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<h2> THE MORHOLT OUT OF IRELAND </h2>
<p>When Tristan came back to that land, King Mark and all his Barony were
mourning; for the King of Ireland had manned a fleet to ravage Cornwall,
should King Mark refuse, as he had refused these fifteen years, to pay a
tribute his fathers had paid. Now that year this King had sent to
Tintagel, to carry his summons, a giant knight; the Morholt, whose sister
he had wed, and whom no man had yet been able to overcome: so King Mark
had summoned all the barons of his land to Council, by letters sealed.</p>
<p>On the day assigned, when the barons were gathered in hall, and when the
King had taken his throne, the Morholt said these things:</p>
<p>“King Mark, hear for the last time the summons of the King of
Ireland, my lord. He arraigns you to pay at last that which you have owed
so long, and because you have refused it too long already he bids you give
over to me this day three hundred youths and three hundred maidens drawn
by lot from among the Cornish folk. But if so be that any would prove by
trial of combat that the King of Ireland receives this tribute without
right, I will take up his wager. Which among you, my Cornish lords, will
fight to redeem this land?”</p>
<p>The barons glanced at each other but all were silent.</p>
<p>Then Tristan knelt at the feet of King Mark and said:</p>
<p>“Lord King, by your leave I will do battle.”</p>
<p>And in vain would King Mark have turned him from his purpose, thinking,
how could even valour save so young a knight? But he threw down his gage
to the Morholt, and the Morholt took up the gage.</p>
<p>On the appointed day he had himself clad for a great feat of arms in a
hauberk and in a steel helm, and he entered a boat and drew to the islet
of St. Samson’s, where the knights were to fight each to each alone.
Now the Morholt had hoisted to his mast a sail of rich purple, and coming
fast to land, he moored his boat on the shore. But Tristan pushed off his
own boat adrift with his feet, and said:</p>
<p>“One of us only will go hence alive. One boat will serve.”</p>
<p>And each rousing the other to the fray they passed into the isle.</p>
<p>No man saw the sharp combat; but thrice the salt sea-breeze had wafted or
seemed to waft a cry of fury to the land, when at last towards the hour of
noon the purple sail showed far off; the Irish boat appeared from the
island shore, and there rose a clamour of “the Morholt!” When
suddenly, as the boat grew larger on the sight and topped a wave, they saw
that Tristan stood on the prow holding a sword in his hand. He leapt
ashore, and as the mothers kissed the steel upon his feet he cried to the
Morholt’s men:</p>
<p>“My lords of Ireland, the Morholt fought well. See here, my sword is
broken and a splinter of it stands fast in his head. Take you that steel,
my lords; it is the tribute of Cornwall.”</p>
<p>Then he went up to Tintagel and as he went the people he had freed waved
green boughs, and rich cloths were hung at the windows. But when Tristan
reached the castle with joy, songs and joy-bells sounding about him, he
drooped in the arms of King Mark, for the blood ran from his wounds.</p>
<p>The Morholt’s men, they landed in Ireland quite cast down. For when
ever he came back into Whitehaven the Morholt had been wont to take joy in
the sight of his clan upon the shore, of the Queen his sister, and of his
niece Iseult the Fair. Tenderly had they cherished him of old, and had he
taken some wound, they healed him, for they were skilled in balms and
potions. But now their magic was vain, for he lay dead and the splinter of
the foreign brand yet stood in his skull till Iseult plucked it out and
shut it in a chest.</p>
<p>From that day Iseult the Fair knew and hated the name of Tristan of
Lyonesse.</p>
<p>But over in Tintagel Tristan languished, for there trickled a poisonous
blood from his wound. The doctors found that the Morholt had thrust into
him a poisoned barb, and as their potions and their theriac could never
heal him they left him in God’s hands. So hateful a stench came from
his wound that all his dearest friends fled him, all save King Mark,
Gorvenal and Dinas of Lidan. They always could stay near his couch because
their love overcame their abhorrence. At last Tristan had himself carried
into a boat apart on the shore; and lying facing the sea he awaited death,
for he thought: “I must die; but it is good to see the sun and my
heart is still high. I would like to try the sea that brings all chances.
… I would have the sea bear me far off alone, to what land no
matter, so that it heal me of my wound.”</p>
<p>He begged so long that King Mark accepted his desire. He bore him into a
boat with neither sail nor oar, and Tristan wished that his harp only
should be placed beside him: for sails he could not lift, nor oar ply, nor
sword wield; and as a seaman on some long voyage casts to the sea a
beloved companion dead, so Gorvenal pushed out to sea that boat where his
dear son lay; and the sea drew him away.</p>
<p>For seven days and seven nights the sea so drew him; at times to charm his
grief, he harped; and when at last the sea brought him near a shore where
fishermen had left their port that night to fish far out, they heard as
they rowed a sweet and strong and living tune that ran above the sea, and
feathering their oars they listened immovable.</p>
<p>In the first whiteness of the dawn they saw the boat at large: she went at
random and nothing seemed to live in her except the voice of the harp. But
as they neared, the air grew weaker and died; and when they hailed her
Tristan’s hands had fallen lifeless on the strings though they still
trembled. The fishermen took him in and bore him back to port, to their
lady who was merciful and perhaps would heal him.</p>
<p>It was that same port of Whitehaven where the Morholt lay, and their lady
was Iseult the Fair.</p>
<p>She alone, being skilled in philtres, could save Tristan, but she alone
wished him dead. When Tristan knew himself again (for her art restored
him) he knew himself to be in the land of peril. But he was yet strong to
hold his own and found good crafty words. He told a tale of how he was a
seer that had taken passage on a merchant ship and sailed to Spain to
learn the art of reading all the stars,—of how pirates had boarded
the ship and of how, though wounded, he had fled into that boat. He was
believed, nor did any of the Morholt’s men know his face again, so
hardly had the poison used it. But when, after forty days, Iseult of the
Golden Hair had all but healed him, when already his limbs had recovered
and the grace of youth returned, he knew that he must escape, and he fled
and after many dangers he came again before Mark the King.</p>
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