SCENE: A wild upland open to the sky. Hill-slopes with scattered firs. The ground is covered with gorse-bushes; knee-high, in golden bloom. The last shreds of fog drift off over the moors to the left and vanish, reevaeling far-away the gleaming towers of the Castle of ETARRE. Full morning. AVRAN, BALARIN, and MARIS stand above the helpless body of PELLEAS. AVRAN Enough of drudge and drag: here let him lie. The pricking gorse has played an eager bride And clapped him welcome in her unwelcome arms. BALARIN A weary work fulfilling punishment! Too often in the scourger's thankless toil The swinging lash flies back, and with shrewd blow Assails th' inflicting hand: so is't with us, Who strain against yon living weight of mail With bloodless fingers, and with stumbling feet Through country-side accurst scarce feel our way; Small glory have we got us therewithal. This is our fame: to counter with a knight Who will not lift his spear against our shields, A mad-cap creature in whose brain there sits The bird of folly. Truth, a mighty task. AVRAN And here, within the growing heat of morn, We come like serfs in secret burial, Dragging a living corpse beneath the sky. Enough, enough! this is no food for knights; Our very horses would revolt the taste And eye their masters with a keen disdain. MARIS There is a feast which no knight may refuse If he be bid to a table; all that owe Allegiance to an overlord must eat The meat of service, drink the willing wine Of fealty, whereby true knighthood lives. You know from whom you draw your honour's strength; She laid upon us bond of her commands And bade us from the belly of his steed Unbind this knight and over briar and thorn Drag out his body till the breath be faint: So should his courage vanish like a dream, And that mad frequency of his desire Be staid to abstinence. Up! drag him on. AVRAN Then snare the sun and strangle out its heat. Go, draw cool shadows out of distant trees And wake the winds that sleep upon the hills. Call back our bodies' breath that's taken flight At sight of labour, like a bonded wretch. MARIS Then let him lie, and heaven rest his soul. BALARIN The mighty Pelleas, the rumoured knight Well proven in the midmost toil of war, How fares he now, the hero of the lance, The champion such as men have never seen? AVRAN In curious wise beneath the open sun He dreams of battle, while the springing gorse Grows up unheard around his silent helm. BALARIN But when his bruisèd limbs have found the balm Of first recovery, he'll rise and seek To draw the shattered ships of his emprise To greater battles over windier deeps. AVRAN 'Twere well to slay him here and quench his soul. Else will the spirit that indwells his breast Grow wings once more and fly above our heads Like loosened hawk against the fleeing hare. MARIS We may not slay him, tho' 'twere mercy's hand Which dealt that stroke. AVRAN Then will he, like a midge, In vast persistence make our lives a curse Of tiny wounds and quick annoyances. MARIS 'Twill prove him small avail to prick and sting: The midge, if he return too often, learns That wings so small can yet be clipped and crushed And tiny body caught and buffeted. AVRAN 'Twere well to hold it longer to its cage; Yet here it has its freedom and the world Wherein to fly abroad, and lo, it lies Ungrateful, without sign of thanks or praise. Fly warrior, we salute thee! Noisy gnat, Midge of the marshes, fare thee well! BALARIN All hail, Chit-sparrow; sit i' the bush and braggart sing; O valiant bird! O wren with eagle's soul! An owl that flies in daytime without eyes. [BALARIN and AVRAN depart across the hill. MARIS follows, but hesitates and turns back.] MARIS [standing above the body of PELLEAS] Too many times, far, far too many times In this same outcome of the selfsame deed Have we prevailed above you, dragged you off, Railed over you and spoken out our curse Of bitterness against your foolish ways And ears forever thirsting for abuse. Too many times our lips have brewed this draught And mixed the gall of laughter with farewell, A honeyed mead in truth, a stirrup cup To speed you in your folly. Change your ways! But if you fall once more within our hands, Expect no better fare from us, nor yet From her that sent us, whom your seeking eyes Shall never look upon again. [PELLEAS moves slightly.] PELLEAS Etarre! MARIS Yes, 'tis Etarre! the one sweet word forlorn That lies upon your lips like magic seal, Like stroke of sorcery and mystic spell Awak'ning fever in your blood and brain That iron may not chill, nor dungeon tame! [He goes off. Silence.] PELLEAS [moaning] O world! O disillusion! [In a sudden pa**ionate outburst] Black despair, Come, cover me with all the shrouds of night! [Silence. FERGUS, attendant on Pelleas, comes over the hill to the right.] FERGUS I marked them how they stood upon this hill In final converse of an evil deed, Here, here upon these trackless, silent slopes Within the yellow reaches of the gorse Lies Pelleas on prison-bed of thorns, Bound with the glowing fetters of the sun. O misery, that in his mind should dwell Submission unto knaves, the lowered shaft, The sunken sword, the battle void and thin. Alas the name that rang in other days! The knight whose deeds dwelt ever on the lips Of others' praises -- how with single hand He smote the robbers of the woods and hills With keen destruction -- how within the lists His spear was fire, a gathered shaft of light, His battle-cry the voices of the storm. And now his name is overset with growth Of dark abuse and shameful calumny, And those that should have reeled and sunk to earth In red disaster and dark swoon of sense, These, even these, mean varlets, thieves, and rogues, Drag Pelleas through upland gorse and way And throw him like a carcase for the birds! [He casts about him in the gorse.] In vain: in vain. Oh, would that eyes were made To pierce the barriers which hide their goal, Or cleave like lightning in a darkened sky, Bringing their own fierce strength wherewith to see. Here, somewhere here, he lies in bitterness With broken mail and battered helmet thrown, A useless tool discarded from the hands Of little workers fashioning misdeeds. Etarre! Etarre! accursèd beauteous face That shines like fire of madness in his eyes And makes his courage falter like a flame; Etarre! Etarre! from heaven's utmost height May God's unfailing anger strike you down And burn that body like a blackened tree! May you be fire engulfed with water-floods, May you be embers smouldered into d**h, May you be ashes blown across the air! I hate you! who are poison in my lips; Within my mouth your name runs like a curse, A thing to rail against with tongue and teeth. [He comes upon PELLEAS.] O mighty master -- fallen, fallen, fallen, See, I am here, your servant, nigh at hand To raise you up, to loose your helm and mail And with fresh water lave your sunken eyes And wet your thirsty lips and cheeks and hair. [PELLEAS moves slightly, groaning.] Midway between the waking sense he swoons. Ah, master, fallen master, turn and speak! PELLEAS Leave me. Depart. I have no wish for you. Go, bring me d**h to minister my needs. FERGUS d**h's a false friend, a thief within your tents; He'll stab you in your slumber. Cast him out! [FERGUS has been busy stooping above Pelleas. He busies himself in loosening the armour while he speaks.] PELLEAS I'll have no other servant: bring me d**h. FERGUS [loosening the helmet] d**h's a grim army laying endless siege Against the living fortress of the soul. Endure, endure; beat back the pressing foe, Lift up again your shield above the walls In stern defiance. See, I raise you up. PELLEAS [in FERGUS' arms] Leave me, ah, leave me here. My broken strength Is fainter than a sunset wind, my mind Is dry and empty. -- Do not make me live, But leave me, leave me here; Etarre -- I saw her not, nor heard her voice, nor felt Her anger go across me like a rain. God knows, such rain were welcome to my lips! Her anger is more sweet than other's praise, Her voice is like a wind within the grain, A moving swell of wave-like melody. FERGUS [raising PELLEAS to his feet] Her voice is like the winter moon half seen Across the other shoulder, magical -- a curse! PELLEAS Have you come hither mocking at my grief, To cry before me words against Etarre And prick my sorrow into festered rage? No, leave me, leave me: what avails your heed? I may not look upon her eyes again! She will not see me, will not grant me speech; Her wretched knights perform her word afar, And cast me from her. Oh, world, world, What cruelty there lies within your breast To poison all the milk whereat we s**! We are the children of your hate, conceived In some dark moment of false pa**ion, born In anguish of repentance, things accursed For whom you have no mother-love, no care, No joy if we be happy, no regret If we be clothed in sorrow and in grief. FERGUS Each man, if he be strong, can take the world Within the grasping hollows of his hand And shape anew the image of his will. There is no knight of all this country wide Can sit his steed unshaken in the lists Against your onset, none that can maintain A helm unshorn, and armour una**ailed. What runes are carven by an evil hand Within the iron of your spirit? Wake, Throw off the clutch of sleep, the grasp of dreams, And blow the wraith of magic into mist Of idle vapour. Ah, if I were you, My lance should smite the laughter of your foes, My wrath should strike them like an angry sea, My vengeance scatter them like autumn leaves! Ride, ride against them! Snap their strength in twain! Go like a curse across this evil land And leave behind you weeping in the halls And wail of women seeking 'mid the slain For their departed lords: and she, the shining snake That sits enfolded in your changèd heart, She, even she, whose castle holds these lands, Etarre, the witch of evil, let her die. PELLEAS What, is your service changed to blackest gall? Is all your heart tormented like your speech With envious canker? O ungrateful task To lift from earth the children of the dust And give the toiling creatures of the plough High freedom in a servitude of love. Nay, who shall give the oxen of the field The battle-steed's high temper, who shall place A soul within the body of a slave, And waken knighthood stifled in the serf? FERGUS With no sweet ointment of forgiving love Will I anoint the heads of those that feed Their starving wits on hatred and foul thoughts. To them that do you wrong I bear one love, The love to see their naked bodies hang From windy branches, and their vulture necks Engirdled with the swaying, clinging noose. PELLEAS God grant you never set your feet within The holy circle of knighthood! -- Take me hence. For I will wait until my body's harm Be grown to match my soul's serenity, The high security of my resolve. Then shall I find me other ways to seek My lady's favour, win her angry heart To softer mood of loving. FERGUS Yet your words Are greater than your strength. How would you walk Through upland gorse and rough unlevelled way? I cannot bear you far, tho' I am fain My back would seek the burden. PELLEAS Search and say If with your eyes you mark my loosened steed Among the heather ranging; for they came And bore me bound thereto. You see him not? Go, search the distance with quick feet and bring Him hither straight; he has not wandered far. FERGUS Rest here in quiet till I come again And wait in patience for my sure return. [He departs.] [PELLEAS stands staring before him in silence.] PELLEAS I would I were as changeless as the sun Who sinks each day into the nether-mist And on the morrow mounts above the dawn In light undimmed; but I with shaken soul Survey the darkness, and with faltering step Go down into the countries of the night, Not knowing if within another East My eyes shall look upon the risen day. All, all is dark: the hell-pits of despair Gape ever at my feet. Where leads the way That brings me to the daylight of her eyes, The dawn which is her presence, and the world Which is her body's grace, her beauty's orb Of circled wonder? Barred and double barred! There is no oaken shaft can break this port, No twisted hook to catch the bolt aside. [Silence.] O sérene sun, alone and pitiless, How mocking is the glitter of thy beams! Meseems thou art the laughter of the world Made visible, contemptuous disdain Wherewith all nature frames the race of man. O shadow stretched before me on the ground, What thing art thou, with what fidelity Art thou my steadfast comrade? Is't thy wish That binds thee, or a dread necessity? Art thou my soul, an unsubstantial thing Knit to me while the sun of life shall last? The sun's a mockery, and life a lure! Go! I release thee from thy servitude; Thou canst not love me who am no man's friend. Here in the world I stand alone. Go forth, My soul, my shadow; seek a happier land And leave this wretched body to fulfil Unequal combat with a grudging fate And so go down to d**h, all purposeless. [He becomes aware of GAWAINE approaching.] What knight is this that stands upon the hill? Is this some foe to plague my restless life, Some novel torment wrought against my love? He moves alone, an armoured knight, afoot Within these reaches of untrodden wild. How came he here? Why moves he without steed In painful toil beneath his armour's press? [GAWAINE enters.] GAWAINE Long have I sought you, wayfaring alone. In visionary speech with three, I gained Strange knowledge and strange biddings to fulfil. PELLEAS Knight, if on wrathful deed your steps be turned, Let not your pride so wander from its ways That it o'erstride itself and seek the dark Of high self-confidence and vaunting word. Fulfil your bidding, add your little stroke Of evil action, yet at heart know well By no necessity of fallen strength I yield my honour to your lesser sword. GAWAINE You shall not find the hungry bird of hate Upon my shield engraven, with fierce claws Tearing the world asunder. PELLEAS Are you not Of them that loathe me at my lady's will And their own coward hearts' high jealousy? GAWAINE I am of Arthur's court. I come in need To succour knighthood, as our king enjoins Upon the glorious order of his knights. I know not who you are nor with what wrong Pent up by men's ill-will and jealous hate. Yet three there were who spoke in visioned speech And by their power on heaven's high elements Conveyed my hither. PELLEAS O belovèd sound, The speech of knighthood in this wretched land, The light of honour risen in the dark Of shameless men and unrepentant deeds! Pelleas I am: my spear has held the prize In many tourneys made in many lands. Much have I heard and loved your noble king. The name of Arthur is a silver star Of truth and equity; in faultless strength The sword of chivalry gleams there aloft, A vision unto men, a creed for faith. GAWAINE And I am Gawaine, of the king's high court, Come hither from the walls of Camelot. The fame of Pelleas has pierced the dark Of distance, with the light of far renown For tourney's wreath, and battle's blameless meed. Our noble order knows no nobler knight. What fateful force of men iniquitous Or deed self-willed has brought you, armed and lone, To stand upon the broom's flower-gilded heights And gaze across the stretch of wind and sun On warring wastes where no man's hand is set Compulsive o'er the unwilling growth of fields? PELLEAS Alas, this tale runs back among the years And far beyond the present sight attains Its first awakening. GAWAINE Yet would I hear. I seek adventure and I strive to bring Knighthood's redemption into creedless lands. PELLEAS On word there is, which shuts and opens wide The doors of all my deeds and all my thoughts: It is a sign wherewith to clothe my soul In courage linked from bright security; It is a charmèd ring, a circled rune, A treasure-stone of wizardry -- Etarre! GAWAINE The name I know not, but am fain to hear This mystic potency, enfolded deep Within a word's soft-sounding innocence. PELLEAS If you would hear, and track the winding speech Through courts of men and castles set anigh, I have no need to hide on lying lips The truth wherefrom my knighthood gets its shame. So hearken: -- in the eager days long since, I know not how far back, for memory stands In helpless failure at the count of time So wretched and so slow to drag away, Perhaps ten years are flown, enough to fill
A stripling youth's advance to manly state, -- Long time, long time, how long ago it seems -- GAWAINE Nay, well I know the adverse wind of fate Clouds all the backward years and hides the sun Of memory in a grey forgetfulness; The past becomes a lost and distant land Where once we moved and shall not move again. But for your story. -- Speak, and tell the tale. PELLEAS Magic of forge and steel and crucible Had wrought a sword; by whose hand, no one knew; 'Twas thought the workers of the hills had steeped Their fires in incantation and had made This sword to be a gift to mortal child, A king's son of the western isles, who died. Golden the hilt, alight with ruddy glow; Thereon engraved, in token of its gift, "The son of Ork. Be strong and hold me fast." Now, when the king's son died, his father called A mighty tourney in the land and set This sword as guerdon to the winning arm. And many came and made their name be cried Within the tourney, and King Arthur's knights Were gathered, ten or twelve, and Kay was there (Him whom they call the Seneschal), Sir Tor, And many others. So the joust was made. Great ladies, queens and nobly born, beheld; And one there was whose eyes were like a fire Within my heart, and ever as I strove Her beauty shone about me like a star, And in mine ears I heard a crying voice, And felt a throbbing of unmeasured strength Which of my body made its minister To triumph in the tourney. So I fought, And over all prevailed. GAWAINE Then you are grown A giant from the strength of lesser men; The hard-wrought prowess of each vanquished name Like hound that changes master comes to you To aid you in the quest for fame, and swell The cry of hunting. PELLEAS In my hands they set The tourney's meed, the gleaming hilt of gold That clasped the flash of steel; upon my head The golden circlet clung. And I, forthwith, Rode down the lists, and pa**ed with heedless eyes The rangèd queens, and at the shining feet Of one more fair than kingly daughter cast The golden circle, royal crown of love And adoration; but with mocking hands She flung it from her, high above the heads Of those who sat about her, that it fell Within the dust and turmoil of the lists. And many there cried out with jealous speech And wrought her shame, until I made be known That I would prove her every act and word Against their gathered spears: thereat they ceased. GAWAINE Strange tale it is, yet not too hard to read. She loved a lesser knight and with sure strength Spurned proffered homage of his vanquisher. PELLEAS Nay, in that quiet heart of hers there beats No blood of pa**ion. Dark indifference With sluggish stream mounts ever in her veins. GAWAINE What came of this? PELLEAS Into her rightful land I followed her; and there I still abide. Against the sky of my desires and deeds There stands, with distant battlements agleam, The castle of Etarre, undimmed, unchanged, While over me the seasons spend their wrath And men work out their hate; yet I prevail. GAWAINE What brought you here alone and without steed? PELLEAS The hands of men across the thorny wild. GAWAINE In anger, or by your own spoken wish? PELLEAS In anger done, yet by another's will. GAWAINE Why seek to hide the need? Within a gla** I saw a knight whom other three unbound From belly of a steed, and with rude strength Dragged far across the barren fields of gold. PELLEAS Ah, I am shamed forever in your sight. GAWAINE True knighthood never sleeps with naked shame, And though he share her hovel leaves therein No children of ill fame. Your courage shines Through all the shrouds of dark ignóminy. Pure spirits cannot err. PELLEAS O noble creed, That brings the eye to witness, not to judge Ask what you will. GAWAINE I ask your present need, And give you service of my sword and spear. PELLEAS Strength will not ease the tightened cord of hate, 'Tis drawn too high above an earthly reach. GAWAINE The sword of courage and the spear of truth May yet avail. Who were these wretched three And by what order moved? PELLEAS The self-same word: It is a light for knowledge. GAWAINE Speak! Etarre? And is it she who brings you into wrong? PELLEAS Because I may not live sans sight of her I ride against her knights in mimic fray And suffer them to make me prisoner That I may come before my lady's eyes To look upon her countenance and hear The wonder of her speech. In wrath alway She cries against me and commands her knights To cast me into dungeon or to set The brand of shame across my fallen shield GAWAINE Were those her men that wrought you this despite? PELLEAS Her will through others moving, cast me here. And now the last sweet flower of hope is dead, Trod under by her foot. The autumn grows And winter creeps along the leafless cold, With mortal fingers plucking branch and twig And blowing harsh against the feeble strength Which is the life of man and beast and flower. My hope is dead; I shall not see it more. GAWAINE If hope through snow and chill of winter love Has ever blossomed in your heart, and spread Its balm of perfume through your wounded soul, 'Twill reach its flower once more against the sky To catch the sunlight in its chaliced cup And nurture trustless sorrow into confidence. PELLEAS This is the last; beyond this utmost bound Nought further lies: love, life, all, all at end! She will not suffer me her presence' grace, But strikes me from afar with other hands. To-day, I saw her not; her worthless knaves Fulfilled her final anger, bringing word More bitter than their curses and their blows. "O fool," they said, "our lady whom we serve Bids us to tell you that until she die She will not look upon your loathèd form Nor hear your wretched pleading." So they spoke, And dragged me hither with full jest and jeer. Accurst be all the forces in me pent That out of shattered nody, darkened brain, Build up anew the empery of life, The realm with I must rule, unwilling king Of citizens that hold me prisoner Within the palace of my self. Have end, O dreadful powers working in the dark; Have end, and let me die! GAWAINE Nay, live, and love! Or if you may not love, then hate; but live! Life is a present moment, a shifting point That moves from nothing into nothing; where it is, There is the world, the beating pulsing world With all its marvel of a felt design. Stretch out your hand and snare the fleeting point; Then have you all the world within your grasp. Live, live, and I will aid you in your quest. PELLEAS What can you do? For many a month and year I dreamed that love would waken in her breast. A fool, I dreamed that mortal will could guide Love the immortal, Love the uncompelled, -- From impious effort gaining due reward, Sadness of heart, bruised limbs, and shattered faith. GAWAINE Is there no gentler word which I may speak? May I not plead before her, win her heart To softer ways and kindlier moods? PELLEAS In vain. GAWAINE May I not say she has misjudged, has scorned That which no queen may purchase with her crown, A lover's worship, gift of gifts? PELLEAS In vain. GAWAINE Then let us find some subtler web to catch Her fleeting love and bring it to your lips. If she be mortal, she shall yet be yours; If pity stir within her, let us make A staff of pity; if within her dwell A woman's worship of high deeds and thoughts, Then let us make high thoughts and deeds our scrip To help us in our quest; if fear of d**h Live in her body, d**h shall be our shoon Wherewith to walk; if dreams of love E'er stir the curtains of her sleep, then love Shall be a cloak and clothe us from the rain. Pity, high deeds, and love, and fear of d**h, Shall be to us cloak, shoon, and scrip, and staff, And from her we'll get alms. PELLEAS In vain! in vain! You would with naked strength and covered wiles Beget from hatred tears, from loathing love. I tell you, not with open pomp and power Love enters in. There is a world unseen Wherein our pa**ions live, and come and go When no eye marks them. In the world of sense Our words and deeds have puissance, and the earth Trembles before our coming; blown with pride We stretch our sceptres toward that other world And lo, the wand whereat earth's kingdoms shook Stands idle in our hand, a gilded stem. GAWAINE And yet Etarre shall love you; grief and fear Are masters of the soul, and work their will. Love is their servant; they but clap their hands And he appears. Give me your knighthood's trust And by my knighthood's faith I swear to you, Etarre shall love you. PELLEAS O mistaken creed! Is love a hound that walks within the leash? Too long, too long in folly I maintained, Seeking to win her love. Love comes not thus. We know not when nor wherefore, we have seen No shadow fall across our steps, nor heard His mystic footfall; yet we raise our eyes And lo, he stands before us, garbed in white, Triumphant, with a light upon his brows. GAWAINE Nay, call him and he'll come, a willing slave. God gave him unto men, that men might be. Hearken and heed: your shield and helm and sword Shall change with mine. So armed, and with a steed, Will I approach the castle where Etarre Holds state aloof. PELLEAS What then? She'll love me more Because you hold my arms? GAWAINE Nay, hate you less. d**h breaks in twain the stubborn plant of wrath And treads to earth its growth and jealous fruit; He lays his finger on the lips of hate, And anger stands with saddened eyes downcast Before his presence. In the camps of war He binds proud nations with a chain of tears, And with a mound of earth builds emperies. Etarre shall hear my words of bitter weal And think you dead. Thereat her brow will change And all her nature be suffused with grief; Th' unshaken headland of her wrath shall sink Within a sea of tears. With sudden ray Illumined, she shall see life's large expanse Move like a landless ocean, vast and void. So will her heart be caught with sudden love And she shall hate me, and against my name Cry murderer. Her body's burning light Shall languish in the sable cloth of grief, Affliction's gloomy cloak; her cheeck shall pale With wan reflection, like the moon that broods Too much upon the splendour of the sun. Then will I cry her pardon of my fault, Confess you living, till the glad blood leap Through all her veins and mantle in her brow. She shall give thanks to Heaven's holy power That held you safe; to all, she shall proclaim You loved and dear; and she shall bid me go To seek you out and bring you to her arms. PELLEAS So, with the breath of falsehood you would blow Love, like a wooden vane that points the wind? The gust of truth will veer it straight once more! GAWAINE The winds must change; the north must yield to south, The breath of snow be melted by the spring, And hate must falter at undoubting love. Give me your shield and sword, and let me fare. PELLEAS Shall love's high course be furthered by deceit, Blessed by false words and hastened by false wiles, And crooked path lead straighter to the goal? GAWAINE Yet paths that cannot scale a naked cliff May find soft slopes to guide a sure ascent On other sides. What matter for the turn? Give me your shield and sword, and let me fare. PELLEAS I will not. 'Tis by other ways I seek To win her pure truth and faultless love. GAWAINE Are you a fisher who with straining net Enmeshes ocean prey, and at the last When silver fishes struggle in his grasp Throws back his booty to the waiting sea? The years with eyes of pity have looked down Upon you, and in restless flight o'erhead Paused for a moment with a prophecy Of other years to come. PELLEAS And now? GAWAINE And now The time is here with open-handed gift, And you would spurn it! Oh, how vain are thoughts! They have no more reality than mist Which sunlight scatters: 'tis the deed that is. Three days, and you shall lie within the clasp Of golden arms and hear from burning lips Love's true confessional, the marriage night. Will you then doubt she loves you? Will you smite Her mouth and call her lips a liar's tool And cast her from you? What shall matter then The means whereby we strove and wrought, and gained This loved reality, this goal of all your thoughts? If she be brought to love you, then she loves, And on it there's no doubt. PELLEAS But in my heart Doubt raises tumult like an angry sea. GAWAINE A stormless sky shall lay its waves at rest. Etarre shall love you, by my word and truth! PELLEAS O fond belief, that wings the heart As feather to a bird new-born Wherewith to leave the nest of pain And seek the lands of gold! Give me your oath of knightly faith That you are herald in this act, Not wooer. GAWAINE For that jealous word I give you pardon. [He stretches out his hands and touches PELLEAS' sword.] Hilt and bar and blade Be record of my oath; sunlight and wind Maintain it; honour keep it fast. I swear By Arthur's knighthood shining in the skies Of false enchantment and black cowardice, If I be found unfaithful, changeful, false, May my bare through feel this unsheathèd blade, May I be cast for ever from the light! PELLEAS Across despair's black-vaulted firmament Your words have moved refulgent like a star Which angels hurl from heaven to guide men's steps On stormy nights through treacherous foul ways. Words lie too lightly on the lips of man That I with words could thank you. [He loosens his helm.] Take my helm, And here my shield. GAWAINE The sword--? PELLEAS I cannot give. "Be strong and hold me fast," so runs the rune. Through dungeon keep, through false defeat, foul hands, And knaves' dark roguery, the rhyme has wrought; Unharmed the sword abides. Take shield and helm, Therefrom the tale has evidence enough. [FERGUS appears over the hill.] And here at time's full flood my servant comes, Called by the present need, -- and yet, alone; Wherein our need is desolate. He went To seek a mount, yet comes with empty zeal. [FERGUS at sight of GAWAINE stops, alarmed. Rea**ured by GAWAINE'S attitude and bearing, he advances.] GAWAINE Armed and afoot, I cannot far proceed. Yon castle on the deep horizon's rim Beckons and nods with greeting from afar In vain civility. Stands nowhere nigh Some hermitage whence I may find a steed? PELLEAS My man-at-arms knows well this waste of land. He shall inform us. [To FERGUS] So, in idle quest You sought? FERGUS Sir Pelleas, the steed I found. He waits beyond the slant of yonder rise. PELLEAS What mock of service have you hid herein? I bade you lead him hither. FERGUS How? with wings? He cannot mount the sudden sheer ascent; But thither I can bear you, where he waits. PELLEAS Then thither lead Sir Gawaine. FERGUS Shall he ride And you remain? GAWAINE Shall squires-at-arms protest When knights hold counsel? FERGUS Good sir knight, oft time The fool's hid wisdom guides the king aright, The jester's bells sit steadier than the crown. I guard my lord and master from deceit. PELLEAS I pray you pardon him, a faithful servant, Who errs too much in serving and in faith. [To FERGUS] Sir Gawaine goes to plead before Etarre, And win me favour. FERGUS Favour in love's cause Is not a ring to slip on other's hand. The pleader pleads but for himself. GAWAINE O vile, O base earth-born, were you my serving man Red stripes should leap across your quivering back; The dogs should laugh at you and loll their tongues To see you lower fallen than themselves! PELLEAS Sir Gawaine, pardon. Much adversity, On me descended, has made dark his mind. He probes forever in suspicious depths, And where he thinks to find an enemy, His very soul drips poison and his words Are but the distillations of his thoughts, The gathered fumes and acids of his brain. He shall repent and serve you loyally. GAWAINE Then let me go forthwith and seek the steed, And so depart. My helm and shield I leave In pledged exchange. When twice the sun has set And twice arisen, messenger shall come And big you to the castle of Etarre. Till then, farewell. PELLEAS God speed the ventured aim. FERGUS And you, O master, what of you alone, Wearied and hungered on the shadeless hills? PELLEAS Go seek for me from distant hermitage Another steed. By sun-down be returned And bear my hence at last. GAWAINE Farewell. PELLEAS Farewell. [FERGUS and GAWAINE depart.] PELLEAS [alone, watching the two move across the brow of the hill] So fare, my heart's adventure, so fare well. CURTAIN