We left Rinaldo when, having overcome
the monster, he quitted the castle of Altaripa, and
pursued his way on foot. He soon met with a weeping
damsel, who, being questioned as to the cause of her
sorrow, told him she was in search of one to do battle
to rescue her lover, who had been made prisoner by
a vile enchantress, together with Orlando and many
more. The damsel was Flordelis, the lady-love
of Florismart, and Rinaldo promised his assistance,
trusting to accomplish the adventure either by valor
or skill. Flordelis insisted upon Rinaldo’s
taking her horse, which he consented to do, on condition
of her mounting behind him.
As they rode on through a wood, they
heard strange noises, and Rinaldo, reassuring the
damsel, pressed forward towards the quarter from which
they proceeded. He soon perceived a giant standing
under a vaulted cavern, with a huge club in his hand,
and of an appearance to strike the boldest spirit
with dread. By the side of the cavern was chained
a griffin, which, together with the giant, was stationed
there to guard a wonderful horse, the same which was
once Argalia’s. This horse was a creature
of enchantment, matchless in vigor, speed, and form,
which disdained to share the diet of his fellow-steeds, corn
or grass, and fed only on air. His
name was Rabican.
This marvellous horse, after his master
Argalia had been slain by Ferrau, finding himself
at liberty, returned to his native cavern, and was
here stabled under the protection of the giant and
the griffin. As Rinaldo approached, the giant
assailed him with his club. Rinaldo defended
himself from the giant’s blows, and gave him
one in return, which, if his skin had not been of
the toughest, would have finished the combat.
But the giant, though wounded, escaped, and let loose
the griffin. This monstrous bird towered in air,
and thence pounced down upon Rinaldo, who, watching
his opportunity, dealt her a desperate wound.
She had, however, strength for another flight, and
kept repeating her attacks, which Rinaldo parried
as he could, while the damsel stood trembling by,
witnessing the contest.
The battle continued, rendered more
terrible by the approach of night, when Rinaldo determined
upon a desperate expedient to bring it to a conclusion.
He fell, as if fainting from his wounds, and, on the
close approach of the griffin, dealt her a blow which
sheared away one of her wings. The beast, though
sinking, griped him fast with her talons, digging
through plate and mail; but Rinaldo plied his sword
in utter desperation, and at last accomplished her
destruction.
Rinaldo then entered the cavern, and
found there the wonderful horse, all caparisoned.
He was coal-black, except for a star of white on his
forehead, and one white foot behind. For speed
he was unrivalled, though in strength he yielded to
Bayard. Rinaldo mounted upon Rabican, and
issued from the cavern.
As he pursued his way he met a fugitive
from Agrican’s army, who gave such an account
of the prowess of a champion who fought on the side
of Angelica, that Rinaldo was persuaded this must
be Orlando, though at a loss to imagine how he could
have been freed from captivity. He determined
to repair to the scene of the contest to satisfy his
curiosity, and Flordelis, hoping to find Florismart
with Orlando, consented to accompany him.
While these things were doing, all
was rout and dismay in the Tartarian army, from the
death of Agrican. King Galafron, arriving at this
juncture with an army for the relief of his capital,
Albracca, assaulted the enemy’s camp, and carried
all before him. Rinaldo had now reached the scene
of action, and was looking on as an unconcerned spectator,
when he was espied by Galafron. The king instantly
recognized the horse Rabican, which he had given
to Argalia when he sent him forth on his ill-omened
mission to Paris. Possessed with the idea that
the rider of the horse was the murderer of Argalia,
Galafron rode at Rinaldo, and smote him with all his
force. Rinaldo was not slow to avenge the blow,
and it would have gone hard with the king had not
his followers instantly closed round him and separated
the combatants.
Rinaldo thus found himself, almost
without his own choice, enlisted on the side of the
enemies of Angelica, which gave him no concern, so
completely had his draught from the fountain of hate
steeled his mind against her.
For several successive days the struggle
continued, without any important results, Rinaldo
meeting the bravest knights of Angelica’s party,
and defeating them one after the other. At length
he encountered Orlando, and the two knights bitterly
reproached one another for the cause they had each
adopted, and engaged in a furious combat. Orlando
was mounted upon Bayard, Rinaldo’s horse, which
Agrican had by chance become possessed of, and Orlando
had taken from him as the prize of victory. Bayard
would not fight against his master, and Orlando was
getting the worse of the encounter, when suddenly Rinaldo,
seeing Astolpho, who for love of him had arrayed himself
on his side, hard beset by numbers, left Orlando to
rush to the defence of his friend. Night prevented
the combat from being renewed; but a challenge was
given and accepted for their next meeting.
But Angelica, sighing in her heart
for Rinaldo, was not willing that he should be again
exposed to so terrible a venture. She begged a
boon of Orlando, promising she would be his if he
would do her bidding. On receiving his promise,
she enjoined him to set out without delay to destroy
the garden of the enchantress Falerina, in which many
valiant knights had been entrapped, and were imprisoned.
Orlando departed on his horse Brigliadoro,
leaving Bayard in disgrace for his bad deportment
the day before. Angelica, to conciliate Rinaldo,
sent Bayard to him; but Rinaldo remained unmoved by
this as by all her former acts of kindness.
When Rinaldo learned Orlando’s
departure, he yielded to the entreaties of the lady
of Florismart, and prepared to fulfil his promise,
and rescue her lover from the power of the enchantress.
Thus both Rinaldo and Orlando were bound upon the
same adventure, but unknown to one another.
The castle of Falerina was protected
by a river, which was crossed by a bridge, kept by
a ruffian, who challenged all comers to the combat;
and such was his strength that he had thus far prevailed
in every encounter, as appeared by the arms of various
knights which he had taken from them, and piled up
as a trophy on the shore. Rinaldo attacked him,
but with as bad success as the rest, for the bridge-ward
struck him so violent a blow with an iron mace that
he fell to the ground. But when the villain approached
to strip him of his armor, Rinaldo seized him, and
the bridge-ward, being unable to free himself, leapt
with Rinaldo into the lake, where they both disappeared.
Orlando, meanwhile, in discharge of
his promise to Angelica, pursued his way in quest
of the same adventure. In passing through a wood
he saw a cavalier armed at all points, and mounted,
keeping guard over a lady who was bound to a tree,
weeping bitterly. Orlando hastened to her relief,
but was exhorted by the knight not to interfere, for
she had deserved her fate by her wickedness.
In proof of which he made certain charges against
her. The lady denied them all, and Orlando believed
her, defied the knight, overthrew him, and, releasing
the lady, departed with her seated on his horse’s
croup.
While they rode another damsel approached
on a white palfrey, who warned Orlando of impending
danger, and informed him that he was near the garden
of the enchantress. Orlando was delighted with
the intelligence, and entreated her to inform him
how he was to gain admittance. She replied that
the garden could only be entered at sunrise and gave
him such instructions as would enable him to gain
admittance. She gave him also a book in which
was painted the garden and all that it contained,
together with the palace of the false enchantress,
where she had secluded herself for the purpose of
executing a magic work in which she was engaged.
This was the manufacture of a sword capable of cutting
even through enchanted substances. The object
of this labor, the damsel told him, was the destruction
of a knight of the west, by name Orlando, who she had
read in the book of Fate was coming to demolish her
garden. Having thus instructed him, the damsel
departed.
Orlando, finding he must delay his
enterprise till the next morning, now lay down and
was soon asleep. Seeing this, the base woman whom
he had rescued, and who was intent on making her escape
to rejoin her paramour, mounted Brigliadoro, and rode
off, carrying away Durindana.
When Orlando awoke, his indignation,
as may be supposed, was great on the discovery of
the theft; but, like a good knight and true, he was
not to be diverted from his enterprise. He tore
off a huge branch of an elm to supply the place of
his sword; and, as the sun rose, took his way towards
the gate of the garden, where a dragon was on his watch.
This he slew by repeated blows, and entered the garden,
the gate of which closed behind him, barring retreat.
Looking round him, he saw a fair fountain, which overflowed
into a river, and in the centre of the fountain a
figure, on whose forehead was written:
“The stream which waters
violet and rose,
From hence to the enchanted
palace goes.”
Following the banks of this flowing
stream, and rapt in the delights of the charming garden,
Orlando arrived at the palace, and entering it, found
the mistress, clad in white, with a crown of gold upon
her head, in the act of viewing herself in the surface
of the magic sword. Orlando surprised her before
she could escape, deprived her of the weapon, and
holding her fast by her long hair, which floated behind,
threatened her with immediate death if she did not
yield up her prisoners, and afford him the means of
egress. She, however, was firm of purpose, making
no reply, and Orlando, unable to move her either by
threats or entreaties, was under the necessity of binding
her to a beech, and pursuing his quest as he best
might.
He then bethought him of his book,
and, consulting it, found that there was an outlet
to the south, but that to reach it a lake was to be
passed, inhabited by a siren, whose song was so entrancing
as to be quite irresistible to whoever heard it; but
his book instructed him how to protect himself against
this danger. According to its directions, while
pursuing his path, he gathered abundance of flowers,
which sprung all around, and filled his helmet and
his ears with them; then listened if he heard the
birds sing. Finding that, though he saw the gaping
beak, the swelling throat, and ruffled plumes, he could
not catch a note, he felt satisfied with his defence,
and advanced toward the lake. It was small but
deep, and so clear and tranquil that the eye could
penetrate to the bottom.
He had no, sooner arrived upon the
banks than the waters were seen to gurgle, and the
siren, rising midway out of the pool, sung so sweetly
that birds and beasts came trooping to the water-side
to listen. Of this Orlando heard nothing, but,
feigning to yield to the charm, sank down upon the
bank. The siren issued from the water with the
intent to accomplish his destruction. Orlando
seized her by the hair, and while she sang yet louder
(song being her only defence) cut off her head.
Then, following the directions of the book, he stained
himself all over with her blood.
Guarded by this talisman, he met successively
all the monsters set for defence of the enchantress
and her garden, and at length found himself again
at the spot where he had made captive the enchantress,
who still continued fastened to the beech. But
the scene was changed. The garden had disappeared,
and Falerina, before so haughty, now begged for mercy,
assuring him that many lives depended upon the preservation
of hers. Orlando promised her life upon her pledging
herself for the deliverance of her captives.
This, however, was no easy task.
They were not in her possession, but in that of a
much more powerful enchantress, Morgana, the Lady of
the Lake, the very idea of opposing whom made Falerina
turn pale with fear. Representing to him the
hazards of the enterprise, she led him towards the
dwelling of Morgana. To approach it he had to
encounter the same uncourteous bridge-ward who had
already defeated and made captive so many knights,
and last of all, Rinaldo. He was a churl of the
most ferocious character, named Arridano. Morgana
had provided him with impenetrable armor, and endowed
him in such a manner that his strength always increased
in proportion to that of the adversary with whom he
was matched. No one had ever yet escaped from
the contest, since, such was his power of endurance,
he could breathe freely under water. Hence, having
grappled with a knight, and sunk with him to the bottom
of the lake, he returned, bearing his enemy’s
arms in triumph to the surface.
While Falerina was repeating her cautions
and her counsels Orlando saw Rinaldo’s arms
erected in form of a trophy, among other spoils made
by the villain, and, forgetting their late quarrel,
determined upon revenging his friend. Arriving
at the pass, the churl presuming to bar the way, a
desperate contest ensued, during which Falerina escaped.
The churl finding himself overmatched at a contest
of arms, resorted to his peculiar art, grappled his
antagonist, and plunged with him into the lake.
When he reached the bottom Orlando found himself in
another world, upon a dry meadow, with the lake overhead,
through which shone the beams of our sun, while the
water stood on all sides like a crystal wall.
Here the battle was renewed, and Orlando had in his
magic sword an advantage which none had hitherto possessed.
It had been tempered by Falerina so that no spells
could avail against it. Thus armed, and countervailing
the strength of his adversary by his superior skill
and activity, it was not long before he laid him dead
upon the field.
Orlando then made all haste to return
to the upper air, and, passing through the water,
which opened a way before him (such was the power of
the magic sword), he soon regained the shore, and found
himself in a field as thickly covered with precious
stones as the sky is with stars.
Orlando crossed the field, not tempted
to delay his enterprise by gathering any of the brilliant
gems spread all around him. He next passed into
a flowery meadow planted with trees, covered with fruit
and flowers, and full of all imaginable delights.
In the middle of this meadow was a
fountain, and fast by it lay Morgana asleep; a lady
of a lovely aspect, dressed in white and vermilion
garments, her forehead well furnished with hair, while
she had scarcely any behind.
While Orlando stood in silence contemplating
her beauty he heard a voice exclaim: “Seize
the fairy by the forelock, if thou hopest fair success.”
But his attention was arrested by another object, and
he heeded not the warning. He saw on a sudden
an array of towers, pinnacles and columns, palaces
with balconies and windows, extended alleys with trees,
in short a scene of architectural magnificence surpassing
all he had ever beheld. While he stood gazing
in silent astonishment the scene slowly melted away
and disappeared.
When he had recovered from his amazement
he looked again toward the fountain. The fairy
had awaked and risen, and was dancing round its border
with the lightness of a leaf, timing her footsteps
to this song:
“Who in this world would
wealth and treasure share,
Honor, delight, and
state, and what is best,
Quick let him catch
me by the lock of hair
Which flutters from
my forehead; and be blest.
“But let him not the
proffered good forbear,
Nor till he seize the
fleeting blessing rest;
For present loss is
sought in vain to-morrow,
And the deluded wretch
is left in sorrow.”
The fairy, having sung thus, bounded
off, and fled from the flowery meadow over a high
and inaccessible mountain. Orlando pursued her
through thorns and rocks, while the sky gradually became
overcast, and at last he was assailed by tempest,
lightning, and hail.
While he thus pursued, a pale and
meagre woman issued from a cave, armed with a whip,
and, treading close upon his steps, scourged him with
vigorous strokes. Her name was Repentance, and
she told him it was her office to punish those who
neglected to obey the voice of Prudence, and seize
the fairy Fortune when he might.
Orlando, furious at this chastisement,
turned upon his tormentor, but might as well have
stricken the wind. Finding it useless to resist,
he resumed his chase of the fairy, gained upon her,
and made frequent snatches at her white and vermilion
garments, which still eluded his grasp. At last,
on her turning her head for an instant, he profited
by the chance, and seized her by the forelock.
In an instant the tempest ceased, the sky became serene,
and Repentance retreated to her cave.
Orlando now demanded of Morgana the
keys of her prison, and the fairy, feigning a complacent
aspect, delivered up a key of silver, bidding him
to be cautious in the use of it, since to break the
lock would be to involve himself and all in inevitable
destruction; a caution which gave the Count room for
long meditation, and led him to consider
How few amid the suitors who
importune
The dame, know how to turn
the keys of Fortune.
Keeping the fairy still fast by the
forelock, Orlando proceeded toward the prison, turned
the key, without occasioning the mischiefs apprehended,
and delivered the prisoners.
Among these were Florismart, Rinaldo,
and many others of the bravest knights of France.
Morgana had disappeared, and the knights, under the
guidance of Orlando, retraced the path by which he
had come. They soon reached the field of treasure.
Rinaldo, finding himself amidst this mass of wealth,
remembered his needy garrison of Montalban, and could
not resist the temptation of seizing part of the booty.
In particular a golden chain, studded with diamonds,
was too much for his self-denial, and he took it and
was bearing it off, notwithstanding the remonstrances
of Orlando, when a violent wind caught him and whirled
him back, as he approached the gate. This happened
a second and a third time, and Rinaldo at length yielded
to necessity, rather than to the entreaties of his
friends, and cast away his prize.
They soon reached the bridge and passed
over without hindrance to the other side, where they
found the trophy decorated with their arms. Here
each knight resumed his own, and all, except the paladins
and their friends, separated as their inclinations
or duty prompted. Dudon, the Dane, one of the
rescued knights, informed the cousins that he had been
made prisoner by Morgana while in the discharge of
an embassy to them from Charlemagne, who called upon
them to return to the defence of Christendom.
Orlando was too much fascinated by Angelica to obey
this summons, and, followed by the faithful Florismart,
who would not leave him, returned towards Albracca.
Rinaldo, Dudon, Iroldo, Prasildo, and the others took
their way toward the west.