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Pleasuance Of Maid Marian

*
An Arthurian Miscellany

Argument.

\"Mary, Mary, quite contrary,

How does your garden grow?

Silver bells and cockle shells

And fair maids all in a row."

Isolt the White, the daughter of a king,

Hoel of Brittany, the same who wed

Sir Tristram of the Woods, who lov'd her not,

Within a shadowy hall sat by herself,

Upon an autumn midnight drencht with rain

And loud with shrieking of the gale, and mus'd

How her white hands had been too weak to hold

Her lord, Sir Tristram, who had sworn to love

But her, then lightly broken, for the man

Was light, his promis'd word. He first had call'd

Her by that name, Isolt of the White Hands,

When those white hands had heal'd him of his hurt

Got in some tourney held in Brittany,

And she had lov'd him for the name, and thought,

"Full surely is he mine as I am his;"

And this had lasted but the waxing old

Of the same moon that crescive saw them wed.

Then he had left her taking slight farewell,

And over seas had come no word from him

Of bale or comfort, and a year was past.

Now as she mus'd on love, and musing felt

Aweary of her life because no love

Was had for her, the tempest-driven rain

Beat at the casement, and small puffs of wind

Flutter'd the flame that burnt upon the hearth,

And stirr'd the many-coloured tapestries

That lin'd the wall; and once a fiercer gust,

It seem'd, drave ope the door, and with the wind

And rain there came one trailing dripping weeds

Of samite after. Then Isolt thereat

Rais'd eyes amist with tears, and thro' these saw

Her cousin, sharp of tongue, sharper of face,

Of all men call'd Maid Marian the curst,

And gave a doubtful welcome. Thereupon

The sharp-fac'd damsel, clanging to the door,

Laught shrilly, crying out the while:

"Your guest,

Good cousin, is not to your mind, meseems."

Thereat Isolt, as stung to courtesy

Perforce, would fain have call'd for lights, and food

And all things needful, had not she, the maid,

Shook off in haste constraining hands and cried:

"I care not for your simple kindnesses,

Cousin Isolt;
" then louder, "I have news

Of him you call your Tristram, so much yours

Indeed as any knight may be the prize

Of one among a score of maidens whom

He loves and leaves."

By this, Isolt the White,

Trembling to hear what she for long had fear'd

To hear, had murmur'd, "False, my cousin, false,"

But that Maid Marian shrill'd it once again:

"Ay! yours and hers, and woman's else

On whom his fancy lights,
" and crying out

On all false lovers, fled into the dark

That clos'd about her, and Isolt was left

To such small comfort as her prayers might yield.

But when the morrow brake upon a world

Washt clean with tempest, light'd by a sun

That drave the mists before in streaming lines

Of golden vapour, she, the white Isolt,

Out of a tender heart was fain to doubt

The word Maid Marian brought, had not the maid

Stood once again before her crying, "Come!

Sad cousin, and behold your lord."

So they,

The twain, took ship, past over seas, and came

To where Tintagel with its crown of towers,

Defies with frowning might of splinter'd crag

The stormful tossing seas of Lyonnesse.

There, favour'd by the tangl'd arms of trees

That stretcht deep shadows on the landward side

Of the huge castle, went they by a path

That led with many windings to the tower

Of Queen Isolt of Britain, she men call'd

The Fair. Within her bower she lay asleep

Upon an azure-broider'd silken couch,

And half her robe had slipt aside and show'd

A silver skin glossy as satin, fair

As none was fair before in all that land.

At her Maid Marian pointed hissing, "See!

The false queen whom false Tristram loves.
" Then she,

Isolt of the White Hands beholding Queen

Isolt the Fair, belov'd of Tristram, knew

That never would he leave that woman there,

That woman in the high tide of her youth,

That woman with the glory in her hair,

For her, his faded wife of Brittany,

For her, his pale Isolt of the White Hands,

And bitter was this knowledge unto her,

And bitter, too, the cry within her heart

At thought of it.

Now, as they drew behind

The silken hangings of the room, the queen

Awoke, a step came up the circling stair,

And Tristram enter'd, whom all women lov'd.

On him the twain gaz'd through the narrow rents

That time had worn within the hangings' folds

And saw him stoop to greet the queen with kiss

Such as he never yet had laid upon

The lips of her of Brittany, and heard

Those false ones utter their adult'rous love

Till gloom had fallen, and King Mark, whom none

Remember'd, softly stole into the bower

And from behind false Tristram clove his skull

From crown to nape. So died the sinful knight

Belov'd of women, slain by him he wrong'd.

But she, Isolt the Fair, beholding him

She lov'd dead at her feet, and him she loath'd

Holding the sword, rais'd such a storm as husht

The outcry of those twain in hiding there,

And swiftly moving to the casement's edge,

And shrieking, "Him I follow whom I love,"

Leapt into that white surge which foam'd below,

And past to judgement as the sinful pass.

Then came the white Isolt with Marian

Forth from her place, and stood beside the dead

Sir Tristram, crying, "He is mine, none else

May claim him dead, for he was mine, not hers;"

Whereat the king star'd full upon her. Face

And voice alike he knew not, but some thought

That she too was by Tristram wrong'd, mov'd him

To growl in churlish answer,

"Woman, take

The man you claim, if you will have him dead

Who living little lov'd you, as I deem,"

Then turn'd and past adown the stair, but sent

No long time after two stout churls to bear

Dead Tristram forth where these two women will'd.

So white Isolt bore home her murder'd lord

Across the sea to Brittany, and there

Entomb'd him piously like some dead saint,

And made a pleasaunce all about where vine

And flower grew thickly, and would walk therein

At morning, noon, and even, silently,

Till three slow twelvemonths past, when there was dole

In Brittany. So hers they made the tomb

She built for sinful Tristram of the Woods,

And after that long sorrow follow'd peace.

But one whom Tristram lov'd in earlier times,

Maid Marian, when she was fair as she

That wedded Mark, came when Isolt was dead

And pac'd the pleasaunce silently at morn

And noon and even, sowing seeds of some

Strange plant from far-off lands, that bloom'd when next

The summer came, in fair white silver bells

Of fragrance such as no man in that land

Had knowledge of, and by the tomb of him

All women lov'd she laid the fiery-edg'd

And many-wrinkl'd shells that hold within

Themselves the voices of the sea. And when

The autumn tempests came upon that shore,

Driven from streaming seas, she flitted through

Her wind-torn, faded, dripping pleasaunce like

Some wan leaf flying before the gale. And high

At such times shrill'd her voice in broken song,

That seem'd the harsh note of some bird at sea.

"False life! false love! Oh, why was I deceiv'd?

False heart! false love, that I, poor maid, believ'd!

False life! false love, that me of hope bereav'd!

False heart, false love!

False lips! false tongue that spake false vows to me!

False face! false eyes, whence truth did turn and flee!

False hand! false heart that brake sweet love's decree!

False life! false love!"

But when the spring was nigh there came to her

A little comfort from the budding leaf,

As still she pac'd the pleasaunce sowing seeds

Of that strange plant, and year by year there bloom'd

Within it such a wilderness of branch

And flower and wandering vine as none had seen

The like. Now fifty tides of Martinmas

Were past and over when there came a gale

Fiercer than any on that wind-swept coast,

And in the night above the storm some heard

The song that ancient Marian sang at whiles

Of false love and false life, and hearing shook

With fear of some dread thing.

But those who stirr'd

Upon the morrow earliest beheld

Within the pleasaunce, on the tomb of him

All women lov'd, the dead maid Marian.

About her brows was wound a faded scarf

That dead Sir Tristram wore as knight of hers

Full sixty dusty summers back at some

Forgotten tourney held in Brittany,

And in her hand was claspt a golden chain

That he had given her, and some there were

Who held that death had made her fair again,

Working a miracle for very ruth.

So past her soul to judgment and its rest.

But when three days were past there stood ten maids

Arow within the pleasaunce strewing blooms

Of latest autumn on the tomb disturb'd

Once more to hold the dust of Marian.

Full quickly glide the years, and none of all

Who knew that land in those dim days are left,

Yet still the pleasaunce shows an isle of green

Midmost of a wide, open, herbless space,

A desolate, waste country no man tills.
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