The Roland Legends
Charles the Great, King of the Franks,
world-famous as Charlemagne, won his undying renown
by innumerable victories for France and for the Church.
Charles as the head of the Holy Roman Empire and the
Pope as the head of the Holy Catholic Church equally
dominated the imagination of the mediaeval world.
Yet in romance Charlemagne’s fame has been eclipsed
by that of his illustrious nephew and vassal, Roland,
whose crowning glory has sprung from his last conflict
and heroic death in the valley of Roncesvalles.
“Oh for a blast of that
dread horn,
On Fontarabian echoes borne,
That to King Charles did come,
When Roland brave, and Olivier,
And every paladin and peer
On Roncesvalles died.”
Scott.
Briefly, the historical facts are
these: In A.D. 778 Charles was returning from
an expedition into Spain, where the dissensions of
the Moorish rulers had offered him the chance of extending
his borders while he fought for the Christian faith
against the infidel. He had taken Pampeluna,
but had been checked before Saragossa, and had not
ventured beyond the Ebro; he was now making his way
home through the Pyrenees. When the main army
had safely traversed the passes, the rear was suddenly
attacked by an overwhelming body of mountaineers, Gascons
and Basques, who, resenting the violation of their
mountain sanctuaries, and longing for plunder, drove
the Frankish rearguard into a little valley (now marked
by the chapel of Ibagneta and still called Roncesvalles),
and there slew every man.
The Historic Basis
The whole romantic legend of Roland has sprung from the
simple words in a contemporary chronicle, In which battle was slain Roland,
prefect of the marches of Brittany."
This same fight of Roncesvalles was
the theme of an archaic poem, the “Song of Altobiscar,”
written about 1835. In it we hear the exultation
of the Basques as they see the knights of France fall
beneath their onslaughts. The Basques are on
the heights they hear the trampling of
a mighty host which throngs the narrow valley below:
its numbers are as countless as the sands of the sea,
its movement as resistless as the waves which roll
those sands on the shore. Awe fills the bosoms
of the mountain tribesmen, but their leader is undaunted.
“Let us unite our strong arms!” he cries
aloud. “Let us tear our rocks from their
beds and hurl them upon the enemy! Let us crush
and slay them all!” So said, so done: the
rocks roll plunging into the valley, slaying whole
troops in their descent. “And what mangled
flesh, what broken bones, what seas of blood!
Soon of that gallant band not one is left alive; night
covers all, the eagles devour the flesh, and the bones
whiten in this valley to all eternity!”
A Spanish Version
So runs the “Song of Altobiscar.”
But Spain too claims part of the honour of the day
of Roncesvalles. True, Roland was in reality
slain by Basques, not by Spaniards; but Spain, eager
to share the honour, has glorified a national hero,
Bernardo del Carpio, who, in the Spanish
legend, defeats Roland in single combat and wins the
day.
The Italian Orlando
Italy has laid claim to Roland, and
in the guise of Orlando, Orlando Furioso, Orlando
Innamorato, has made him into a fantastic, chivalrous
knight, a hero of many magical adventures.
Roland in French Literature
Noblest of all, however, is the development
of the “Roland Saga” in French literature;
for, even setting aside much legendary lore and accumulated
tradition, the Roland of the old epic is a perfect
hero of the early days of feudalism, when chivalry
was in its very beginnings, before the cult of the
Blessed Virgin Mary added the grace of courtesy to
its heroism. Evidently Roland had grown in importance
before the “Chanson de Roland” took its
present form, for we find the rearguard skirmish magnified
into a great battle, which manifestly contains recollections
of later Saracen invasions and Gascon revolts.
As befits the hero of an epic, Roland is now of royal
blood, the nephew of the great emperor, who has himself
increased in age and splendour; this heroic Roland
can obviously only be overcome by the treachery of
one of the Franks themselves, so there appears the
traitor Ganelon (a Romance version of a certain Danilo
or Nanilo), who is among the Twelve Peers what Judas
was among the Apostles; the mighty Saracens, not the
insignificant Basques, are now the victors; and the
vengeance taken by Charlemagne on the Saracens and
on the traitor is boldly added to history, which leaves
the disaster unavenged. Thus the bare fact was
embroidered over gradually by the historical imagination,
aided by patriotism, until a really national hero was
evolved out of an obscure Breton count.
The “Chanson de Roland”
The “Song of Roland,”
as we now have it, seems to be a late version of an
Anglo-Norman poem, made by a certain Turoldus or Thorold;
and it must bear a close resemblance to that chant
which fired the soldiers of William the Norman at
Hastings, when
“Taillefer, the noble
singer,
On his war-horse swift and
fiery,
Rode before the Norman host;
Tossed his sword in air and
caught it,
Chanted loud the death of
Roland,
And the peers who perished
with him
At the pass of Roncevaux.”
Roman de Rou.
The “Song of Roland” bears
an intimate relation to the development of European
thought, and the hero is doubly worth our study as
hero and as type of national character. Thus
runs the story:
The Story
The Emperor Charles the Great, Carolus
Magnus, or Charlemagne, had been for seven years in
Spain, and had conquered it from sea to sea, except
Saragossa, which, among its lofty mountains, and ruled
by its brave king Marsile, had defied his power.
Marsile still held to his idols, Mahomet, Apollo,
and Termagaunt, dreading in his heart the day when
Charles would force him to become a Christian.
The Saracen Council
The Saracen king gathered a council
around him, as he reclined on a seat of blue marble
in the shade of an orchard, and asked the advice of
his wise men.
“‘My lords,’
quoth he, ’you know our grievous state.
The mighty Charles, great
lord of France the fair,
Has spread his hosts in ruin
o’er our land.
No armies have I to resist
his course,
No people have I to destroy
his hosts.
Advise me now, what counsel
shall I take
To save my race and realm
from death and shame?’”
Blancandrin’s Advice
A wily emir, Blancandrin, of Val-Fonde,
was the only man who replied.
He was wise in counsel, brave in war, a loyal vassal
to his lord.
“‘Fear not, my
liege,’ he answered the sad king.
’Send thou to Charles
the proud, the arrogant,
And offer fealty and service
true,
With gifts of lions, bears,
and swift-foot hounds,
Seven hundred camels, falcons,
mules, and gold
As much as fifty chariots
can convey
Yea, gold enough to pay his
vassals all.
Say thou thyself will take
the Christian faith,
And follow him to Aix to be
baptized.
If he demands thy hostages,
then I
And these my fellows give
our sons to thee,
To go with Charles to France,
as pledge of truth.
Thou wilt not follow him,
thou wilt not yield
To be baptized, and so our
sons must die;
But better death than life
in foul disgrace,
With loss of our bright Spain
and happy days.’
So cried the pagans all; but
Marsile sat
Thoughtful, and yet at last
accepted all.”
An Embassy to Charlemagne
Now King Marsile dismissed the council
with words of thanks, only retaining near him ten
of his most famous barons, chief of whom was Blancandrin;
to them he said: “My lords, go to Cordova,
where Charles is at this time. Bear olive-branches
in your hands, in token of peace, and reconcile me
with him. Great shall be your reward if you succeed.
Beg Charles to have pity on me, and I will follow him
to Aix within a month, will receive the Christian
law, and become his vassal in love and loyalty.”
“Sire,” said Blancandrin,
“you shall have a good treaty!”
The ten messengers departed, bearing
olive-branches in their hands, riding on white mules,
with reins of gold and saddles of silver, and came
to Charles as he rested after the siege of Cordova,
which he had just taken and sacked.
Reception by Charlemagne
Charlemagne was in an orchard with
his Twelve Peers and fifteen thousand veteran warriors
of France. The messengers from the heathen king
reached this orchard and asked for the emperor; their
gaze wandered over groups of wise nobles playing at
chess, and groups of gay youths fencing, till at last
it rested on a throne of solid gold, set under a pine-tree
and overshadowed with eglantine. There sat Charles,
the king who ruled fair France, with white flowing
beard and hoary head, stately of form and majestic
of countenance. No need was there of usher to
cry: “Here sits Charles the King.”
The ambassadors greeted Charlemagne
with all honour, and Blancandrin opened the embassy
thus:
“Peace be with you from God
the Lord of Glory whom you adore! Thus says the
valiant King Marsile: He has been instructed in
your faith, the way of salvation, and is willing to
be baptized; but you have been too long in our bright
Spain, and should return to Aix. There will he
follow you and become your vassal, holding the kingdom
of Spain at your hand. Gifts have we brought
from him to lay at your feet, for he will share his
treasures with you!”
He is Perplexed
Charlemagne raised his hands in thanks
to God, but then bent his head and remained thinking
deeply, for he was a man of prudent mind, cautious
and far-seeing, and never spoke on impulse. At
last he said proudly: “Ye have spoken fairly,
but Marsile is my greatest enemy: how can I trust
your words?”
Blancandrin replied: “He
will give hostages, twenty of our noblest youths,
and my own son will be among them. King Marsile
will follow you to the wondrous springs of Aix-la-Chapelle,
and on the feast of St. Michael will receive baptism
in your court.”
Thus the audience ended. The
messengers were feasted in a pavilion raised in the
orchard, and the night passed in gaiety and good-fellowship.
He Consults his Twelve Peers
In the early morning Charlemagne arose
and heard Mass; then, sitting beneath a pine-tree,
he called the Twelve Peers to council. There came
the twelve heroes, chief of them Roland and his loyal
brother-in-arms Oliver; there came Archbishop Turpin;
and, among a thousand loyal Franks, there came Ganelon
the traitor. When all were seated in due order
Charlemagne began:
“My lords and barons, I have
received an embassy of peace from King Marsile, who
sends me great gifts and offers, but on condition that
I leave Spain and return to Aix. Thither will
he follow me, to receive the Faith, become a Christian
and my vassal. Is he to be trusted?”
“Let us beware,” cried all the Franks.
Roland Speaks
Roland, ever impetuous, now rose without
delay, and spoke: “Fair uncle and sire,
it would be madness to trust Marsile. Seven years
have we warred in Spain, and many cities have I won
for you, but Marsile has ever been treacherous.
Once before when he sent messengers with olive-branches
you and the French foolishly believed him, and he
beheaded the two counts who were your ambassadors to
him. Fight Marsile to the end, besiege and sack
Saragossa, and avenge those who perished by his treachery.”
Ganelon Objects
Charlemagne looked out gloomily from
under his heavy brows, he twisted his moustache and
pulled his long white beard, but said nothing, and
all the Franks remained silent, except Ganelon, whose
hostility to Roland showed clearly in his words:
“Sire, blind credulity were
wrong and foolish, but follow up your own advantage.
When Marsile offers to become your vassal, to hold
Spain at your hand and to take your faith, any man
who urges you to reject such terms cares little for
our death! Let pride no longer be your counsellor,
but hear the voice of wisdom.”
The aged Duke Naimes, the Nestor of
the army, spoke next, supporting Ganelon: “Sire,
the advice of Count Ganelon is wise, if wisely followed.
Marsile lies at your mercy; he has lost all, and only
begs for pity. It would be a sin to press this
cruel war, since he offers full guarantee by his hostages.
You need only send one of your barons to arrange the
terms of peace.”
This advice pleased the whole assembly,
and a murmur was heard: “The Duke has spoken
well.”
“Who Shall Go to Saragossa?”
“’My lords and
peers, whom shall we send
To Saragossa to Marsile?’
‘Sire, let me go,’
replied Duke Naimes;
‘Give me your glove
and warlike staff.’
‘No!’ cried the
king, ’my counsellor,
Thou shalt not leave me unadvised
Sit down again; I bid thee
stay.’
“’My lords and
peers, whom shall we send
To Saragossa to Marsile?’
‘Sire, I can go,’
quoth Roland bold.
‘That canst thou not,’
said Oliver;
’Thy heart is far too
hot and fierce
I fear for thee. But
I will go,
If that will please my lord
the King.’
‘No!’ cried the
king, ’ye shall not go.
I swear by this white flowing
beard
No peer shall undertake the
task.’
“‘My lords and
peers, whom shall we send?’
Archbishop Turpin rose and
spoke:
’Fair sire, let me be
messenger.
Your nobles all have played
their part;
Give me your glove and warlike
staff,
And I will show this heathen
king
In frank speech how a true
knight feels.’
But wrathfully the king replied:
’By this white beard,
thou shalt not go!
Sit down, and raise thy voice
no more.’”
Roland Suggests Ganelon
“Knights of France,” quoth
Charlemagne, “choose me now one of your number
to do my errand to Marsile, and to defend my honour
valiantly, if need be.”
“Ah,” said Roland, “then
it must be Ganelon, my stepfather; for whether he
goes or stays, you have none better than he!”
This suggestion satisfied all the
assembly, and they cried: “Ganelon will
acquit himself right manfully. If it please the
King, he is the right man to go.”
Charlemagne thought for a moment,
and then, raising his head, beckoned to Ganelon.
“Come hither, Ganelon,” he said, “and
receive this glove and staff, which the voice of all
the Franks gives to thee.”
Ganelon is Angry
“No,” replied Ganelon,
wrathfully. “This is the work of Roland,
and I will never forgive him, nor his friends, Oliver
and the other Peers. Here, in your presence,
I bid them defiance!”
“Your anger is too great,”
said Charlemagne; “you will go, since it is
my will also.”
“Yes, I shall go, but I shall
perish as did your two former ambassadors. Sire,
forget not that your sister is my wife, and that Baldwin,
my son, will be a valiant champion if he lives.
I leave to him my lands and fiefs. Sire,
guard him well, for I shall see him no more.”
“Your heart is too tender,”
said Charlemagne. “You must go, since such
is my command.”
He Threatens Roland
Ganelon, in rage and anguish, glared
round the council, and his face drew all eyes, so
fiercely he looked at Roland.
“Madman,” said he, “all
men know that I am thy stepfather, and for this cause
thou hast sent me to Marsile, that I may perish!
But if I return I will be revenged on thee.”
“Madness and pride,” Roland
retorted, “have no terrors for me; but this
embassy demands a prudent man not an angry fool:
if Charles consents, I will do his errand for thee.”
“Thou shalt not. Thou art
not my vassal, to do my work, and Charles, my lord,
has given me his commands. I go to Saragossa;
but there will I find some way to vent my anger.”
Now Roland began to laugh, so wild
did his stepfather’s threats seem, and the laughter
stung Ganelon to madness. “I hate you,”
he cried to Roland; “you have brought this unjust
choice on me.” Then, turning to the emperor:
“Mighty lord, behold me ready to fulfil your
commands.”
But is Sent
“Fair Lord Ganelon,” spoke
Charlemagne, “bear this message to Marsile.
He must become my vassal and receive holy baptism.
Half of Spain shall be his fief; the other half is
for Count Roland. If Marsile does not accept
these terms I will besiege Saragossa, capture the town,
and lead Marsile prisoner to Aix, where he shall die
in shame and torment. Take this letter, sealed
with my seal, and deliver it into the king’s
own right hand.”
Thereupon Charlemagne held out his
right-hand glove to Ganelon, who would fain have refused
it. So reluctant was he to grasp it that the
glove fell to the ground. “Ah, God!”
cried the Franks, “what an evil omen! What
woes will come to us from this embassy!” “You
shall hear full tidings,” quoth Ganelon.
“Now, sire, dismiss me, for I have no time to
lose.” Very solemnly Charlemagne raised
his hand and made the sign of the Cross over Ganelon,
and gave him his blessing, saying, “Go, for
the honour of Jesus Christ, and for your Emperor.”
So Ganelon took his leave, and returned to his lodging,
where he prepared for his journey, and bade farewell
to the weeping retainers whom he left behind, though
they begged to accompany him. “God forbid,”
cried he, “that so many brave knights should
die! Rather will I die alone. You, sirs,
return to our fair France, greet well my wife, guard
my son Baldwin, and defend his fief!”
He Plots with Marsile’s Messengers
Then Ganelon rode away, and shortly
overtook the ambassadors of the Moorish king, for
Blancandrin had delayed their journey to accompany
him, and the two envoys began a crafty conversation,
for both were wary and skilful, and each was trying
to read the other’s mind. The wily Saracen
began:
“’Ah! what a wondrous
king is Charles!
How far and wide his conquests
range!
The salt sea is no bar to
him:
From Poland to far England’s
shores
He stretches his unquestioned
sway;
But why seeks he to win bright
Spain?’
‘Such is his will,’
quoth Ganelon;
‘None can withstand
his mighty power!’
“’How valiant
are the Frankish lords
But how their counsel wrongs
their king
To urge him to this long-drawn
strife
They ruin both themselves
and him!’
‘I blame not them,’
quoth Ganelon,
’But Roland, swollen
with fatal pride.
Near Carcassonne he brought
the King
An apple, crimson streaked
with gold:
“Fair sire,” quoth
he, “here at your feet
I lay the crowns of all the
kings.”
If he were dead we should
have peace!’
“’How haughty
must this Roland be
Who fain would conquer all
the earth!
Such pride deserves due chastisement!
What warriors has he for the
task?’
‘The Franks of France,’
quoth Ganelon,
’The bravest warriors
’neath the sun!
For love alone they follow
him
(Or lavish gifts which he
bestows)
To death, or conquest of the
world!’”
To Betray Roland
The bitterness in Ganelon’s
tone at once struck: Blancandrin, who cast a
glance at him and saw the Frankish envoy trembling
with rage. He suddenly addressed Ganelon in whispered
tones: “Hast thou aught against the nephew
of Charles? Wouldst thou have revenge on Roland?
Deliver him to us, and King Marsile will share with
thee all his treasures.” Ganelon was at
first horrified, and refused to hear more, but so
well did Blancandrin argue and so skilfully did he
lay his snare that before they reached Saragossa and
came to the presence of King Marsile it was agreed
that Roland should be destroyed by their means.
Ganelon with the Saracens
Blancandrin and his fellow ambassadors
conducted Ganelon into the presence of the Saracen
king, and announced Charlemagne’s peaceable
reception of their message and the coming of his envoy.
“Let him speak: we listen,” said
Marsile.
Ganelon then began artfully:
“Peace be to you in the name of the Lord of
Glory whom we adore! This is the message of King
Charles: You shall receive the Holy Christian
Faith, and Charles will graciously grant you one-half
of Spain as a fief; the other half he intends for his
nephew Roland (and a haughty partner you will find
him!). If you refuse he will take Saragossa,
lead you captive to Aix, and give you there to a shameful
death.”
Marsile’s Anger
Marsile’s anger was so great
at this insulting message that he sprang to his feet,
and would have slain Ganelon with his gold-adorned
javelin; but he, seeing this, half drew his sword,
saying:
“’Sword, how fair
and bright thou art!
Come thou forth and view the
light.
Long as I can wield thee here
Charles my Emperor shall not
say
That I die alone, unwept.
Ere I fall Spain’s noblest
blood
Shall be shed to pay my death.’”
The Saracen Council
However, strife was averted, and Ganelon
received praise from all for his bold bearing and
valiant defiance of his king’s enemy. When
quiet was restored he repeated his message and delivered
the emperor’s letter, which was found to contain
a demand that the caliph, Marsile’s uncle, should
be sent, a prisoner, to Charles, in atonement for the
two ambassadors foully slain before. The indignation
of the Saracen nobles was intense, and Ganelon was
in imminent danger, but, setting his back against
a pine-tree, he prepared to defend himself to the
last. Again the quarrel was stayed, and Marsile,
taking his most trusted leaders, withdrew to a secret
council, whither, soon, Blancandrin led Ganelon.
Here Marsile excused his former rage, and, in reparation,
offered Ganelon a superb robe of marten’s fur,
which was accepted; and then began the tempting of
the traitor. First demanding a pledge of secrecy,
Marsile pitied Charlemagne, so aged and so weary with
rule. Ganelon praised his emperor’s prowess
and vast power. Marsile repeated his words of
pity, and Ganelon replied that as long as Roland and
the Twelve Peers lived Charlemagne needed no man’s
pity and feared no man’s power; his Franks,
also, were the best living warriors. Marsile
declared proudly that he could bring four hundred
thousand men against Charlemagne’s twenty thousand
French; but Ganelon dissuaded him from any such expedition.
Ganelon Plans Treachery
“’Not thus will
you overcome him;
Leave this folly, turn to
wisdom.
Give the Emperor so much treasure
That the Franks will be astounded.
Send him, too, the promised
pledges,
Sons of all your noblest vassals.
To fair France will Charles
march homeward,
Leaving (as I will contrive
it)
Haughty Roland in the rearguard.
Oliver, the bold and courteous,
Will be with him: slay
those heroes,
And King Charles will fall
for ever!’
‘Fair Sir Ganelon,’
quoth Marsile,
‘How must I entrap Count
Roland?’
’When King Charles is
in the mountains
He will leave behind his rearguard
Under Oliver and Roland.
Send against them half your
army:
Roland and the Peers will
conquer,
But be wearied with the struggle
Then bring on your untired
warriors.
France will lose this second
battle,
And when Roland dies, the
Emperor
Has no right hand for his
conflicts
Farewell all the Frankish
greatness!
Ne’er again can Charles
assemble
Such a mighty host for conquest,
And you will have peace henceforward!’”
Welcomed by Marsile
Marsile was overjoyed at the treacherous
advice and embraced and richly rewarded the felon
knight. The death of Roland and the Peers was
solemnly sworn between them, by Marsile on the book
of the Law of Mahomet, by Ganelon on the sacred relics
in the pommel of his sword. Then, repeating the
compact between them, and warning Ganelon against
treason to his friends, Marsile dismissed the treacherous
envoy who hastened to return and put his scheme into
execution.
Ganelon Returns to Charles
In the meantime Charles had retired
as far as Valtierra, on his way to France, and there
Ganelon found him, and delivered the tribute, the
keys of Saragossa, and a false message excusing the
absence of the caliph. He had, so Marsile said,
put to sea with three hundred thousand warriors who
would not renounce their faith, and all had been drowned
in a tempest, not four leagues from land. Marsile
would obey King Charles’s commands in all other
respects. “Thank God!” cried Charlemagne.
“Ganelon, you have done well, and shall be well
rewarded!”
The French Camp. Charles Dreams
Now the whole Frankish army marched
towards the Pyrenees, and, as evening fell, found
themselves among the mountains, where Roland planted
his banner on the topmost summit, clear against the
sky, and the army encamped for the night; but the
whole Saracen host had also marched and encamped in
a wood not far from the Franks. Meanwhile, as
Charlemagne slept he had dreams of evil omen.
Ganelon, in his dreams, seized the imperial spear
of tough ash-wood, and broke it, so that the splinters
flew far and wide. In another dream he saw himself
at Aix attacked by a leopard and a bear, which tore
off his right arm; a greyhound came to his aid but
he knew not the end of the fray, and slept unhappily.
A Morning Council
When morning light shone, and the
army was ready to march, the clarions of the host
sounded gaily, and Charlemagne called his barons around
him.
“’My lords and
Peers, ye see these strait defiles:
Choose ye to whom the rearguard
shall be given.’
‘My stepson Roland,’
straight quoth Ganelon.
’’Mid all the
Peers there is no braver knight:
In him will lie the safety
of your host.’
Charles heard in wrath, and
spoke in angry tones:
’What fiendish rage
has prompted this advice?
Who then will go before me
in the van?’
The traitor tarried not, but
answered swift:
‘Ogier the Dane will
do that duty best.’”
When Roland heard that he was to command
the rearguard he knew not whether to be pleased or
not. At first he thanked Ganelon for naming him.
“Thanks, fair stepfather, for sending me to the
post of danger. King Charles shall lose no man
nor horse through my neglect.” But when
Ganelon replied sneeringly, “You speak the truth,
as I know right well,” Roland’s gratitude
turned to bitter anger, and he reproached the villain.
“Ah, wretch! disloyal traitor! thou thinkest
perchance that I, like thee, shall basely drop the
glove, but thou shalt see! Sir King, give me
your bow. I will not let my badge of office fall,
as thou didst, Ganelon, at Cordova. No evil omen
shall assail the host through me.”
Roland for the Rearguard
Charlemagne was very loath to grant
his request, but on the advice of Duke Naimes, most
prudent of counsellors, he gave to Roland his bow,
and offered to leave with him half the army. To
this the champion would not agree, but would only
have twenty thousand Franks from fair France.
Roland clad himself in his shining armour, laced on
his lordly helmet, girt himself with his famous sword
Durendala, and hung round his neck his flower-painted
shield; he mounted his good steed Veillantif, and
took in hand his bright lance with the white pennon
and golden fringe; then, looking like the Archangel
St. Michael, he rode forward, and easy it was to see
how all the Franks loved him and would follow where
he led. Beside him rode the famous Peers of France,
Oliver the bold and courteous, the saintly Archbishop
Turpin, and Count Gautier, Roland’s loyal vassal.
They chose carefully the twenty thousand French for
the rearguard, and Roland sent Gautier with one thousand
of their number to search the mountains. Alas!
they never returned, for King Almaris, a Saracen chief,
met and slew them all among the hills; and only Gautier,
sorely wounded and bleeding to death, returned to
Roland in the final struggle.
Charlemagne spoke a mournful “Farewell”
to his nephew and the rearguard, and the mighty army
began to traverse the gloomy ravine through the dark
masses of rocks, and to emerge on the other side of
the Pyrenees. All wept, most for joy to set eyes
on that dear land of fair France, which for seven
years they had not seen; but Charles, with a sad foreboding
of disaster, hid his eyes beneath his cloak and wept
in silence.
Charles is Sad
“What grief weighs on your mind,
sire?” asked the wise Duke Naimes, riding up
beside Charlemagne.
“I mourn for my nephew.
Last night in a vision I saw Ganelon break my trusty
lance this Ganelon who has sent Roland to
the rear. And now I have left Roland in a foreign
land, and, O God! if I lose him I shall never find
his equal!” And the emperor rode on in silence,
seeing naught but his own sad foreboding visions.
The Saracen Pursuit
Meanwhile King Marsile, with his countless
Saracens, had pursued so quickly that the van of the
heathen army soon saw waving the banners of the Frankish
rear. Then as they halted before the strife began,
one by one the nobles of Saragossa, the champions
of the Moors, advanced and claimed the right to measure
themselves against the Twelve Peers of France.
Marsile’s nephew received the royal glove as
chief champion, and eleven Saracen chiefs took a vow
to slay Roland and spread the faith of Mahomet.
“Death to the rearguard!
Roland shall die! Death to the Peers! Woe
to France and Charlemagne! We will bring the
Emperor to your feet! You shall sleep at St.
Denis! Down with fair France!” Such were
their confident cries as they armed for the conflict;
and on their side no less eager were the Franks.
“Fair Sir Comrade,” said
Oliver to Roland, “methinks we shall have a
fray with the heathen.”
“God grant it,” returned
Roland. “Our duty is to hold this pass for
our king. A vassal must endure for his lord grief
and pain, heat and cold, torment and death; and a
knight’s duty is to strike mighty blows, that
men may sing of him, in time to come, no evil songs.
Never shall such be sung of me.”
Oliver Descries the Saracens
Hearing a great tumult, Oliver ascended
a hill and looked towards Spain, where he perceived
the great pagan army, like a gleaming sea, with shining
hauberks and helms flashing in the sun. “Alas!
we are betrayed! This treason is plotted by Ganelon,
who put us in the rear,” he cried. “Say
no more,” said Roland; “blame him not in
this: he is my stepfather.”
Now Oliver alone had seen the might
of the pagan array, and he was appalled by the countless
multitudes of the heathens. He descended from
the hill and appealed to Roland.
Roland will not Blow his Horn
“’Comrade Roland,
sound your war-horn,
Your great Olifant, far-sounding:
Charles will hear it and return
here.’
‘Cowardice were that,’
quoth Roland;
’In fair France my fame
were tarnished.
No, these Pagans all shall
perish
When I brandish Durendala.’
“’Comrade Roland,
sound your war-horn:
Charles will hear it and return
here.’
‘God forbid it,’
Roland answered,
’That it e’er
be sung by minstrels
I was asking help in battle
From my King against these
Pagans.
I will ne’er do such
dishonour
To my kinsmen and my nation.
No, these heathen all shall
perish
When I brandish Durendala.’
“’Comrade Roland,
sound your war-horn
Charles will hear it and return
here.
See how countless are the
heathen
And how small our Frankish
troop is!’
‘God forbid it,’
answered Roland,
’That our fair France
be dishonoured
Or by me or by my comrades
Death we choose, but not dishonour!’”
Roland was a valiant hero, but Oliver
had prudence as well as valour, and his advice was
that of a good and careful general. Now he spoke
reproachfully.
It is Too Late
“Ah, Roland, if you had sounded
your magic horn the king would soon be here, and we
should not perish! Now look to the heights and
to the mountain passes: see those who surround
us. None of us will see the light of another
day!”
“Speak not so foolishly,”
retorted Roland. “Accursed be all cowards,
say I.” Then, softening his tone a little,
he continued: “Friend and comrade, say
no more. The emperor has entrusted to us twenty
thousand Frenchmen, and not a coward among them.
Lay on with thy lance, Oliver, and I will strike with
Durendala. If I die men shall say: ’This
was the sword of a noble vassal.’”
Turpin Blesses the Knights
Then spoke the brave and saintly Archbishop
Turpin. Spurring his horse, he rode, a gallant
figure, to the summit of a hill, whence he called
aloud to the Frankish knights:
“’Fair sirs and
barons, Charles has left us here
To serve him, or at need to
die for him.
See, yonder come the foes
of Christendom,
And we must fight for God
and Holy Faith.
Now, say your shrift, and
make your peace with Heaven;
I will absolve you and will
heal your souls;
And if you die as martyrs,
your true home
Is ready midst the flowers
of Paradise!’”
The Frankish knights, dismounting,
knelt before Turpin, who blessed and absolved them
all, bidding them, as penance, to strike hard against
the heathen.
Then Roland called his brother-in-arms,
the brave and courteous Oliver, and said: “Fair
brother, I know now that Ganelon has betrayed us for
reward and Marsile has bought us; but the payment shall
be made with our swords, and Charlemagne will terribly
avenge us.”
“Montjoie! Montjoie!”
While the two armies yet stood face
to face in battle array Oliver replied: “What
good is it to speak? You would not sound your
horn, and Charles cannot help us; he is not to blame.
Barons and lords, ride on and yield not. In God’s
name fight and slay, and remember the war-cry of our
Emperor.” And at the words the war-cry of
“Montjoie! Montjoie!” burst from
the whole army as they spurred against the advancing
heathen host.
The Fray
Great was the fray that day, deadly
was the combat, as the Moors and Franks crashed together,
shouting their cries, invoking their gods or saints,
wielding with utmost courage sword, lance, javelin,
scimitar, or dagger. Blades flashed, lances were
splintered, helms were cloven in that terrible fight
of heroes. Each of the Twelve Peers did mighty
feats of arms. Roland himself slew the nephew
of King Marsile, who had promised to bring Roland’s
head to his uncle’s feet, and bitter were the
words that Roland hurled at the lifeless body of his
foe, who had but just before boasted that Charlemagne
should lose his right hand. Oliver slew the heathen
king’s brother, and one by one the Twelve Peers
proved their mettle on the twelve champions of King
Marsile, and left them dead or mortally wounded on
the field. Wherever the battle was fiercest and
the danger greatest, where help was most needed, there
Roland spurred to the rescue, swinging Durendala, and,
falling on the heathen like a thunderbolt of war,
turned the tide of battle again and yet again.
“Red was Roland, red
with bloodshed:
Red his corselet, red his
shoulders,
Red his arm, and red his charger.”
Like the red god Mars he rode through
the battle; and as he went he met Oliver, with the
truncheon or a spear in his grasp.
“‘Friend, what
hast thou there?’ cried Roland.
’In this game ’tis
not a distaff,
But a blade of steel thou
needest.
Where is now Hauteclaire,
thy good sword,
Golden-hilted, crystal-pommeled?’
‘Here,’ said Oliver;
’so fight I
That I have not time to draw
it.’
‘Friend,’ quoth
Roland, ’more I love thee
Ever henceforth than a brother.’”
The Saracens Perish
Thus the battle continued, most valiantly
contested by both sides, and the Saracens died by
hundreds and thousands, till all their host lay dead
but one man, who fled wounded, leaving the Frenchmen
masters of the field, but in sorry plight broken
were their swords and lances, rent their hauberks,
torn and blood-stained their gay banners and pennons,
and many, many of their brave comrades lay lifeless.
Sadly they looked round on the heaps of corpses, and
their minds were filled with grief as they thought
of their companions, of fair France which they should
see no more, and of their emperor who even now awaited
them while they fought and died for him. Yet they
were not discouraged; loudly their cry re-echoed,
“Montjoie! Montjoie!” as Roland cheered
them on, and Turpin called aloud: “Our men
are heroes; no king under heaven has better.
It is written in the Chronicles of France that in
that great land it is our king’s right to have
valiant soldiers.”
A Second Saracen Army
While they sought in tears the bodies
of their friends, the main army of the Saracens, under
King Marsile in person, came upon them; for the one
fugitive who had escaped had urged Marsile to attack
again at once, while the Franks were still weary.
The advice seemed good to Marsile, and he advanced
at the head of a hundred thousand men, whom he now
hurled against the French in columns of fifty thousand
at a time; and they came on right valiantly, with
clarions sounding and trumpets blowing.
“‘Soldiers of
the Lord,’ cried Turpin,
’Be ye valiant and steadfast,
For this day shall crowns
be given you
Midst the flowers of Paradise.
In the name of God our Saviour,
Be ye not dismayed nor frighted,
Lest of you be shameful legends
Chanted by the tongue of minstrels.
Rather let us die victorious,
Since this eve shall see us
lifeless!
Heaven has no room for cowards!
Knights, who nobly fight,
and vainly,
Ye shall sit amid the holy
In the blessed fields of Heaven.
On then, Friends of God, to
glory!’”
And the battle raged anew, with all the odds against the
small handful of French, who knew they were doomed, and fought as though they
were fey."
Gloomy Portents
Meanwhile the whole course of nature
was disturbed. In France there were tempests
of wind and thunder, rain and hail; thunderbolts fell
everywhere, and the earth shook exceedingly. From
Mont St. Michel to Cologne, from Besancon to Wissant,
not one town could show its walls uninjured, not one
village its houses unshaken. A terrible darkness
spread over all the land, only broken when the heavens
split asunder with the lightning-flash. Men whispered
in terror: “Behold the end of the world!
Behold the great Day of Doom!” Alas! they knew
not the truth: it was the great mourning for
the death of Roland.
Many French Knights Fall
In this second battle the French champions
were weary, and before long they began to fall before
the valour of the newly arrived Saracen nobles.
First died Engelier the Gascon, mortally wounded by
the lance of that Saracen who swore brotherhood to
Ganelon; next Samson, and the noble Duke Anseis.
These three were well avenged by Roland and Oliver
and Turpin. Then in quick succession died Gerin
and Gerier and other valiant Peers at the hands of
Grandoigne, until his death-dealing career was cut
short by Durendala. Another desperate single combat
was won by Turpin, who slew a heathen emir “as
black as molten pitch.”
The Second Army Defeated
Finally this second host of the heathens
gave way and fled, begging Marsile to come and succour
them; but now of the victorious French there were
but sixty valiant champions left alive, including Roland,
Oliver, and the fiery prelate Turpin.
A Third Appears
Now the third host of the pagans began
to roll forward upon the dauntless little band, and
in the short breathing-space before the Saracens again
attacked them Roland cried aloud to Oliver:
“’Fair Knight
and Comrade, see these heroes,
Valiant warriors, lying lifeless!
I must mourn for our fair
country
France, left widowed of her
barons.
Charles my King, why art thou
absent?
Brother mine, how shall we
send him
Mournful tidings of our struggle?’
‘How I know not,’
said his comrade.
‘Better death than vile
dishonour.’”
Roland Willing to Blow his Horn
“’Comrade, I will
blow my war-horn:
Charles will hear it in the
passes
And return with all his army.’
Oliver quoth: ’’Twere
disgraceful
To your kinsmen all their
life-days.
When I urged it, then you
would not;
Now, to sound your horn is
shameful,
And I never will approve it.’”
Oliver Objects. They Quarrel
“’See, the battle
goes against us:
Comrade, I shall sound my
war-horn.’
Oliver replied: ’O
coward!
When I urged it, then you
would not.
If fair France again shall
greet me
You shall never wed my sister;
By this beard of mine I swear
it!’
“‘Why so bitter
and so wrathful?’
Oliver returned: ’’Tis
thy fault;
Valour is not kin to madness,
Temperance knows naught of
fury.
You have killed these noble
champions,
You have slain the Emperor’s
vassals,
You have robbed us of our
conquests.
Ah, your valour, Count, is
fatal!
Charles must lose his doughty
heroes,
And your league with me must
finish
With this day in bitter sorrow.’”
Turpin Mediates
Archbishop Turpin heard the dispute,
and strove to calm the angry heroes. “Brave
knights, be not so enraged. The horn will not
save the lives of these gallant dead, but it will
be better to sound it, that Charles, our lord and
emperor, may return, may avenge our death and weep
over our corpses, may bear them to fair France, and
bury them in the sanctuary, where the wild beasts
shall not devour them.” “That is
well said,” quoth Roland and Oliver.
The Horn is Blown
Then at last Roland put the carved
ivory horn, the magic Olifant, to his lips, and blew
so loudly that the sound echoed thirty leagues away.
“Hark! our men are in combat!” cried Charlemagne;
but Ganelon retorted: “Had any but the
king said it, that had been a lie.”
A second time Roland blew his horn,
so violently and with such anguish that the veins
of his temples burst, and the blood flowed from his
brow and from his mouth. Charlemagne, pausing,
heard it again, and said: “That is Roland’s
horn; he would not sound it were there no battle.”
But Ganelon said mockingly: “There is no
battle, for Roland is too proud to sound his horn
in danger. Besides, who would dare to attack
Roland, the strong, the valiant, great and wonderful
Roland? No man. He is doubtless hunting,
and laughing with the Peers. Your words, my liege,
do but show how old and weak and doting you are.
Ride on, sire; the open country lies far before you.”
When Roland blew the horn for the
third time he had hardly breath to awaken the echoes;
but still Charlemagne heard. “How faintly
comes the sound! There is death in that feeble
blast!” said the emperor; and Duke Naimes interrupted
eagerly: “Sire, Roland is in peril; some
one has betrayed him doubtless he who now
tries to beguile you! Sire, rouse your host,
arm for battle, and ride to save your nephew.”
Ganelon Arrested
Then Charlemagne called aloud:
“Hither, my men. Take this traitor Ganelon
and keep him safe till my return.” And the
kitchen folk seized the felon knight, chained him
by the neck, and beat him; then, binding him hand
and foot, they flung him on a sorry nag, to be borne
with them till Charles should demand him at their
hands again.
Charles Returns
With all speed the whole army retraced
their steps, turning their faces to Spain, and saying:
“Ah, if we could find Roland alive what blows
we would strike for him!” Alas! it was too late!
Too late!
How lofty are the peaks, how vast
and shadowy the mountains! How dim and gloomy
the passes, how deep the valleys! How swift the
rushing torrents! Yet with headlong speed the
Frankish army hastens back, with trumpets sounding
in token of approaching help, all praying God to preserve
Roland till they come. Alas! they cannot reach
him in time! Too late. Too late!
Roland Weeps for his Comrades
Now Roland cast his gaze around on
hill and valley, and saw his noble vassals and comrades
lie dead. As a noble knight he wept for them,
saying:
“’Fair Knights,
may God have mercy on your souls!
May He receive you into Paradise
And grant you rest on banks
of heavenly flowers!
Ne’er have I known such
mighty men as you.
Fair France, that art the
best of all dear lands,
How art thou widowed of thy
noble sons!
Through me alone, dear comrades,
have you died,
And yet through me no help
nor safety comes.
God have you in His keeping!
Brother, come,
Let us attack the heathen
and win death,
Or grief will slay me!
Death is duty now.’”
He Fights Desperately
So saying, he rushed into the battle,
slew the only son of King Marsile, and drove the heathen
before him as the hounds drive the deer. Turpin
saw and applauded. “So should a good knight
do, wearing good armour and riding a good steed.
He must deal good strong strokes in battle, or he
is not worth a groat. Let a coward be a monk in
some cloister and pray for the sins of us fighters.”
Marsile in wrath attacked the slayer
of his son, but in vain; Roland struck off his right
hand, and Marsile fled back mortally wounded to Saragossa,
while his main host, seized with panic, left the field
to Roland. However, the caliph, Marsile’s
uncle, rallied the ranks, and, with fifty thousand
Saracens, once more came against the little troop
of Champions of the Cross, the three poor survivors
of the rearguard.
Roland cried aloud: “Now
shall we be martyrs for our faith. Fight boldly,
lords, for life or death! Sell yourselves dearly!
Let not fair France be dishonoured in her sons.
When the Emperor sees us dead with our slain foes
around us he will bless our valour.”
Oliver Falls
The pagans were emboldened by the
sight of the three alone, and the caliph, rushing
at Oliver, pierced him from behind with his lance.
But though mortally wounded Oliver retained strength
enough to slay the caliph, and to cry aloud:
“Roland! Roland! Aid me!” then
he rushed on the heathen army, doing heroic deeds
and shouting “Montjoie! Montjoie!”
while the blood ran from his wound and stained the
earth blood-red. At this woeful sight Roland
swooned with grief, and Oliver, faint from loss of
blood, and with eyes dimmed by fast-coming death,
distinguished not the face of his dear friend; he saw
only a vague figure drawing near, and, mistaking it
for an enemy, raised his sword Hauteclaire and gave
Roland one last terrible blow, which clove the helmet,
but harmed not the head. The blow roused Roland
from his swoon, and, gazing tenderly at Oliver, he
gently asked him:
“’Comrade and
brother, was that blow designed
To slay your Roland, him who
loves you so?
There is no vengeance you
would wreak on me.’
’Roland, I hear you
speak, but see you not.
God guard and keep you, friend;
but pardon me
The blow I struck, unwitting,
on your head.’
‘I have no hurt,’
said Roland; ’I forgive
Here and before the judgment-throne
of God.’”
And Dies
Now Oliver felt the pains of death
come upon him. Both sight and hearing were gone,
his colour fled, and, dismounting, he lay upon the
earth; there, humbly confessing his sins, he begged
God to grant him rest in Paradise, to bless his lord
Charlemagne and the fair land of France, and to keep
above all men his comrade Roland, his best-loved brother-in-arms.
This ended, he fell back, his heart failed, his head
drooped low, and Oliver the brave and courteous knight
lay dead on the blood-stained earth, with his face
turned to the east. Roland lamented him in gentle
words: “Comrade, alas for thy valour!
Many days and years have we been comrades: no
ill didst thou to me, nor I to thee: now thou
art dead, ’tis pity that I live!”
Turpin is Mortally Wounded. The Horn Again
Turpin and Roland now stood together
for a time and were joined by the brave Count Gautier,
whose thousand men had been slain, and he himself
grievously wounded; he now came, like a loyal vassal,
to die with his lord Roland, and was slain in the
first discharge of arrows which the Saracens shot.
Taught by experience, the pagans kept their distance,
and wounded Turpin with four lances, while they stood
some yards away from the heroes. But when Turpin
felt himself mortally wounded he plunged into the
throng of the heathen, killing four hundred before
he fell, and Roland fought on with broken armour,
and with ever-bleeding head, till in a pause of the
deadly strife he took his horn and again sent forth
a feeble dying blast.
Charles Answers the Horn
Charlemagne heard it, and was filled
with anguish. “Lords, all goes ill:
I know by the sound of Roland’s horn he has not
long to live! Ride on faster, and let all our
trumpets sound, in token of our approach.”
Then sixty thousand trumpets sounded, so that mountains
echoed it and valleys replied, and the heathen heard
it and trembled. “It is Charlemagne!
Charles is coming!” they cried. “If
Roland lives till he comes the war will begin again,
and our bright Spain is lost.” Thereupon
four hundred banded together to slay Roland; but he
rushed upon them, mounted on his good steed Veillantif,
and the valiant pagans fled. But while Roland
dismounted to tend the dying archbishop they returned
and cast darts from afar, slaying Veillantif, the
faithful war-horse, and piercing the hero’s armour.
Still nearer and nearer sounded the clarions of Charlemagne’s
army in the defiles, and the Saracen host fled for
ever, leaving Roland alone, on foot, expiring, amid
the dying and the dead.
Turpin Blesses the Dead
Roland made his way to Turpin, unlaced
his golden helmet, took off his hauberk, tore his
own tunic to bind up his grievous wounds, and then
gently raising the prelate, carried him to the fresh
green grass, where he most tenderly laid him down.
“‘Ah, gentle lord,’
said Roland, ’give me leave
To carry here our comrades
who are dead,
Whom we so dearly loved; they
must not lie
Unblest; but I will bring
their corpses here
And thou shalt bless them,
and me, ere thou die.’
‘Go,’ said the
dying priest, ’but soon return.
Thank God! the victory is
yours and mine!’”
With great pain and many delays Roland
traversed the field of slaughter, looking in the faces
of the dead, till he had found and brought to Turpin’s
feet the bodies of the eleven Peers, last of all Oliver,
his own dear friend and brother, and Turpin blessed
and absolved them all. Now Roland’s grief
was so deep and his weakness so great that he swooned
where he stood, and the archbishop saw him fall and
heard his cry of pain. Slowly and painfully Turpin
struggled to his feet, and, bending over Roland, took
Olifant, the curved ivory horn; inch by inch the dying
archbishop tottered towards a little mountain stream,
that the few drops he could carry might revive Roland.
He Dies
However, his weakness overcame him
before he reached the water, and he fell forward dying.
Feebly he made his confession, painfully he joined
his hands in prayer, and as he prayed his spirit fled.
Turpin, the faithful champion of the Cross, in teaching
and in battle, died in the service of Charlemagne.
May God have mercy on his soul!
When Roland awoke from his swoon he
looked for Turpin, and found him dead, and, seeing
Olifant, he guessed what the archbishop’s aim
had been, and wept for pity. Crossing the fair
white hands over Turpin’s breast, he sadly prayed:
“’Alas! brave
priest, fair lord of noble birth,
Thy soul I give to the great
King of Heaven!
No mightier champion has He
in His hosts,
No prophet greater to maintain
the Faith,
No teacher mightier to convert
mankind
Since Christ’s Apostles
walked upon the earth!
May thy fair soul escape the
pains of Hell
And Paradise receive thee
in its bowers!’”
Roland’s Last Fight
Now death was very near to Roland,
and he felt it coming upon him while he yet prayed
and commended himself to his guardian angel Gabriel.
Taking in one hand Olifant, and in the other his good
sword Durendala, Roland climbed a little hill, one
bowshot within the realm of Spain. There under
two pine-trees he found four marble steps, and as
he was about to climb them, fell swooning on the grass
very near his end. A lurking Saracen, who had
feigned death, stole from his covert, and, calling
aloud, “Charles’s nephew is vanquished!
I will bear his sword back to Arabia,” seized
Durendala as it lay in Roland’s dying clasp.
The attempt roused Roland, and he opened his eyes,
saying, “Thou art not of us,” then struck
such a blow with Olifant on the helm of the heathen
thief that he fell dead before his intended victim.
He Tries to Break his Sword
Pale, bleeding, dying, Roland struggled
to his feet, bent on saving his good blade from the
defilement of heathen hands. He grasped Durendala,
and the brown marble before him split beneath his mighty
blows; but the good sword stood firm, the steel grated
but did not break, and Roland lamented aloud that
his famous sword must now become the weapon of a lesser
man. Again Roland smote with Durendala, and clove
the block of sardonyx, but the good steel only grated
and did not break, and the hero bewailed himself aloud,
saying, “Alas! my good Durendala, how bright
and pure thou art! How thou flamest in the sunbeams,
as when the angel brought thee! How many lands
hast thou conquered for Charles my King, how many
champions slain, how many heathen converted!
Must I now leave thee to the pagans? May God spare
fair France this shame!” A third time Roland
raised the sword and struck a rock of blue marble,
which split asunder, but the steel only grated it
would not break; and the hero knew that he could do
no more.
His Last Prayer
Then he flung himself on the ground
under a pine-tree with his face to the earth, his
sword and Olifant beneath him, his face to the foe,
that Charlemagne and the Franks might see when they
came that he died victorious. He made his confession,
prayed for mercy, and offered to Heaven his glove,
in token of submission for all his sins. “Mea
culpa! O God! I pray for pardon for all my
sins, both great and small, that I have sinned from
my birth until this day.” So he held up
towards Heaven his right-hand glove, and the angels
of God descended around him. Again Roland prayed:
“’O very Father,
who didst never lie,
Didst bring St. Lazarus from
the dead again,
Didst save St. Daniel from
the lion’s mouth,
Save Thou my soul and keep
it from all ills
That I have merited by all
my sins!’”
He Dies
Again he held up to Heaven his glove,
and St. Gabriel received it; then, with head bowed
and hands clasped, the hero died, and the waiting
cherubim, St. Raphael, St. Michael, and St. Gabriel,
bore his soul to Paradise.
So died Roland and the Peers of France.
Charles Arrives
Soon after Roland’s heroic spirit
had passed away the emperor came galloping out of
the mountains into the valley of Roncesvalles, where
not a foot of ground was without its burden of death.
Loudly he called: “Fair
nephew, where art thou? Where is the archbishop?
And Count Oliver? Where are the Peers?”
Alas! of what avail was it to call?
No man replied, for all were dead; and Charlemagne
wrung his hands, and tore his beard and wept, and his
army bewailed their slain comrades, and all men thought
of vengeance. Truly a fearful vengeance did Charles
take, in that terrible battle which he fought the
next day against the Emir of Babylon, come from oversea
to help his vassal Marsile, when the sun stood still
in heaven that the Christians might be avenged on
their enemies; in the capture of Saragossa and the
death of Marsile, who, already mortally wounded, turned
his face to the wall and died when he heard of the
defeat of the emir; but when vengeance was taken on
the open enemy Charlemagne thought of mourning, and
returned to Roncesvalles to seek the body of his beloved
nephew.
The emperor knew well that Roland
would be found before his men, with his face to the
foe. Thus he advanced a bowshot from his companions
and climbed a little hill, there found the little flowery
meadow stained red with the blood of his barons, and
there at the summit, under the trees, lay the body
of Roland on the green grass. The broken blocks
of marble bore traces of the hero’s dying efforts,
and Charlemagne raised Roland, and, clasping the hero
in his arms, lamented over him.
His Lament
“’The Lord have
mercy, Roland, on thy soul!
Never again shall our fair
France behold
A knight so worthy, till France
be no more!
“’The Lord have
mercy, Roland, on thy soul!
That thou mayest rest in flowers
of Paradise
With all His glorious Saints
for evermore!
My honour now will lessen
and decay,
My days be spent in grief
for lack of thee,
My joy and power will vanish.
There is none,
Comrade or kinsman, to maintain
my cause.
“’The Lord have
mercy, Roland, on thy soul!
And grant thee place in Paradise
the blest,
Thou valiant youth, thou mighty
conqueror!
How widowed lies our fair
France and how lone
How will the realms that I
have swayed rebel
Now thou art taken from my
weary age!
So deep my woe that fain would
I die too
And join my valiant Peers
in Paradise
While men inter my weary limbs
with thine!"
The Dead Buried
The French army buried the dead with
all honour, where they had fallen, except the bodies
of Roland, Oliver, and Turpin, which were carried
to Blaye, and interred in the great cathedral there;
and then Charlemagne returned to Aix.
Aude the Fair
As Charles the Great entered his palace
a beauteous maiden met him, Aude the Fair, the sister
of Oliver and betrothed bride of Roland. She
asked eagerly:
“Where is Roland the mighty
captain, who swore to take me for his bride?”
“Alas! dear sister and friend,”
said Charlemagne, weeping and tearing his long white
beard, “thou askest tidings of the dead.
But I will replace him: thou shalt have Louis,
my son, Count of the Marches.”
“These words are strange,”
exclaimed Aude the Fair. “God and all His
saints and angels forbid that I should live when Roland
my love is dead.” Thereupon she lost her
colour and fell at the emperor’s feet; he thought
her fainting, but she was dead. God have mercy
on her soul!
The Traitor Put to Death
Too long it would be to tell of the
trial of Ganelon the traitor. Suffice it that
he was torn asunder by wild horses, and his name remains
in France a byword for all disloyalty and treachery.