SCENE: A room in the Castle of ETARRE. Tapestries upon the walls. The late afternoon sun streams in through a solitary window. Its shaft of light falls full upon ETARRE, who sits before a loom set in a recess. She is working at a tapestry, now nearly finished. A maid, AILEEN, attends her. ETARRE And one more colour to enrich his crest. Shall it be scarlet? AILEEN Would not blue lie well? ETARRE It shall be scarlet. He shall flash and burn Like dew sun-kindled with a thousand sheens. Where hangs the scarlet thread? AILEEN Here at the wing From this last dripping stain. ETARRE The sun a-mist On autumn afternoons so stains the world; A noble colour for a crested plume. AILEEN Yet blue were softer. ETARRE You are bitten deep With this sea-madness; in your own blue eyes Nought's fair that is not blue. AILEEN The world's a-drip With red and crimson, or you like it not. ETARRE But, look you, I have reason in my choice, For red's the fairer colour. There is nought so brave As scarlet banners or a crimson sky. AILEEN For them that like it. But the blue of streams On summer afternoons 'neath summer skies Gladdens my heart with deep and pure content. ETARRE And one lone spray of hooded red in flower Cries louder than the murmur of your streams, The quiet of your skies. They are fancy-poor Who love not red. AILEEN And false of heart Who love not blue. [Sings.] Love came to me in kirtle red, (Honour's false and Faith is dead); Came again in kirtle blue (Honour's fair and Faith is true). ETARRE You're quick in mocking me with children's rhyme. Make me a rhyme to mock this rainbow bird Whose crest is finished. How he sweeps and flies! Come, I'll begin it. [Sings] On the wind there flies a bird; He is come from distant shores, From the dawn's unopened doors To the western gates unstirred. In his wingèd flight there run Colours of the setting sun. Do you end the song. AILEEN [singing] Eyes and lips and sweet desires Are but feathers for his wings, Burning love the song he sings; All thy hope and thought are fires Giving light unto his eyes; Life and youth, Beauty, truth, Are the strength wherewith he flies. Snowy breast and golden hair Are but plumes for him to wear. He shall sing a summer's day, Clap his wings, away, away. ETARRE Ill caught. You've made your bird too like to Time, The raven dark who speeds across the world, And dressed him in fine colours like a daw Which steals strange ornament. AILEEN [singing] Silken raiment wherein dressed Beauty shimmers half divine, Glint of j**els, rare and fine, Are but colours for his crest, Crimson colours for his wings; Hark! 'tis love whereof he sings! Brave and gay, a summer's day, Ere he flies away, away. ETARRE I like it not. It troubles me with some half-dreamed lament, An unknown broken promise, I know not To whom, nor for what purpose, made. Poor bird Here woven on the loom, thou are maligned! Thou art pure fancy of mine inmost dreams, Not touched with these gross images of earth. Thy colours are imperishable light Caught from the steadfast sun and held secure. Thou'lt never fly away, but here remain To be mine eye's interpreter of joy, To hang upon my castle walls, and sing Thy crimson colours in sheer ecstasy. AILEEN Ay, let him live in silken thread and woof; There is a bird which flies from mortal grasp. Most fair he is, to perch upon our wrist With flashing colours, and from sunlit throat Pour forth his flooding heart's high melodies. In every word you speak, he trills and sings; In every motion of your hand, he moves With wings aflutter; in your brightening eyes He lives triumphant: oh, beware, beware; Too soon he's gone, and in the dusk and chill No nightingale shall waken into song. ETARRE What mean you? Life and Youth and Happiness? I have them in sweet surfeit. AILEEN And of love? ETARRE How many times did I forbid his name And cast him from my highest battlement? With subtle track you turn upon my words And lead me toward that monstrous loathing, hid In all your thoughts. Shall I not be content With golden solitude, that I must bind Love's naked body to my car of dreams? AILEEN A maiden's eyes, a maiden's wise, The open gates of paradise. ETARRE What mask of rhyme holds revel in your brain That you make mock of me? AILEEN A loveless fate, and Eden's gate Is barred with double sword of hate. ETARRE Have done! have done! AILEEN Flame that burns not, stream that flows not, Maid that loves not, Eden knows not. ETARRE This is an old wives' song, a ragged cloth With halting stitches sewn in knotted thread, And you would clothe me with it like a queen! I am content with life; you'd stir the stream To waters turbid as the floods in spring. AILEEN I pray for love's awakening, to end This dream that hides its own poor solitude In deep illusion of a soulless life. My heart can do no more. ETARRE Not more, yet less, And cease to weary me with hopes and tears. Your tongue moves ever in the wells of speech Drawing new wonders to the light of day; And chief there-mid ther curling snake of love Winds envious through all your words. Have done. [MARIS enters.] AILEEN And here comes one to guide you in your ways, To steep your heart in cold indifference, And marble every living pulse and vein. MARIS I pray you, give me a moment's grace, to cross Your silken fancy with rough thread of care. I have been troubled with much thought of late; Our silent halls have heard my pacing step And stared in dark displeasure, matching frown Of sullen stone to sullen brow of thought. ETARRE Has Care thrown nets within my castle-yard Or brought us siege? We'll catch him prisoner And show him forth. Speak on, lay bare his haunt; Pull down his hiding place and hale him out. MARIS Your eyes have seen him, many a day that's past. He will not be gainsayed, but comes again With unstilled clamour to our quiet walls. He carries armour like a knight, has shield, A spear, a sword, yet will no battle bear; We drag him out and cast him to the wilds, Where nature tends him with her healing dew And dries him with the sunshine and the wind. ETARRE Pelleas. MARIS The orbed and golden fire of day With no more steadfast pace in heaven's track Returns to us: yet one gives light and warmth, The other is a flame within our fields That must be quenched. AILEEN Flame quenches flame, but sword Can cut it not. MARIS Here's parable enough To quench the very sun in ignorance And cloud the light of reason in our brains. ETARRE Her idle speech yields up its idle tale: To all her riddles waits a single key, A key which I have dropped in blackest moat. MARIS You've carved a rune to clear a parable. Your words are like a flight of wingèd birds Crossing from sea to sea above my head; I watch them pa**, yet know not where they go. But as for Pelleas, we'll speak of him; He has a malady which eats his life Like rain upon a sword-blade, turning steel From flash and splendour into edgeless rust; Deeper and deeper sinks the water-drop Till all's corroded and the biting teeth Of slow destruction meet from either side. And such a sword is worthless unto men, Fit for quick burial. In short word and brief, For Pelleas I come, to counsel d**h. ETARRE You'd have me slay him! AILEEN Overstepped indeed! He runs with too great fury. ETARRE Shall my name Be joined with murder's most ignoble rout And brought to silence? MARIS Not in cruelty I come. There are some souls so weighed with life, So deep in sorrow, so oppressed with ill, That d**h comes like a prison-keeper kind To strike away the chains of their captivity. The holy Church's covenant of hell and heaven Is but a prophecy of that unmeasured dark Wherein the dead find sustenance and life; And men in their last hour come down unto the strand With all earth's hills behind them, and the level sea Ready for new emprise unknown and unexplored. d**h is the hand that sends them from the shore, And d**h the wind that swells within their sails. And unto them that walk with leaden eyes Viewless and vacant as the staring blind Through life's harsh country, weary and despaired, To them, you call it cruelty and hate To give them vision of th' eternal sea Which leads into th' unknown? Oh, be a**ured That Mercy, queen of heaven, with backward grasp Beneath her grey-starred gown holds fast a sword, And unto some poor souls, in gift of gifts, Brings not fine balsam, but the edge of d**h. ETARRE What charge is this; am I then merciful? Did mercy move me through the days and weeks Of his imprisonment, when he was cast To sleep among the nettled dungeon-holds And pray for sunbeams in a lightless pit? Did mercy move me when with jest and jeer You dragged him in the dust of horses' hoofs Or cast him in the sight of beast and bird To be their mockery? Freedom I sought. Slaves can be cruel, and I was worse than slave, Tormented with the thought that I was strong And he was weak, yet he with all his cries Made day a nightmare, and within my breast Dried up the wells of pity. Idle hope That I should turn against myself, and walk On paths of mercy! MARIS Slay him and be free. ETARRE Slay him, and hear the owl at nightfall cry, And watch the rooks, wind-blown above the towers, Circle and caw, while all with self-same voice Say "Murderer?" Slay him, and think the dew Is born of lamentation, and the wind Is come on wings funereal and wild To scream for vengeance from the fiends of hell? Slay him, you say, and watch the lips of men Curdle against me, till my frenzied hands Are clapped above mine ears to hide the sound Of spoken evil? O unhappy, I, Laden with unpremeditated wrong Which will not alter. Oh, unhappy grief! AILEEN How changed is your contentment, torn aside To bare the inner sorrow of unrest. Oh, leave these false pursuings; be at ease With woven pictures and imagined scenes And make not real the dreams of tragedy. ETARRE Dreams, dreams, false shadows, phantoms thoughts, How I am wearied of their flapping wings Across the twilight of imagined worlds! There is a change within me of new hours And other suns; I could be kind or cruel With unsuspected tenderness and hate. There's something born within me, great and strange, A child of impulse, wakened in my veins. I'll have no more of dreams; come take this loom And set it forth to other hands. And now We'll hearken, Maris, to your d**hly plaint. AILEEN I wish you were not wrought of changeful mood. But late, you spoke of solitude's content And wove yourself a golden web of dreams, And now you're torn it like a tangled fly Within a spider's mesh that's spun too weak. ETARRE Too weak it was; I've torn it with a word. AILEEN And with a word rebuilt it many a time. ETARRE The spider's dead; he'll weave no more. And now We'll listen, Maris, to your plea of hate. MARIS 'Tis not in hate I urge it. Well you know I bear no hate to mightier knights than I. ETARRE And well you know I loathe your Pelleas And turn all praise of him to darker speech. MARIS Still darker speech has gone abroad, to stain The honour of Etarre and all her knights. There is a tale now told in other halls, And false it rings, and yet, alas, is true. It tells of one lone knight who puts to scorn Dungeon and steel, a foe who will not fight Yet always conquers. Men speak hard of you And call you vampire, s**ing might and power From lovelorn men. If this continues on, Before the year's end Camelot will hear, For Arthur's knights ride fast through all this land. If you would keep untarnished light of fame, This Pelleas must vanish from the land, And mouths of men gape empty of ill words. ETARRE And if they know I slew him? MARIS Not by guile; By open battle in the sight of men. ETARRE And who is there in all this land of mine To battle with Sir Pelleas? MARIS Even I. For he is fallen from his ancient strength Till I and he are grown one force in arms. ETARRE And if he slay you? MARIS Then my cause is lost; I bear the sorrow. ETARRE If he will not fight? MARIS We'll give him open choice to fight or die And love of you will guide him in his choice. ETARRE And then he'd slay you! I have seen his spear Go down the lists and ravish charging steeds Of their proud burden. I have seen his sword Shear crest and helm, and leap through buckled steel. He'd slay you, slay you, and with eager cry Come throw himself before me, plead for love. No; other ways there are wherein men die, And I, the vampire of the strength of men, Shall know a better counsel. [A horn is heard.] Hark, a horn! Go bring me news. Return with every speed. [MARIS goes out.] Look from the window; is there aught to see? AILEEN The sinking light of day on field and moor, A flight of birds, the moving heads of grain, The leaves ashiver on the trees; nought else. ETARRE What meant that horn? Is Pelleas returned And have my knights brought me but empty words, Boasting completion of the unfulfilled? AILEEN It cannot be. Some other danger calls; For Pelleas is cast upon the hills And comes not riding with imperious haste Of new adventure. ETARRE Year and threefold year Unvisited of danger, I have held Communion with the change of day and night; Wrapped in the quiet of a warless land I have forgotten ravaging and d**h, As one who inland dwelling on the hills Forgets the loud-tongued clamour of the sea And thinks to measure fierceness of all storms By that weak wind that plays upon the moor, Forgetting all the wrack and thund'rous surge Which sweeps to ruin: on a sudden day He comes unto the cliffs and hears the sea, The menace of the waters holding guard Before the portals of the earth. So I. And here is war with brazen throat and strong Come crying at my door, and I have slept. AILEEN Here is no tramping of the hoofs of war; Some messenger on peaceful journey bent Craves food and shelter, giving in return The last hot news of joust at Camelot And feast of Arthur's knights, the noble tales Of battle unto giant and to dwarf In magic wood and isle snake-habited; Fen-dwelling sorcerers and craggy fiends; The last sad word of knights no more returned; Court-news and scandal, like a spider's thread That waves in th' wind, seeking whereon to build. ETARRE Whate'er it be, my warders stand at guard In quick restraint lest any enter in, And unexpected come, and unannounced. Where's Maris that he waits so long? [GAWAINE enters, with helm and shield of PELLEAS. The visor is down.] Who's here? Pelleas? Quick, help me! call for Maris! help! Help, Balarin and Avran, Erse, and Dane! Is no one here to help me, none to come? O treachery outdark'ning all belief! What! none, not one, -- one man to bring me help?
AILEEN He dare not so a**ail you! If he come, I'll cast myself against him, break his path, And hamper him till you be fled. [GAWAINE stands unmoved, leaning upon his shield.] ETARRE What! still? No motion, no advance to pluck me hence? You're harrier and I the song-bird caught, And you leave sheathed your claws? What, great of heart, You dare so come, and offer me, not d**h, -- No! that's too little for your hungry soul! -- But kindness and a sword that holds its sheath? You dare so stand before me, raise no hand To bring me hurt? You dare humility? O impudence that mocks my woman's strength And spurns all vengeance, every stroke of sword! You've slain my knights or caught them with some trick, You've made me here defenceless to your might, And now you stand before me dumb and still And speak no word and raise no awful hand. AILEEN Shall I bring aid, go search the battlements, Call every serf from labour, strip the fields? He will not dare a**ail you. ETARRE Here abide. I need not man's a**istance; woman's will And woman's word borrow an unknown strength When wrong's at issue. Here, in last defence, You stand on trial, plead a mortal cause Before an unrelenting judge. Have care Of every moving word and springing phrase Lest they o'ertip the balance with false weight. Much have I found of blame and heavy fault: A restless spirit walking in the night, His mantle blown by gust of unseen winds Across the darkness toward the home of storms Where stars and sun are hidden; so he moves, Wild-eyed with some new vision drawn aghast; And this is he who makes my life a curse, Pelleas, the knight; for him make your defence! What! not an outburst of an injured love? Are not those furnaces of pa**ion stirred That shone so ruddy in the dark of hate, That burned upon the hill-tops of abuse Like beacon fires, those furnaces of love That once consumed your soul to ashen drift And made you like a coal that's burnt to th' end? What! not a word? no, not a single word? Is all your life's endeavour stricken dumb? Then hark; for them that will not plead their cause Judgement is given. You have sinned too much To keep the water's surface; lead, and more than lead, Drags at your body, and the stream's quick flood Closes above you, who are judged and damned. A thousand ways you've found in your offence: Your shadow has been dark on all my paths, A fiery shadow burning gra** and herb. You've eaten out the petals of my life And strewn my happiness like withered leaves On autumn walks; you've been the wind and rain To hold me prisoner beneath my roof Longing in vain for sunlight and clear skies. You've sinned too much against me, you have moved A hundred feet beneath my castle walls And with huge shoulders shaken keep and tower; You've caught the lightning on the barren wild And driven it against me like a hound; For like the stroke of earthquake underground Or bolt of errant flame across the night, So have you shaken me and burned my sight, So have you cast my life in monstrous ruin And blackened all the walls of strength and love. For this you have no penitence, no grief, But are returned like hawk upon his flight To seek anew the victim you have struck; But I am changed to poison-throated snake With deadly venom poised upon my tongue And all my body tense in gathered coil; No harmless serpent of the fens am I, But an undreamed and deadly throat of pain; I call you to that sombre house of rest Wherein all men must while eternally. I have been bitter; drunken deep in words I have a**ailed you; now I speak no more. Prepare you for your d**h. I seek my knights. [GAWAINE raises the bar of his helmet. ETARRE starts aghast.] GAWAINE There is no need. I am not Pelleas. ETARRE What knight are you? Oh, speak, how came you here? What dark intent of silence led you in? What will you of me? Are you rapine's hand Or stroke of vengeance, war's untimely sword, Some miracle of quick disaster sprung From seed unplanted? Speak! GAWAINE Gawaine am I, Knight of King Arthur's Court, of royal kith. Deception's mask no guiltier purpose hides Than from your love and anger to extort A knowledge in each mood of praise of blame And learn if I win favour for my deed. ETARRE What deed? You've slain my knights? GAWAINE They are unharmed. ETARRE Are they not stricken and not captive bound? Do men-at-arms still hold their watch and guard? How came you here? Were all my servants false? GAWAINE Smooth words and promise of high recompense, An oath of loyalty unto your cause, A servitor of yours that knew my face In other days and other lands -- no more; These were enough to gain my entrance here. Your servants sought to serve you as they could, Thinking to win new favour through my aid. Deal not too harshly with them, but on me Turn all the pa**ion of your fit rebuke. ETARRE I have no heart to child a noble knight Well known in Caerleon's court. But answer me, This shield so quartered, see, I know it well, Yon helm with the green plume half caught aside, These are of Pelleas. GAWAINE From him I took them. ETARRE You've slain him or made him prisoner? GAWAINE Not made him prisoner. ETARRE Then slain? GAWAINE Yea, slain. In battle smitten to the final breath. ETARRE Dead, Pelleas! Now let the hooded sun Break forth in splendour, let the golden moors Proclaim thanksgiving from a thousand flowers! Oh, I am as the earth, with winter bowed, Who sudden feels the weight of snow and frost With one great stroke from his twain shoulders cast, And leaps unto his feet, and calls for Spring. For I had taken resolution dread, And d**h was all about me, lithe and dark, To haunt my footsteps and in silent halls Afflict my purpose with the nightmare forms Which Horror views with shuddering lidless eyes Or with fixed stare pursues. Join exultation And be aroused to song, my silent heart; We are of much relieved, our troubled days That were as night's dark pall of mist and cloud, Are turned to smoke upcurling in the sun, And vanish in the clear expanse of light. GAWAINE Have you no pity, are you carved of stone? This is unholy so to cry and sing, To whet rejoicing on the steel of d**h. ETARRE Is it unholy for the wanderer Through night's black pitfalls and most secret lures To hail the sunrise with a joyful song, Knowing he walks securely on his way? GAWAINE I could not slay a man with such a wild heart! ETARRE It is not I who slew him! Oh, be glad. Look you, I am most merciful and kind; You know not all my history of grief, You know not how he came across my life, Black thread within the weaving of my joys! GAWAINE Noble he was, and glorious in strength. ETARRE Whereof I had much cause of bitterness. We thrust the dwarf aside, spurn him the path; The giant brings us terror in our knees. Oh, had he not so noble been, so strong, So burning on the lips of man and maid, So high redoubted in all mighty arms, I would have pitied him, not hated to the last. GAWAINE Have you no sorrow now, that he is dead; Have you no word of praise? ETARRE Oh, ask me not; But unto you who brought me into peace, All gratefulness of heart, all kindly words. Be welcome to our halls, and bide with us. AILEEN Shall I prepare a chamber for our guest? ETARRE With every speed. Let Avran know of this. GAWAINE I cannot here abide. My journey calls. I was on idle mission sent and vain. I must go hence again in haste. [AILEEN, at a sign from ETARRE, goes out.] ETARRE Oh, stay! It is unkindness to defeat all thanks And set true praise at loss; you render base Her whom your kindness most has cherishèd, Most nurtured into grateful ways. You spurn The springing blade of recompense, and flee Before its growth has quickened into leaf. GAWAINE A truer deed, that is not done for gain. ETARRE Those purposes were never truly sown Which no man bides to reap; but like the wind You've scattered bounty with a careless strength And run abroad intent on other joys. The harvest threshers mock with plundered chaff The wind that sowed and knew not how to reap; Be more advised and with more human grace Glean recompense and store the golden grain. GAWAINE With how persuasive touch you lull asleep The serpent-heads of honour. 'Tis too late, For they have set their fangs within me deep, And I must go. ETARRE For honour? Is it honour To trample welcome underfoot, and turn With angry frown from greeting to farewell? Does honour quarrel with hospitality And virtue with all kindness? GAWAINE Ask my Wish And learn it does not with my Will accord; Prove Inclination, and 'twill here abide, But speak to Duty, Knighthood, Self-resolve, And they will cry "To horse!" and ride away. ETARRE It is Ill-will that plucks you by the sleeve, A servant in high banquet come to call His master forth on other needs? GAWAINE Ah, no; For admiration pours me heavy wine Of looks and words persuasive to the sense. I pray your pardon if I seem unkind: There is a vow which bids me hence. ETARRE A vow? Of fasting and of shelterless advance Through rainy ways and dripping nights a-cold? GAWAINE A vow most recent to impatient lips, To further love's advantage. ETARRE Then remain; Tell me the tale and I with woman's heart Can find a surer way than quickest wit Of man's device. Thus shall you hold the vow And further love's advantage. GAWAINE 'Twere in vain; For she is hard of heart and loves him not. ETARRE Is he of manner lovable and kind, In birth accepted and on courtly ways? GAWAINE All these he is, noble and great and true. Knighthood he honours, and the halls of men Which feel his stately presence. Such an one Is like a crown upon the head of kings, Adorning them with beauty. He is strong As mountain elm or heaven-cresting pine, Yet in his deeds more gentle than a child And in his thought as pure. ETARRE 'Tis you that love. Could she with such enamoured eyes behold, The earth would shrink to nothing at her feet And he would stand alone against the stars, A hero, crowned with pa**ion, as with light. In other guise she knows him, be a**ured, And finds some deadly fault whose clinging tooth Tears at his virtues and with venomed drop Discolours those fair tints wherein he shines. Can you not say with what quick wrong estranged She holds him from her? GAWAINE By a wilful mood, A child's unreasoned pa**ion of dislike. ETARRE There is an eye more deep than reason set. False-shadowed forms deceive the fleshly sight, False words with reason dally, lead astray The wisest thought; but this is undeceived. Have you not marked how the untutored wild With thoughtless vision of pure sense discern Their friends or enemies in humankind? And so with woman when she loves or hates. Ask why the leaf unfolds to April rain But lies close-hidden from the winds of March. GAWAINE Did I not say, "In vain"? My mind forbode A fruitless mission. Therefore, let me go. ETARRE Is this a snare of wisdom curling round Into unreason? You go forth in vain: "Therefore," you say, "make haste!" Nay, therefore bide; If you are so persuaded, that your words Can never waken love in this Unknown, This obdurate and loveless Beautiful Who spurns this knight of yours and will not heed, Then bide with me, and feast with me, and dream Of more successful loves, more gracious toils, More sweet acceptance. You are welcome here, For you have freed me from a deep distress Which boded worse disaster, drawing on With monstrous shapes and dreams of murdered men: For with my own weak hands and woman's strength, Goaded by anger, driven by despair I should have bartered Pelleas with d**h, And sold him to the fearful hands of night To be their captive, gaining in return From that grim changers'-table quick release And freedom from the bonds of hate. GAWAINE In vain! Did I not say, "In vain"? -- This murdered knight, This Pelleas, was noble-souled and great And women loved him. ETARRE Like a strangling noose He clung about my heart; through pulse and vein A clogging hatred thickened, and my mouth Grew dry with anger and unbidden rage. But tell me why you slew him; not in hate, For praise you speak; and not in rivalry, For great you name him. GAWAINE 'Twas a slanderous tale Against your beauty and your name. To him I told it; and in sudden fire he shone And with his sword and spear proclaimed you true. ETARRE Who bade him praise me? let my word and deed Be their own champion, dress their shields alone And ride to battle! Was my hate in vain That he should hound me with remorseless love? GAWAINE For you he died. ETARRE And I shall bury him And on his mound set an ungraven stone, That I may cast him alway from my mind As life has cast him from her herald's scroll. But you who from the one have purged his name Shall never from the other be effaced. GAWAINE I pray you let me now depart in peace. ETARRE By all the sacred bonds of gratitude I fetter you and hold you now in thrall. By courtesy of knighthood, by the grace Of man to feebler woman, by the strength Of that great company of Arthur's knights, By creed of chivalry and law of faith I conjure you, remain! GAWAINE Accursed vow, What evil have you brought me! Will you come And cry fulfilment of your darkest word? For I must bide and to the utmost proof Display that broken emba**y of love Whose hopes are all in vain! ETARRE Like stricken priest Who sees temptation writ on every wall, Wide-eyed for sustenance you murmur prayer. Am I a creature wrought in deadly shape Of mortal pa**ion, that with quivering fear You dare not here abide and with me feast Holding high converse of adventured deed? You do offend me with ungracious thoughts And with unworthy shaft suspicion point. Yet shall you be forgiven with full heart If you from stern intention draw aside And turn to kindness. For three nights and days Let helm and breastplate join with greave and spur Unstirred in idleness. GAWAINE With eager hands I lay aside the heavy press of mail. ETARRE My knights shall swift disarm you. Here remain; My servants shall attend you. [She leaves the room.] GAWAINE Fatal vow, For thee I am a**ailed. How hard of heart, How cold to pity is that glorious form, That haunting presence! Yet, what body's grace Here shone about me! with what subtle charm Of pleading voice and of unveiled desire She bade me welcome! Nay, not ice and stone That lovely breast, though it be white as snow And like unsullied marble carven out. O honour, bide with me, unshaken, strong; O knighthood, watch above me. Deep events Have wrought me danger. O thrice wretched vow That makes my path a journey through the dark And spreads disaster wide on every hand! CURTAIN