There was once an emperor who had
two things that he loved more than all the world his
daughter and his garden. The finest linen and
the richest silks of India or China decked the princess
from the moment she was old enough to run alone, and
the ships that brought them brought also the fairest
flowers and sweetest fruits that grew in distant lands.
All the time that he was not presiding over his council,
or hearing the petitions of his people, the emperor
passed in his garden, watching the flowers open and
the fruits ripen, and by-and-by he planted trees and
shrubs and made walks and alleys, till altogether the
garden was the most beautiful as well as the largest
that had ever been seen.
The years passed, and the princess
reached the age of fourteen; quite old enough to be
married, thought the kings and princes who were looking
out for a bride for their sons. The emperor’s
heart sank when he heard rumours of embassies that
were coming to rob him of his daughter, and he shut
himself up in his room to try to invent a plan by which
he might keep the princess, without giving offence
to the powerful monarchs who had asked for her hand.
For a long while he sat with his head
on his hands, thinking steadily, but every scheme
had some drawback. At length his face brightened
and he sprang up from his seat.
‘Yes! that will do,’ he
cried, and went down to attend his council, looking
quite a different man from what he had been a few hours
before.
The embassies and the princes continued
to arrive, and they all got the same answer.
’The emperor was proud of the honour done to
himself and his daughter, and would give her in marriage
to any man who would pass through the garden and bring
him a branch of the tree which stood at the further
end.’ Nothing could surely be more easy,
and every prince in turn as he heard the conditions
felt that the fairest damsel on the whole earth was
already his wife.
But though each man went gaily in,
none ever came out, nor was it ever known what had
befallen them. At last so many had entered that
fatal gate that it seemed as if there could be no
more princes or nobles left, and the emperor began
to breathe again at the thought that he would be able
after all to keep his daughter.
But one day a knight of great renown,
named Tirius, arrived from beyond the seas and knocked
at the gate of the castle. Like the others, he
was welcomed and feasted, and when the feast was ended
he craved that the emperor would grant him the hand
of the princess on whatever condition he might choose.
‘Right willingly,’ answered
the emperor; ’there is only one condition I
have laid down, and that is an easy one, though for
some strange reason no one as yet has been able to
fulfil it. You have merely to walk through the
garden that you see below, and bring me back a branch
from a tree bearing golden fruit, which stands on
the opposite side. If fame speaks true, this
is child’s play to the adventures in which you
have borne so noble a part.’
‘In good sooth,’ said
the knight, who saw clearly that there was more in
the matter than appeared ’in good
sooth your condition likes me well. Still, as
fortune is ever inconstant, and may be tired of dealing
me favours, I would first ask as a boon a sight of
your fair daughter and leave to hearken to her voice.
After that I will delay no longer, but proceed on
my quest.’
‘I will take you to her myself,’
answered the emperor, who thought that he might show
this small mercy to a man who was going to his death,
and he led his guest down long passages and through
lofty halls, till they reached the princess’s
apartments.
’In five minutes my chamberlain
shall come for you, and he shall show you the way
to the garden,’ said the emperor, ’and
meanwhile I bid you farewell;’ and, leaving
Tirius to enter alone, he went to seek his ministers.
It would be hard to say whether the
knight or the princess was most amazed as they stood
gazing at each other he at her beauty and
she at his boldness, for never before had any man
crossed her threshold. For a moment both were
silent; then the knight, remembering how short a time
was allowed him, aroused himself from his dream and
spoke:
’Gentle damsel, help me now
in my need, for I have been drawn hither by love.
Full well I know that many have had this adventure
before me, and have entered that garden and never
returned from it. Without your aid my fate will
be such as theirs, and therefore, I pray you, tell
me what I should do so that I may win through without
harm.’
Now the knight was a goodly man and
tall, and perhaps the princess may have bewailed in
secret the noble youths who had fallen victims to her
father’s pleasure. But, however that might
be, she smiled and made reply:
’I am ready to marry any man
on whom my father wishes to bestow me, and you say
you have come hither for love of me. Still, you
have asked of me a hard thing, for it beseems not
a daughter to betray her father’s confidence.
Yet, as I am loth that any more fair youths should
lose their lives for my sake, I will give you this
counsel. You must first pass through a forest,
which is the home of a lady who is known to all as
the “Lady of Solace.” Go to her, and
she will give you the help you need to journey safely
through the garden.’
The princess had scarcely finished
these words when the voice of the chamberlain was
heard without, bidding him withdraw, and, glancing
gratefully at her, the knight bowed low and took his
leave.
In the great hall the chamberlain
quitted him, telling him to take his ease and rest
till the emperor should return, but instead the knight
waited till he was alone and then plunged straight
into the forest.
He walked on for a little way till
he reached a green space, and there he stopped and
cried, ‘Where is the Lady of Solace?’ Then
he sat down on a stone and waited. In a short
time he saw coming towards him two ladies, one bearing
a basin and the other a cloth.
‘We give you greeting, sir,’
they said; ’the Lady of Solace has sent us to
you, and she bids you first wash your feet in this
basin, and then go with us to her palace.’
So the knight washed his feet, and dried them in the
white cloth, and rose up and went with the ladies to
the palace, which was built of blue marble, and the
fairest that ever he saw. The Lady of Solace
was fair likewise and of a marvellous sweet countenance,
and her voice was soft like the voice of a thrush as
she asked him what he wanted with her. At that
the knight told his errand, and how the princess had
bade him come to her, for she alone could help him
to win through the enchanted garden.
‘I am called the Lady of Solace,’
said she, with a smile which seemed made up of all
the beautiful things in the world, ’and I give
succour to all those who need it. Here is a ball
of thread; take it and bind it round the post of the
gate of the garden, and hold fast the thread in your
hand, unwinding it as you go. For if you lose
the clue, you will perish like those before you.
And more. A lion dwells in the garden, who will
spring out and devour you, as he has devoured the rest.
Therefore, arm yourself with armour, and see that
the armour be anointed thickly with ointment.
When the lion sees you, he will take your arm or your
leg into his mouth, and his teeth shall stick fast
in the ointment, and when you sunder yourself from
him his teeth shall be drawn out, and you shall kill
him easily. But during the fight beware lest you
let go the clue.’
And after the lion shall come four
men, who will set on you and seek to turn you from
their path; but beware of them also, and if you are
in peril call to me, and I will succour you.
And now return to the palace and put on your armour,
and so, farewell.’
When the knight heard this he was
right glad, and stole back to the palace, where he
found that the emperor was still sitting at his council.
He sat down in the great hall to await him, but the
time seemed very long before his host entered.
‘How have you sped?’ asked he.
‘My lord, now that through your
goodness I have seen the princess,’ said the
knight, ’there can be but one ending to my journey.
I go at once in quest of the tree, and I am content
whatever fate may befall me.’
‘May fortune be with you!’
answered the emperor, who never failed to give good
wishes to his daughter’s suitors, as he felt
quite sure that they would be of no use.
So the knight bowed low and left the
hall, going straight to the gatekeeper’s house,
where he had put off his armour on arriving. On
pretence of sharpening his sword, he borrowed a pot
of ointment from the man, and, unseen by him, rubbed
the paste thickly over his armour. After this
he looked about to see that no one was watching him,
and took the path that led to the garden.
A large iron gate supported by two
posts stood at the entrance, and round one of these
he firmly bound one end of the thread which the Lady
of Solace had given him. Holding the other end
in his hand, he advanced for a long while without
seeing or hearing any strange thing, till a roar close
to him caused him to start. The knight had just
time to draw his sword and hold up his shield before
the lion was upon him; but, as he had been forewarned,
the great beast dashed aside the shield, and fastened
his teeth in the arm that held it. The pain was
such that the knight leaped backwards, but the lion’s
teeth were fixed fast in the ointment, and they all
came out of his mouth, so that he could bite no more.
And when he rushed at his enemy with his claws they
stuck also, so that the knight with a blow of his
sword was able to kill him with ease.
Mightily he rejoiced at seeing his
foe dead before him, and by ill fortune he forgot
that, had it not been for the counsel of the Lady of
Solace, it was he who would have been slain,
and not the lion. He swelled with pride and conceit
at the ease with which he had won the victory, and
never noted that the clue of thread was no longer in
his hands.
‘Ah, lovely princess, I come
to seek my reward,’ cried he to himself, and
turned his face towards the palace. But a little
way on he spied seven trees, very fair to view, all
covered with fruit that shone temptingly in the sun.
He gathered a cluster that hung just above his head,
and when he had eaten that, he thought that it tasted
so delicious he really must have another, and another
also.
He was still eating when three men
passed by, and asked him what he was doing there.
The knight was so puffed up that he did not answer
them civilly after his manner, but gave them rude
words, for which in return he received buffets.
In the end, the men dragged him away from the tree
and flung him into a ditch that was full of water,
and his armour weighed him down, so that he could
not get out. Then at last he remembered his clue,
and felt for it, but it was not there, and his pride
broke down, and he saw that he had brought his ruin
on himself. And in despair he lifted up his voice
and cried, ’O Lady of Solace, help me, I beseech
you, in my great need, for I am nigh dead.’
He shut his eyes for very misery, but opened them
again in a moment, for a lady stood by him, and she
said:
’Did not I tell you that if
you lost the clue you could never more find your way
out of the garden? I will lift you out of the
ditch, but, for the clue, you must seek for it yourself
till you find it.’ And with that she vanished.
Not that day did the knight find the
clue, nor the next, nor the next. Faint and weary
was he, but he dared not eat of the fruit that was
around him, some hanging from the boughs of trees and
some growing on the ground. At length he wandered
back to the spot where he had fought with the lion,
and there, covered with blood, lay the clue he had
so long sought. By its help he was led to the
tree with the golden fruit, which stood at the far
end of the garden, and plucking one of the boughs
he turned to retrace his steps, wondering, now that
he held the thread, at the shortness of the way.
‘Here is the branch, O Emperor!
and now give me the princess,’ he said, kneeling
and laying the bough down on the steps of the throne.
And the emperor could not gainsay him, but bade his
officers fetch his daughter, and after they had been
married she went with her husband into his own country,
where they lived happily till they died.
[From the Gesia Romanorum.]