Everyone knows about the famous knight
Sir Guy, the slayer of the great Dun Cow which had
laid waste the whole county of Warwick. But besides
slaying the cow, he did many other noble deeds of which
you may like to hear, so we had better begin at the
beginning and learn who Sir Guy really was.
The father of Guy, Segard the Wise,
was one of the most trusty councillors of the powerful
earl of Warwick and Oxford, who was feared as well
as loved by all, as a man who would suffer no wrong
through the lands which he governed.
Now the earl had long noted the beauty
and strength of Segard’s young son, and had
enrolled him amongst his pages and taught him all manner
of knightly exercises. He even was versed in
the art of chess-playing, and thus whiled away many
a wet and gloomy day for his master, and for his daughter
the fair Felice, learned in astronomy, geometry, and
music, and in all else that professors from the schools
of Toulouse and Spain could teach a maiden.
It happened one Pentecost that the
earl of Warwick ordered a great feast, followed by
a tourney, to be held in the open space near the castle,
and tents to be set up for dancing and players on the
lute and harp. At these tourneys it was the custom
of every knight to choose out his lady and to wear
her token or colours on his helmet, as Sir Lancelot
did the red sleeve of Elaine, and oftentimes, when
Pentecost and the sports were over, marriages would
be blessed by the priest.
At this feast of Pentecost in particular,
Guy stood behind the chair of his master the earl,
as was his duty, when he was bidden by the chamberlain
of the castle to hasten to the chamber of the Lady
Felice, and to attend upon her and her maidens, as
it was not thought seemly for them to be present at
the great feast.
Although, as we have said, the page
had more than once been called upon to amuse the young
damsel with a bout of chess, she had ever been strictly
guarded by her nurse and never suffered to exchange
a word with the youth whose place was so much below
hers. On this evening, however, with none to
hinder her, she chattered and laughed and teased her
ladies, till Guy’s heart was stolen from him
and he quite forgot the duties he was sent to fulfil,
and when he left her presence he sought his room,
staggering like one blind.
Young though he was, Guy knew none
better how wide was the gulf that lay between
him and the daughter of his liege lord. If the
earl, in spite of all his favour, was but to know
of the passion that had so suddenly been born in him,
instant death would be the portion of the over-bold
youth. But, well though he knew this, Guy cared
little, and vowed to himself that, come what might,
as soon as the feast was over he would open his heart
to Felice, and abide by her answer.
It was not easy to get a chance of
speaking to her, so surrounded was she by all the
princes and noble knights who had taken part in the
tourney; but, as everything comes to him who waits,
he one day found her sitting alone in the garden,
and at once poured forth all his love and hopes.
‘Are you mad to think that I
should marry you?’ was all she said,
and Guy turned away so full of unhappiness that he
grew sick with misery. The news of his illness
much distressed his master, who bade all his most
learned leeches go and heal his best-beloved page,
but, as he answered nothing to all they asked him,
they returned and told the earl that the young man
had not many days to live.
But, as some of our neighbours say,
‘What shall be, shall be’; and that very
night Felice dreamed that an angel appeared to her
and chided her for her pride, and bade her return
a soft answer if Guy again told her of his love.
She arose from her bed full of doubts and fears, and
hurried to a rose bower in her own garden, where, dismissing
her ladies, she tried to set her mind in order and
find out what she really felt.
Felice was not very successful, because
when she began to look into her heart there was one
little door which always kept bursting open, though
as often as it did so her pride shut it and bolted
it again. She became so tired of telling herself
that it was impossible that the daughter of a powerful
noble could ever wed the simple son of a knight, that
she was about to call to her maidens to cheer her
with their songs and stories, when a hand pushed aside
the roses and Guy himself stood before her.
‘Will my love ever be in vain?’
he asked, gasping painfully as he spoke and steadying
himself by the walls of the arbour. ’It
is for the last time that I ask it; but if you deny
me, my life is done, and I die, I die!’ And
indeed it seemed as if he were already dead, for he
sank in a swoon at Felice’s feet.
Her screams brought one of her maidens
running to her. ’Grammercy, my lady, and
is your heart of stone,’ cried the damsel, ’that
it can see the fairest knight in the world lying here,
and not break into pieces at his misery? Would
that it were I whom he loved! I would never
say him nay.’
‘Would it were you, and
then I should no more be plagued of him,’ answered
Felice; but her voice was softer than her words, and
she even helped her maiden to bring the young man
out of his swoon. ’He is restored now,’
she said to her damsel, who curtseyed and withdrew
from the bower; then, turning to Guy, she added, half
smiling:
’It seems that in my father’s
court no man knows the proverb, “Faint heart
never won fair lady.” Yet it is old, and
a good one. My hand will only be the prize
of a knight who has proved himself better than other
men. If you can be that knight well,
you will have your chance with the rest.’
The soul of the youth leaped into
his eyes as he listened; for he knew that this was
much for the proud Felice to say. But he only
bowed low, and with new life in his blood he left
the castle. In a few days he was as strong as
ever he had been, and straightway sought the earl,
whom he implored to bestow on him the honour of knighthood.
‘Right gladly will I do so,
my page,’ answered Rohand, and gave orders that
he would hold a solemn ceremony, when Guy and twenty
other youths should be dubbed knights.
Like many young men, Sir Guy thought
that his first step on the road was also to be his
last, and instantly sought the presence of Felice,
whom he expected to find in the same softened mood
as he had left her. But the lady only laughed
his eagerness to scorn.
’Think you that the name of
knight is so rare that its ownership places you high
above all men?’ asked she. ’In what,
I pray you tell me, does it put you above the rest
who were dubbed by my father with you to-day?
No troth of mine shall you have until your name is
known from Warwick to Cathay.’
And Sir Guy confessed his folly and
presumption, and went heavily unto the house of Segard.
‘O my father,’ he began
before he had let the tapestry fall behind him, ‘I
would fain cross the seas and seek adventures.’
‘Truly this is somewhat sudden,
my fair young knight,’ answered Sir Segard,
with a mocking gleam in his eyes, for Guy’s father
had not been as blind as fathers are wont to be.
‘Other knights do so,’
replied Guy, drawing figures on the floor with the
point of his sword. ‘And I would not that
I were behind them.’
‘You shall go, my son,’
said Segard, ’and I will give you as companions
the well-tried knights Sir Thorold and Sir Leroy, and
Heraud, whom I have proved in many wars. Besides
these, you shall have men-at-arms with you, and such
money as you may need.’
Before many days had passed, Sir Guy
and his friends had sailed across the high seas, and
had made their way to the noble city of Rouen.
Amidst all that was strange and new to him, there
was yet much that was familiar to his eyes, for there
were certain signs which betokened a tournament, and
on questioning the host of the inn he learned all that
he desired. Next morning a tourney was to be held
by order of the emperor and the prize should be a
white horse, a milk-white falcon, and two white greyhounds,
and, if he wished it, the hand of the princess Whiterose,
the emperor’s daughter.
Though he had not been made a knight
a month ago, Sir Guy knew full well the customs of
chivalry, and presented a palfrey, scarcely less beautiful
than the one promised as a prize, to the teller of
these happy tidings. Then he put on his armour
and rode forth to the place of the tourney.
In the field over against Rouen was
gathered the flower of Western chivalry. The
emperor had sent his son, and in his train came many
valiant knights, among them Otho duke of Pavia, hereafter
to be Sir Guy’s most bitter enemy. The
fights were long and sore, but one by one the keenest
swordsmen rolled in the dust, and the prize was at
length adjudged to the youngest knight there present.
Full courteously he told all who might
wish to hear that he might not wed Whiterose, the
princess, for his faith was already plighted to another
across the sea. And to Felice and to her father
he sent the falcon and horse and greyhounds as tokens
of his valour. After that he and his friends
journeyed to many lands, fighting tournaments when
there were any tournaments to fight, till the whole
of Christendom rang with the name of Sir Guy.
‘Surely I have proved my worth,’
he said, when a whole year had gone by. ‘Let
us go home’; and home they went.
Joyful was the welcome bestowed on
him by every one he met joyful, that is,
from all but Felice.
‘Yes, you have done well,’
she said, when he knelt before her, offering some
of the prizes he had won. ’It is truly spoken
among men that there are not twelve knights living
as valorous as you. But that is not good enough
for me. It matters not that you are “one
of the best”; my husband must be “the
best of all."’
In vain Sir Guy pleaded that with
her for his wife his strength would be doubled, and
his renown also.
’If you cannot conquer all men
for my sake now, you will never do it after,’
she answered; and Sir Guy, seeing his words were useless,
went out to do her bidding.
The wrath of his father and mother
was great when their son came to tell them he was
going to seek a fresh quest, but, though his heart
was sore rent with their tears, he only embraced them
tenderly, and departed quickly, lest he should make
some promise he might not keep.
For long he found no knight whose
skill and strength were equal to his own, and he was
beginning to hope that the day was drawing nigh that
should see him stand without a peer, when, in a tourney
near the city of Benevento, his foe thrust his lance
deep into his shoulder, and for many days Sir Guy
lay almost senseless on his bed.
Now Otho duke of Pavia had neither
forgotten nor forgiven his overthrow by the young
knight at Rouen, more than a year agone, and he resolved
to have his revenge while his enemy was still weak
from loss of blood. So he hid some men behind
some bushes, which Sir Guy would needs pass while
riding along the road to the north, ‘and then,’
thought he, ’I will cast him into prison, there
to await my pleasure.’
But though his plans were well laid,
the fight went against him, and in the end Sir Guy,
nearly fainting with weariness and loss of blood, was
again the victor, and Otho’s best knight, Sir
Guichard of Lombardy, owed his life to the swiftness
of his horse. His victory, however, was to Sir
Guy as sad as many defeats, for his constant companions
lay dead before him.
‘Ah, Felice, this is your doing,’ said
he.
Long were it to tell of the deeds
done by the noble knight Sir Guy; of the tourneys
that he won, of the cities that he conquered even
at the game of chess he managed to be victorious!
Of course many men were sorely jealous of him and
his renown, and wove plots for his ruin, but somehow
or other he contrived to escape them all.
By this time Sir Guy had grown to
love wandering and fighting so well that he had well-nigh
forgotten who had sent him from his native land, and
why he was not dwelling in his father’s castle.
Indeed, so wholly had the image of Felice faded from
his memory, that when Ernis emperor of Constantinople,
under whose banner he was serving, offered him the
hand of his only daughter and half of his dominions,
Sir Guy at once accepted his gifts.
The sight of the wedding-ring brought
him back to his allegiance. He no longer loved
Felice it is true, and he did love a younger
and gentler maiden. But he must abide by the
oath he had sworn, though it were to his own undoing.
His grief at the loss of the princess
Lorette sent Sir Guy to his bed for many days, but
as soon as the fever left him he felt that he could
stay at court no longer, and began to make plans to
seek other adventures in company with his friend Heraud
and a lion which he had saved from the claws of a
dragon.
Since that day this lion had never
quitted his side, except at his master’s bidding,
and he always slept on the floor by his master’s
bed. The emperor and all his courtiers were fond
of the great beast, who moved among them as freely
as a kitten, but Sir Morgadour, the chief steward
of the emperor of the West, who was visiting the court,
had ever been Sir Guy’s mortal enemy, and one
evening, thinking himself unseen, gave the lion a
mortal wound as he was sleeping quietly in the garden.
He had just strength enough to drag himself to Sir
Guy’s feet, where he died, and a damsel who
had marked the cruel deed proclaimed loudly that it
was done by Sir Morgadour. In an instant Sir Guy’s
dagger was buried in his breast; but when he grew
calmer he remembered that his presence at court might
bring injury upon Ernis, as the emperor of the West
would certainly seize the occasion to avenge the death
of his steward. So the next day he left the city,
and slowly turned his face towards England.
It was some months before he arrived
there, so many adventures did he meet with on the
way. But directly he landed he hastened to York
to throw himself at the feet of Athelstan the king.
‘Ah, welcome indeed, fair son,’
cried he; ’the fame of your prowess has reached
us these many years past, and we have just received
the news that a fearful and horrible dragon, with
wings on his feet and claws on his ears, is laying
waste our county of Northumberland. He is as black
as any coal, and as rough as any foal, and every man
who has gone out to meet him has been done to death
ere he has struck a blow. Go, therefore, with
all speed and deliver us from this monster, for of
dragons you have slain many, and perchance this one
is no more evil than the rest.’
The adventure was one after Sir Guy’s
own heart, and that very day he rode northwards; but
even his well-proved courage failed somewhat
at the sight of the dragon, ten times uglier and more
loathsome than any he had ever beheld. The creature
roared hideously as he drew near, and stood up at
his full length, till he seemed almost to stretch as
far as Warwick. ‘Verily,’ thought
Sir Guy to himself, ’the fight of old with the
great Dun Cow was as the slaying of a puppy in comparison
with this!’
The dragon was covered thickly with
scales all over his body, his stomach as well as his
back. They were polished and shiny and hard as
iron, and so closely planted that no sword could get
in between them.
‘No use to strike there,’
muttered Sir Guy, ’a thrust down his throat is
my only chance.’
But if Sir Guy knew this, the dragon
knew it much better, and, though the knight managed
to jump aside and avoid the swoops of his long neck
and the sudden darting of his sharp claws, he had not
even tried to strike a blow himself for fear lest
his sword should break in two against that shining
horny surface. This was not the kind of warfare
to which the dragon was accustomed, and he began to
grow angry, as anyone might have seen by the lashings
of his tail and the jets of smoke and flame that poured
out of his nostrils. Sir Guy felt that his chance
would soon come, and waited patiently, keeping his
eye for ever fixed on the dragon’s mouth.
At length the monster gave a sudden
spring forward, and if Sir Guy had not been watching
he could scarcely have leaped out of the way.
The failure to reach his prey enraged the dragon more
than ever, and, opening his mouth, he gave a roar
which the king heard on his throne at York. He
opened his mouth; but he never shut it again, for Guy’s
sword was buried in it. The death struggles were
short; and then Sir Guy cut off the head and bore
it to the king.
After this, his first thought was
for his parents, who, he found, had died many years
agone, and having said a prayer over their graves,
and put his affairs in order, he hurried off to Warwick
to see Felice, and tell her that he had fulfilled
the commands she had given him long years ago, when
he was but a boy. He also told her of the ladies
of high degree whose hands he had won in fair fight won and
rejected. ’All of them I forsook for thee,
Felice,’ he said.
He had kept his word; but he had left
his heart in Constantinople. Perhaps Felice did
not know this, or perhaps she did not set much store
by hearts, and cared more for the renown that Sir Guy
had won throughout Christendom. Anyhow, she received
him gladly and graciously, and so did her father,
and the marriage was celebrated with great pomp, and
for a space Sir Guy remained at home, and after a
time a son was born to him.
But at the day of his son’s
birth Sir Guy was far away. In the quiet and
idleness of the castle he began to think, and his conscience
pricked him sore, that all the years of his life he
had done ill to many a man
And slain many a man with
his hand,
Burnt and destroyed many a
land.
And all was for woman’s
love,
And not for God’s sake
above.
‘The end should be different
from the beginning,’ he said, and forthwith
he put on the dress of a pilgrim, and took ship for
the Holy Land, carrying with him a gold ring, given
him by Felice.
Once more he came back, an old man
now, summoned by Athelstan, to deliver the city of
Winchester out of the hands of the Danes, who were
besieging it. Once more he returned to Warwick,
and, unseen, watched Felice training her son in all
the duties of knighthood, and once more he spoke with
her, when, dying in his hermitage, he sent her the
ring by his page, and prayed her to come and give
him burial.
[Early English Metrical Romances.]