse that cameFrom Ociant's deserted land—a raceNot loving God the Lord; ne'er shall you hearOf viler breed: their heathen skin as hardAs iron, whence it is they need no helmsNor hauberks mailed—in battle treach'rous fiends.Aoi.
The Emir has himself ten legions armed.To form the first the giants of MalpruseWere summoned; to the second came the Huns;The Hungres made the third; Baldise-la-LungueThe fourth, and Val-Penuse the fifth; the sixthMaruse; the seventh Leuz and Astrimonies;The eighth Argoilles; Clarbone the ninth; the tenthFormed of the bearded men of Val-Fondé,A tribe that never would love God. The songs[168]Of Geste of France thus thirty legions count:A mighty host where many a trumpet blasts.Forward, like valiant knights, the Pagans ride.Aoi.
The Emir, rich and mighty lord, commandsBefore him to display his dragon-flag,The standard of Mahum and Tervagant;With it Apollo's image, evil god.Ten Canelieus about him ride, and cryThis sermon with loud voice: "Who by our GodsCraves to be saved, with the most contrite heartMust pray!" And then the Pagans low inclineTheir heads and chins, with brilliant helms bent downTo earth.—"Now, gluttons, comes your hour to die!"Cry out the French; "Confusion be your lot.This day, O God of ours, defend King Carle,Turn Thou the scale of battle to his side!"Aoi.
The Emir, great in wisdom, called his sonAnd the two kings:—"Seigneurs Barons, in front[169]Ride ye, and all my legions you shall lead;Among them only three will I retain,But of the best: The first shall be the Turks,The second of the Ormaleis composed,And third shall be the Giants of Malpruse,While those of Occiant shall near me standTo set them on King Carle and on his French.Should then the Emperor dare measure armsWith me, struck from its trunk his head shall fall—No right has he to other fate than this."Aoi.
Both armies are immense; their squadrons bright.Between the combatants nor height, nor hill,Nor vale, nor wood that shelter could afford;Foe looks on foe across the open field.—Said Baligant: "My Saracens, to horse!Ride forward to the fight!" The battle flagIs borne on high by Amboire d'Oliferne,And all shout "Precieuse!" The French exclaim:"May ye confounded be this day!" AloudRises their cry "Montjoie!" The Emperor Carle[170]His trumpets bid resound, and the olifantWhose blast 'whelms all. The Pagans say: "Carle's hostIs fair! Fierce battle shall we have and dire."Aoi.
Vast is the plain and broad the field. BeholdThose dazzling helms inlaid with gold and gems,Those shields, those coats of mail with saffron edged,Those spears and pennons rolled; hearken ye the voiceOf trumpets blowing clear and strong, and harkThe olifant's shrill blast, which sounds the charge.The Emir calls his brother, Canabeu,The King of Floredée, who rules the landAs far as Val-Sevrée, and points to Carle'sTen must'ring legions: "See the pride of FranceThe praised; amid his bearded knights how proudThe Emperor rides! O'er their hauberks streamTheir beards as white as snow upon the frost.Forsooth! These valiant warriors will strike hardWith lance and sword, and such a fight be oursAs never man has fought." Then Baligant,Urging his courser further than a man[171]Can hurl a staff, gave reasons and their proof:"Come forward, Pagans; follow where I go!"Brandishing high the shaft of his own lance,At Carle he levels fair its trenchant steel.Aoi.
When Carle the Emir sees, and with him borneThe dragon-standard, all the land o'erswarmedBy Arab warriors, save that space aloneHeld by his host, he cries with loudest voice:"Barons of France, in valor great, we know,Upon how many fields ye battled! SeeThe Pagans! Traitors vile and cowards all;Yea, all their law I count no denier worth.What care ye, lords, how vast their numbers are?Let those who wish to combat follow me!"With pointed spurs he pricks his courser's flanksAnd Tecendur four times leaped in the air.Cry out the French:—"A valiant King is this!Ride forward, Sire, not one will fail you here."Aoi.
Clear was the day and bright the sun. Both hostsResplendent, their battalions numberless;[172]The legions in the van already meetIn fight. Both Counts Rabel and GuinemanOn their fleet coursers' necks have loosed the rein!Sharply they spur, and all the Franks dash onTo deal with trenchant lance their valiant blows.Aoi.
A daring Knight is Count Rabel. With spursOf purest gold he pricks his courser's flanks,Rushing to smite Torleu the Persian King.No shield, no hauberk can such blow withstand.The golden spear went through the Pagan's heartAnd mid the brambles of the road has struckHim dead. The French cry out: "Aid us, O God!With Carle the right; ne'er shall we fail our King!"Aoi.
Guineman 'gainst the King of Leutice tilts;The Pagan's shield with painted flowers bedeckedIs shattered and his hauberk torn away.Through his heart's core the pennon of the Knight[173]Is driven, bearing death,—or laugh or weepWho may. At such a blow the French exclaim:"Barons, strike ever! Strike and be not slackAgainst the Pagan hordes; to Carle belongsThe right. With us the justice true of God!"Aoi.
Malprime upon a steed of purest whiteLeads 'gainst the serried legions of the FranksHis men. Abating not his mighty blows,Corse over corse he heaps. Cries BaligantIn front: "Ye whom my kindness nurtured long,Barons of mine, see how my son seeks CarleAnd with so many knights he measured arms;A better vassal I shall never claim;Give him the succor of your trenchant spears."On rush the Pagans at these words, and dealTheir mortal blows around. Rude is the fight!The battle marvelous and stern. None suchWas ever seen before or since that hour.Aoi.
The hosts are numberless, the warriors fierce—The encount'ring legions fighting hand to hand[174]Noblest exploits achieved. How many a lanceAsunder broken; God! How many shieldsIn pieces split, how many hauberks wrenched!Splinters of shivered armor you might seeStrew all the field, and verdant tender grassVermillioned o'er by streams of human gore!The Emir to his people calls anew:"Barons strike down these Christian people!"—HardAnd long the fight embittered by revengeAnd rage. Ne'er seen before nor will be seenAgain such combat.—To the death they fight.Aoi.
The Emir to his men:—"Strike, Pagans, yeFor this alone have come. Dames sweet and fairShall be your guerdon; honors, and domainsI promise all."—The Saracens respond:"To serve you all we ought."—So hard they fightThat in the hot affray they lose their spears:Anon a thousand flashing swords and more,Are drawn, a bloody slaughter to achieve.He who stood on that field, true battle saw.Aoi.
The King exhorts his French: "Beloved SeigneursAnd trusty Knights, ye many battles foughtFor me, won many a realm, defeated Kings!Full well I know, rich guerdons have ye earned;My wealth, lands, blood I owe you. Now to-dayYour sons, your brothers and your kin avengeWho fell in Ronceval but yesternight!Well know ye mine the right, with them the wrong."The French reply:—"Yea, sire, you speak the truth."The twenty thousand knights who march with CarlePledge with one soul their fealty. Dire distress,E'en death, shall cause not one of these to failThe Emperor; not on lances they rely,But with the sword in hand wage doughty strife.Wondrous the raging battle. Stern the fight.Aoi.
The brave Malprime has pressed his steed acrossThe field, and carried death among the French.[176]Duke Naimes glanced proudly toward him, and as knightIn battle fearless met him in career;He strikes ... tears off his buckler's leathern top,The hauberk cuts in twain, drives through the heartThe yellow pennon of the spear, and strikesHim dead mid seven hundred other knights.Aoi.
King Canabeus, the Emir's brother, spursHis courser on; his crystal-hilted swordUnsheathes, and deals Naimes' princely helm a blowWhich splits the crest in twain; the trenchant bladeSevers the five strong bands which to his headFast bound it; now not worth a denier wasThe steel-mailed hood; down to the flesh the casqueSheer cleft—a fragment falls upon the earth.The blow was great; the Duke, astounded, reeled,And would have fallen but for God's help. He clasps[177]His courser's neck, and should the Pagan dealAnother stroke, the noble Duke has breathedHis last; but to his help comes Carle of France.Aoi.
In the Duke Naimes' brave heart what agony!Once more the Pagan raised his arm to strike,But now King Carle cries:—"Coward, wretch! This blowBrings thee ill luck!"—And valiantly the KingRushed on, crushed 'gainst his heart the buckler, rentThe hauberk's top; dead-struck the heathen KingFalls on the ground ... empty the saddle rests.Aoi.
Deep grief the Emperor felt when there he sawDuke Naimes sore-wounded and the verdant grassStreamed o'er by his clear blood, and thereuponThis counsel spoke:—"Fair Naimes, ride close by me;The wretch who brought you to this cruel fightHas breathed his last, his body by my lance[178]Transfixed."—The Duke:—"In you my trust, O sire!If e'er I live, with knightly service shallMy arm requite this deed!"—Then side by sideIn faith and love, with twenty thousand knightsThey march. And none of these or flinch or yield.Aoi.
The Emir rides across the field, in hasteTo deal a blow against Count Guineman.Athwart his heart he breaks the buckler whiteAnd tears the hauberk's sides apart, disjointsTwo ribs and hurls him from his courser, dead;Then takes the life of Gebain and Lorant,And of Richard the old, a Norman Lord.The Pagans cry: "Precieuse deserves its name!Barons! strike on, Precieuse will save us all!"Aoi.
A noble sight, those knights of Araby,Of Occiant, of Argoille and of Bascle!Spears intermix, death to repel or give.Nathless the French recoil not from the strife.[179]On either side they fall heaped high. Till eveThe storm of battle raged. Meanwhile the knightsOf France upon that day bore rueful loss;Nor stayed the carnage till the day was done.Aoi.
French and Arabian warriors emulateIn valor each the other. Ashen shaftsBreak from their brazen heads. Whoso then sawThose shields defaced, who heard those hauberks whiteResound with blows, this dinning clash of shields'Gainst helmets grinding, saw those knights and menFall and with dying shrieks roll on the earth,Of greatest anguish could the memory keep;So fierce this battle raged. The Emir callsUpon Apollo, Tervagan, uponMahum: "Till now I served you well, O Gods!And I will have an image made for each,Molten of purest gold [if ye but help]!"Before him then his favorite GemalfinAppears. He brings ill news. "Sire BaligantThis day brings you mishap; Malprime, your sonHas fall'n! Your brother Canabeus is dead.[180]Two Franks the glory have of their defeat,One, Carle the Emperor, I deem, so vastHis fame, his air as Marchis grand, his beardAs white as April blossom!" At these wordsThe Emir's helm declines, his visage sinksLow on his breast. Such is his grief, he thinksDeath nears him. Calling Jangleu d'ultremer,Aoi.
The Emir said:—"Jangleu, step forth; most wiseArt thou, thy knowledge great; thy counsel e'erI followed; what the chance of victoryFor Franks or Arabs deemest thou?" JangleuResponds:—"Death, Baligant, hangs o'er your head.Ne'ermore your gods can save you; Carle is proud,And valiant are his men. Ne'er lived a raceSo strong in battle; yet call up your knightsOf Occiant, Enfruns and Arabs, TurksAnd Giants. Do your duty with all speed."Aoi.
The Emir spreads out to the breeze his beardAs hawthorn blossom white; betide what may,[181]Escape he will not seek, puts to his lipsA trumpet clear, whose blast the Pagans hark,And fast their cohorts rally on the field.They bray and neigh, the men of Occiant,While those of Arguile yelp as curs, and chargeThe Franks so rashly, they mow down and breakTheir thickest ranks, and by this blowThrow seven thousand dead upon the field.Aoi.
To Count Ogier is dastardy unknown;No better vassal buckled hauberk on.When the French legions broken thus he saw,He called Tierri Duke of Argonne, GeffreiD'Anjou and Jozeran the Count, and spokeThese haughty words to Carle:—"Behold our menBy Pagans slaughtered! May God ne'er permitYour brow to wear its crown if unrevengedYour shame remains!" None dared reply a word,But spurring hard their steeds, with loosened reinsThey rush in fury 'gainst the Pagan ranksAnd strike the foes where'er they can be met.Aoi.
Hard strikes Carlemagne the king, hard strikes Duke Naimes,Ogier de Dannemark, Geffrei d'Anjou,Who bears the royal pennon. But o'er allOgier de Dannemark puts forth his might;He pricks his courser, drops the rein and fallsUpon the Pagan who the Dragon holds,So fiercely, that both Dragon and the King'sOwn flag is crushed before him on the spot.When Baligant beholds his gonfalon fallAnd Mahum's flag defenseless, in his heartSprings quick the thought, wrong may be on his sideAnd right on Carle's. The Pagans [waver now].The Emperor Carle around him calls his (Franks):"Barons, in God's name, do you stand by me?"Respond the French:—"To ask is an offense.Accurst be he who deals not glorious strokes!"Aoi.
The day wears on and vesper draweth nigh.Christians and Pagans, sword in hand, engage;[183]And valiant are their chiefs, nor mindless theyOf battle cries:—"Precieuse!" the Emir shouts,And Carle:—"Montjoie!" the glorious sign. Each knowsThe other by the clear sonorous voice,And 'mid the field encountering, gives and takesFierce blows. Each massy shield receives the shock,And each beneath the boss is cloven in twainBy the strong lance; each hauberk's sides are rent,But the keen steel in neither reached the flesh;The horse-girths burst and let the saddles fall.Dropped to the earth both kings, both to their feetQuick springing, dauntlessly unsheathed their swords.And now the mortal combat will not ceaseTill Carle or Baligant has fallen in death.Aoi.
Carle of sweet France is brave, but the Emir feelsBefore him neither fear nor dread. Both wieldTheir naked swords and mighty thrusts exchange.[184]The shields, of wood and leather multifold,Are rent, the nails torn out, the bosses split;Each at the other's hauberk aims his blows.Both combat breast to breast; the showering sparksWrap both their helms in fire: no end can beTill one or other, vanquished, owns his wrong.Aoi.
The Emir said: "King Carle, bethink thee yet;Take better counsel with thy heart, and showRemorse. Full well I know, by thee my sonWas slain, thou broughtest ruin through my land.Become my man, I will restore [in fief]This land [to thee], and to the East, but serveMe well." And Carle: "Great shame were that to me!To Heathens I can give no peace nor love....Receive the law our God revealed; acceptThe faith of Christ.... For e'er my love is thine,If thou believe in God, the Almighty King."Said Baligant: "Ill words are these of thine:[Far better die by the keen edge of sword."]Aoi.
The mighty Emir with a giant's strengthSmites Carle upon the helm of burnished steel,Which splits in twain beneath the ponderous blow,Cuts through the silky hair, shears from the scalpFully the breadth of a man's palm and more,Baring the skull. Carle staggers, nearly falls,But God willed not that he should die or yield.Saint Gabriel, with eager flight once moreDescends, demanding:—"What ails thee, great King?"Aoi.
When Carle the Angel's heavenly accent hears,All thought or dread of death forsakes his soul,And in him springs again his former strength.The Emir by the royal sword of FranceIs struck, his helm all bright with gems is rent,His cloven skull pours out the brain, his faceIs cleft to the very roots of his white beard:Dead falls the Pagan past recovery.[186]Then shouts the King his rallying cry, "Montjoie!"Hearing his shout, Duke Naimes hastes up, and bringsThe charger Tecendur for Carle the greatTo mount. The Pagans turn their backs—God willsThey should not stay. The Franks have their desires.Aoi.
The Pagans fly—such is the will of God;Carle leads the French in the pursuit. Thus spakeThe King:—"Seigneurs, the time is come to giveVent to just hatred, and your anguished heartsAssuage. This very morn I saw your eyesStreaming with tears." They cry:—"Our vengeance now!"And vying with each other in exploits,They deal their mighty blows. But few escape.Aoi.
Amidst the sultry heat and clouds of dustThe Pagans rousèd, by their foes harassed,[187]Flee far for Sarraguce. To her high towerAscends Queen Bramimunde, where, seeing thusThe routed Arabs fly, she calls her priestsAnd canons, subjects to false law, by GodNe'er loved: their crowns no holy tonsure wear.She cries aloud:—"Aid us, Mahum! Oh aid!O gentle King! Already vanquished areOur men, the Emir slain in shameful death!"On hearing this, Marsile turned to the wallHis covered face, and amid bitter tearsHis life departed. Soon the eager fiendsBore off to judgment his sin-burthened soul.Aoi.
The Pagans all are slain [or put to flight];Carle wins the day. The gates of SarraguceAre stormed, and well he knows, defense is vain.He takes the city. All the Christian hostPour in, and there repose their limbs this night.The King with snow-white beard is filled with pride:Queen Bramimunde gives up the citadels;Ten of these forts are large, and fifty small.Well helped are they whom God Almighty aids.Aoi.
The sunny day had passed, the shades of nightHad fallen; bright the moonlight; all the starsIn heaven shone. Carle ruled in Sarraguce.Unto one thousand men he gave commandTo search throughout the city's synagoguesAnd mosques for all their idols and graved signsOf gods—these to be broken up and crushedBy ax and iron mallet he ordains.Nor sorcery nor falsehood left. King CarleBelieves in God and serves him faithfully.Then bishops bless the fountains, leading upThe Heathens to the blest baptismal Font.If one perchance resist the King, condemnedIs he to die, or hanged, or burnt, or slain.More than one hundred thousand are baptizedTrue Christians; but not so Queen Bramimunde:A captive shall she go unto sweet FranceAnd be converted by the King through love.Aoi.
Night passes; dawn appears. Carle fortifiesThe towers of Sarraguce. One thousand Knights[189]Of valor proved are left to guard the townIn the Emperor's name. With escort strong he rides,Followed by Bramimunde a captive, yetCommands that naught but kindness she receive.In proud and joyous triumph they return;Through Nerbune passes the victorious host,Unto Burdele, the city great and fair.There on the altar of the Baron SaintSevrin, Carle lays the olifant filled fullOf marks and gold, where pilgrims view it still.Passing upon broad skiffs across Girunde,To Blaive, he bears the bodies of RollándAnd Olivier, his noble Compagnon,With the Archbishop good and brave. BeneathWhite monuments he hath the lords entombedAt Saint-Romain. Here those three Barons lie....The French to God and to his saints, once moreCommend them. Carle anew through mounts and valesProceeds, nor will he stop until in Aix.Fast rides he till he nears the marble stepsOf his great palace; and as soon as reachedIts tower, by messengers he summons up[190]Baiviers and Saisnes, Loherencs and Frisons,Allemans, Burguignons, Normans, Poitevins,Bretons, of France the wisest men; for nowGanelon's trial shall have no delay.Aoi.
From Spain at last the Emperor has returnedTo Aix, the noblest seat of France; ascendsHis palace, enters in the stately hall.—Now comes to greet him the fair [lady] Aude,And asks the King:—"Where is Rollánd the chiefWho pledged his faith to take me for his wife?"Sore-pained, heart-broken, Carle, with weeping eyes,Tears his white beard.—"Ah! sister well beloved,Thou askest me of one who is no more.A worthier match I give thee in exchange;Loewis it is. I can not better say.He is my son, and will protect my realms."Aude answers:—"To my ear these words are strange.May God, His saints, His angels, all forfend[192]That, if Rollánd lives not, I still should live."Her color fades, she falls prone at the feetOf Carlemagne—dead ... God's mercy on her soul!Barons of France mourn her with pitying tears.Aoi.
Such was the end of Aude the beautiful.The King, in hope 'tis but a swoon, with tearsAnd pity taking both her hands, upliftsHer form; the head upon the shoulders sinks.As soon as Carle knows it is death indeed,Four countesses he summons, bids them bearIn haste the Lady to a nunnery.——All night they watched the body, and at mornBeside a shrine gently she was entombedWith highest honors by the King's command.Aoi.
The Emperor is once more at Aix. There standsAmid the city 'fore the palace gate,In iron chains, the traitor Ganelon.His hands are fastened to a stake with thongsOf deer-skin by the sergeants who then beat[193]His body well with staves and heavy cords.Such treatment was his true desert. He waitsHis coming doom, in agony of soul.Aoi.
Written it is in ancient Geste of FranceThat Carle then summoned men from all his lands,Who met at Aix's Chapelle. A solemn feastIt was; some say the Baron Saint Silvestre's.This day began the plea and historyOf Ganelon who wove the treason's plot.The Emperor bade them drag him to his bar.Aoi.
"Seigneurs Barons," said to them Carle the King,"Judge Ganelon according to the law.—Among my host with me to Spain he came;His craft lost twenty thousand of my Franks;My nephew, whom ye nevermore shall see,And Olivier, the brave and courteous Knight.The traitor sold my brave twelve Peers for gain."Then Ganelon:—"May I be cursed ere IDeny. Of wealth and honors had [Rollánd][194]Deprived me, and for this, his loss and deathI wrought, but treason none I will confess."Respond the French:—"On this we counsel take."Aoi.
In presence of the King stands GanelonWith bearing hardy, florid countenance;Were he but loyal, as a Baron trueHis mien. Upon the French and judges heHas cast a glance, and on his thirty kinWho 'round him stand; then with firm voice exclaims:"Barons! Now hear me all, for love of God!I to the Emperor's host belonged, and servedHim ever in all faith and love. Rollánd,His nephew, hatred bore to me, and fainHad doomed my days to torture and to death.As message-bearer I to King MarsileWas sent, wisdom alone my shield and guard;I gave defiance to Rollánd the bold,To Olivier and to their comrades all:By Carle and all his Barons this was heard.Revenge this was, but treason it was none."Reply the French:—"All this we well shall weigh."Aoi.
On seeing the great plea was to commence,Thirty good Knights were called by GanelonOut of his kin, and one among them makesA speech all others hark: 'tis PinabelOf Castel de Sorence, of greatest skillIn words, and apt with reason plausible;Withal, a vassal brave to guard his arms.Thus to him Ganelon:—"In you my trustI place; my life from death, my name from shamePreserve!"—Said Pinabel:—"Thou shalt be saved.Dare one French Knight condemn thee to be hanged,And would the Emperor make us both to meetIn combat, my good sword will his rash wordBelieve."—And at his feet falls Ganelon.Aoi.
Baiviers, Saines, Poitevins, Normans and FrenchIn council met;—Allemans, Tiedeis in greatArray. Those from Alverne most courteous proveAnd show more kindness unto Pinabel.[196]One to the others said:—"To leave this pleaRight would it be, and pray Carl'magne, this onceTo pardon Ganelon who, from this day,Will serve his lord with truer faith and love.Rollánd lies in his grave; nor wealth, nor goldRestores him to your eyes. This cruel fightIs folly."—All the Knights approve, save one,Tierri, a brother of the Lord Geffrei.Aoi.
To Carle his Barons come again, and say:"We pray you, sire, acquit Count Ganelon;Then will he serve you with true faith and love.Grant him his life which springs from noble race.Rollánd lies in his grave; ne'er shall we seeHim more, nor treasures e'er can bring him back."Exclaimed the King: "Vile traitors are ye all!"Aoi.
Now, seeing all will fail him, o'er Carle's eyesAnd features gloom descends; by grief o'erwhelmedHe cries: "Unhappy that I am!" Then stood[Tierri], the brother of Geffrei, the Duke[197]D'Anjou, before the King. Thin, light of frame,Hair raven-black, [face] somewhat brown of hue,In height nor tall nor short; with courtesyHe spake thus to the Emp'ror: "Fair sire King,Be not cast down. That I have served you wellEre this, you know. 'Tis my ancestral rightTo sit among the judges of the plea.However guilty was Rollánd againstCount Ganelon, his duty to the KingShould have restrained his hate. A treason foulGanelon wrought against Rollánd; forswornIn perjury tow'rd you, he lost himself.For all his crimes his death I here demand,Death by the cord; his body to the dogsBe thrown away—the perjurer's just doom.Should any of his kin deny the wordsI speak, this sword of mine girt to my sideWill make them good."—All cry: "Well have you said."Aoi.
Then toward the King advances Pinabel;Tall, strong and swift, and brave. Strike he but once,No second blow need follow; to the King[198]He said: "Sire, unto you belongs this plea.Command these clamors to be hushed. There standsTierri who now his judgment has pronounced.The lie I give him and to fight defy!"With this his right hand glove of deer-skin gaveUnto the King who said: "I must receiveGood pledges." Of his kin then thirty knightsWere given as legal sureties of his pledge."I also give my pledge," the Emperor said,"And have them guarded safe till judgment pass."Aoi.
When Tierri sees that now the fight is near,He gives the Emperor his right hand glove.To him the sureties Carle himself provides,Bids that they bring four benches to the placeWhereon the combatants shall sit. The termsAre judged by all the others as most fair.Ogier de Dannemarche was chosen to ruleThe lists. Then for their steeds and arms both called.Aoi.
Both knights now made them ready for the fight,Were shriven, assoiled, and blessed; a mass have heard,Communion have received, and richest almsBequeathed to monasteries.—Before strikingThey both appear.—Gold spurs their heels adorn;They wear white hauberks light and strong; bright helmsClasp on their heads, and gold hilt swords are girtUpon their thighs, and to their necks are boundStrong quartered shields; they wield in each right handA trenchant sword, and on fleet steeds they mount;Then melt in tears one hundred thousand knightsWho for Rollánd's sake wish Tierri well.Yea—but God knows what way the thing will end.Aoi.
Beyond the town of Aix a plain extends:And here our Barons will the combat try.Most valiant knights are both; the steeds they rideAre swift and stout; with spurs in flanks, and freedOf rein, they dash.—The warriors all their might[200]And skill unite to strike the surest blow.Bucklers beneath the shock are torn and crushed,White hauberks rent in shreds, asunder burstsEach courser's girth, the saddles, turning, fall.One hundred thousand men look weeping on....Aoi.
Both knights leap on the earth, and, quick as light,Stand face to face.—Strong, fiery PinabelAnd Tierri for each other seek. Their steedsAre fled.—But their gold-hilted swords they wield;And on the helms of steel they shower such blowsAs rashed the thongs. Loudly the knights lament,And Carle exclaims:—"Show thou the right, O God!"Aoi.
Cried Pinabel:—"Tierri, surrender thou!Thy vassal I will be in faith and love,And to thy pleasure will I yield my wealth;[201]But let the King forgive Count Ganelon!"Tierri replied:—"Thy offers all are vain;Vile treason were it such a pact to make;But God shall judge us and make plain the right."Aoi.
Then Tierri spake:—"I hold thee, Pinabel,As Baron true, great, strong, of handsome mold;Thy peers acknowledge thee as valiant knight;Well, let this combat cease, between the KingAnd thee a covenant I will strive to make.On Ganelon such justice shall be doneThat future ages shall record the doom."They grasp again their swords and hewEach other's gold-encrusted helm with rageSo rash that sparkling fires spurt through the air.No power will now disjoint the combatants:The death of one can only close the strife.Aoi.
No braver man than Pinabel.—Such blowsHe deals on Tierri's helmet of Provence,That the sparks fly in showers, and, falling, set[202]The grass ablaze. Then aiming at his foeHis keen-edged brand, down to the brow cuts throughHis helm; the blade glides down across his face,And plows his right cheek with a deep red gash;Unto his stomach is the haubert rent,But God protects him, and averts his death.Aoi.
Tierri, on seeing blood gush from his browAnd tinge the grassy field, strikes PinabelOn his steel-burnished helmet, and cuts throughTo the nose-plate. His head is cleft in twainAnd gushes forth the brain. This fatal blowGives Pinabel his death, and ends the fight.The French exclaim:—"O wondrous work of God!Full right it is that Ganelon be hangedWith all his kin who sureties were for him!"Aoi.
Tierri had won, and on the battle-fieldThe Emperor Carle arrived with an escort[203]Of forty Barons,—Naimes the Duke, OgierDe Dannemarche, Geffrei d'Anjou, WillalmesDe Blaive.—In close embrace the King has pressedTierri, and with his mantle's sables wipedThe warrior's face; then lays his furs asideAnd on his shoulders others are arrayed.Meanwhile the knight, by friendly hands disarmed,On an Arabian mule is placed, and soThis valorous Baron full of joy returnsTo Aix.—Amid the place they all dismount,And now the sureties must abide their doom.Aoi.
Carlemagne around him calls his counts and dukes:"What counsel give ye touching those I kept,Unto this plea who came for GanelonThemselves sworn hostages for Pinabel?"Respond the French:—"Let none of them survive!"—Carle then commands a road-keeper, Basbrun:[204]"Hang them all up on yon accursed tree!By this gray beard of mine, I swear, if oneEscape, thou diest but a villain's death!"—Answered the man:—"What else but to obey?"—Then by a hundred sergeants roughly seized,Those thirty men are hanged.—Who man betraysDestroys himself and others drags to death.Aoi.
And now have turned away Baiviers, Allemans,Poitevins, Bretons and Normans; but moreThan all, the French advise that GanelonShould die a death of torture. Then they tieWith cords his hands and feet. Four sergeants bringFour wild and fiery destriers, made madBy a mare 'mid the field. A fearful endFor Ganelon; bound between them, limb from limbIs rent away, each nerve and muscle stretchedAnd torn. The clear blood streams upon the green.Thus perished Ganelon by a felon's death....Traitors of evil deeds must never boast.Aoi.
When the Emperor Carle had wreaked his full revenge,He called the bishops from the realms of France,And from Baviere, and those of Alemaigne:"Now in my [court] have I a captive, sprungFrom noble race. Such sermons has she heard,So good examples seen, she will believeIn the true God, and Christian faith embrace.Baptize her so that He may save her soul;God-mothers choose her of our noblest dames."With a great company the Baths at AixWere thronged, and soon before the holy FontsThe Queen received the name of Juliane:Henceforth a Christian holding fast the Truth.Aoi.
But when the Emperor had made completeHis justice and his heavy wrath assuaged,And brought Queen Bramimunde to Christian faith,The day was over and the night had fall'n.The King sought rest within his vaulted room.Saint Gabriel brought him word from God and said:"Carle, of thy empire summon all the hostsFor swiftest marching to the land of Bire;So shalt thou succor King Vivien in Imphe,The city compassed by the Pagan foe.The Christians look to thee and cry for help."—Will has he none to go, the King, but moans:—"O, God," quoth he, "so troublous is my life!"—Whereat he weeps, and tears his hoary beard.Aoi.
Thus endeth here the Geste Turoldus sang.
FOOTNOTES
1 Molted. Because in that condition, better for hunting.
2 Pallies. A square piece of silk on which the knights used
to sit. (From Pallium).
3 Tables. In the romances of the Middle Ages the game of
tables means tric-trac, chess, checkers, etc.
5 A sort of undergarment made of gold and silk brocade
worn in time of war under the coat of mail, and in time of
peace under the mantle of fur. In the latter case it was of silk.
{209]
GLOSSARY.
Of places and words which may present some difficulty as regards origin
and meaning on account of their ancient orthography. For more complete
information see Léon Gautier's seventh edition of the text.
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