Chronicle and Romance (The Harvard Classics Series) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 553 pages of information about Chronicle and Romance (The Harvard Classics Series).

Chronicle and Romance (The Harvard Classics Series) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 553 pages of information about Chronicle and Romance (The Harvard Classics Series).

When the hermit had kept Sir Launcelot three days, the hermit gat him a horse, an helm, and a sword.  And then he departed about the hour of noon.  And then he saw a little house.  And when he came near he saw a chapel, and there beside he saw an old man that was clothed all in white full richly; and then Sir Launcelot said:  God save you.  God keep you, said the good man, and make you a good knight.  Then Sir Launcelot alit and entered into the chapel and there he saw an old man dead, in a white shirt of passing fine cloth.  Sir, said the good man, this man that is dead ought not to be in such clothing as ye see him in, for in that he brake the oath of his order, for he hath been more than an hundred winter a man of a religion.  And then the good man and Sir Launcelot went into the chapel; and the good man took a stole about his neck, and a book, and then he conjured on that book; and with that they saw in an hideous figure and horrible, that there was no man so hard-hearted nor so hard but he should have been afeard.  Then said the fiend:  Thou hast travailed me greatly; now tell me what thou wilt with me.  I will, said the good man, that thou tell me how my fellow became dead, and whether he be saved or damned.  Then he said with an horrible voice:  He is not lost but saved.  How may that be? said the good man; it seemed to me that he lived not well, for he brake his order for to wear a shirt where he ought to wear none, and who that trespasseth against our order doth not well.  Not so, said the fiend, this man that lieth here dead was come of a great lineage.  And there was a lord that hight the Earl de Vale, that held great war against this man’s nephew, the which hight Aguarus.  And so this Aguarus saw the earl was bigger than he.  Then he went for to take counsel of his uncle, the which lieth here dead as ye may see.  And then he asked leave, and went out of his hermitage for to maintain his nephew against the mighty earl; and so it happed that this man that lieth here dead did so much by his wisdom and hardiness that the earl was taken, and three of his lords, by force of this dead man.

CHAPTER II

Of A dead man, how men would have hewn him, and it would not be, and how sir launcelot took the hair of the dead man

Then was there peace betwixt the earl and this Aguarus, and great surety that the earl should never war against him.  Then this dead man that here lieth came to this hermitage again; and then the earl made two of his nephews for to be avenged upon this man.  So they came on a day, and found this dead man at the sacring of his mass, and they abode him till he had said mass.  And then they set upon him and drew out swords to have slain him; but there would no sword bite on him more than upon a gad of steel,

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Chronicle and Romance (The Harvard Classics Series) from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.