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<h2> THE DISCOVERY </h2>
<p>King Mark made peace with Tristan. Tristan returned to the castle as of
old. Tristan slept in the King’s chamber with his peers. He could
come or go, the King thought no more of it.</p>
<p>Mark had pardoned the felons, and as the seneschal, Dinas of Lidan, found
the dwarf wandering in a forest abandoned, he brought him home, and the
King had pity and pardoned even him.</p>
<p>But his goodness did but feed the ire of the barons, who swore this oath:
If the King kept Tristan in the land they would withdraw to their
strongholds as for war, and they called the King to parley.</p>
<p>“Lord,” said they, “Drive you Tristan forth. He loves
the Queen as all who choose can see, but as for us we will bear it no
longer.”</p>
<p>And the King sighed, looking down in silence.</p>
<p>“ King,” they went on, “we will not bear it, for we know
now that this is known to you and that yet you will not move. Parley you,
and take counsel. As for us if you will not exile this man, your nephew,
and drive him forth out of your land forever, we will withdraw within our
Bailiwicks and take our neighbours also from your court: for we cannot
endure his presence longer in this place. Such is your balance: choose.”</p>
<p>“My lords,” said he, “once I hearkened to the evil words
you spoke of Tristan, yet was I wrong in the end. But you are my lieges
and I would not lose the service of my men. Counsel me therefore, I charge
you, you that owe me counsel. You know me for a man neither proud nor
overstepping.”</p>
<p>“Lord,” said they, “call then Frocin hither. You
mistrust him for that orchard night. Still, was it not he that read in the
stars of the Queen’s coming there and to the very pine-tree too? He
is very wise, take counsel of him.”</p>
<p>And he came, did that hunchback of Hell: the felons greeted him and he
planned this evil.</p>
<p>“Sire,” said he, “let your nephew ride hard to-morrow at
dawn with a brief drawn up on parchment and well sealed with a seal: bid
him ride to King Arthur at Carduel. Sire, he sleeps with the peers in your
chamber; go you out when the first sleep falls on men, and if he love
Iseult so madly, why, then I swear by God and by the laws of Rome, he will
try to speak with her before he rides. But if he do so unknown to you or
to me, then slay me. As for the trap, let me lay it, but do you say
nothing of his ride to him until the time for sleep.”</p>
<p>And when King Mark had agreed, this dwarf did a vile thing. He bought of a
baker four farthings’ worth of flour, and hid it in the turn of his
coat. That night, when the King had supped and the men-at-arms lay down to
sleep in hall, Tristan came to the King as custom was, and the King said:</p>
<p>“Fair nephew, do my will: ride to-morrow night to King Arthur at
Carduel, and give him this brief, with my greeting, that he may open it:
and stay you with him but one day.”</p>
<p>And when Tristan said: “I will take it on the morrow;”</p>
<p>The King added: “Aye, and before day dawn.”</p>
<p>But, as the peers slept all round the King their lord, that night, a mad
thought took Tristan that, before he rode, he knew not for how long,
before dawn he would say a last word to the Queen. And there was a spear
length in the darkness between them. Now the dwarf slept with the rest in
the King’s chamber, and when he thought that all slept he rose and
scattered the flour silently in the spear length that lay between Tristan
and the Queen; but Tristan watched and saw him, and said to himself:</p>
<p>“It is to mark my footsteps, but there shall be no marks to show.”</p>
<p>At midnight, when all was dark in the room, no candle nor any lamp
glimmering, the King went out silently by the door and with him the dwarf.
Then Tristan rose in the darkness and judged the spear length and leapt
the space between, for his farewell. But that day in the hunt a boar had
wounded him in the leg, and in this effort the wound bled. He did not feel
it or see it in the darkness, but the blood dripped upon the couches and
the flour strewn between; and outside in the moonlight the dwarf read the
heavens and knew what had been done and he cried:</p>
<p>“Enter, my King, and if you do not hold them, hang me high.”</p>
<p>Then the King and the dwarf and the four felons ran in with lights and
noise, and though Tristan had regained his place there was the blood for
witness, and though Iseult feigned sleep, and Perinis too, who lay at
Tristan’s feet, yet there was the blood for witness. And the King
looked in silence at the blood where it lay upon the bed and the boards
and trampled into the flour.</p>
<p>And the four barons held Tristan down upon his bed and mocked the Queen
also, promising her full justice; and they bared and showed the wound
whence the blood flowed.</p>
<p>Then the King said:</p>
<p>“Tristan, now nothing longer holds. To-morrow you shall die.”</p>
<p>And Tristan answered:</p>
<p>“Have mercy, Lord, in the name of God that suffered the Cross!”</p>
<p>But the felons called on the King to take vengeance, saying:</p>
<p>“Do justice, King: take vengeance.”</p>
<p>And Tristan went on, “Have mercy, not on me—for why should I
stand at dying?—Truly, but for you, I would have sold my honour high
to cowards who, under your peace, have put hands on my body—but in
homage to you I have yielded and you may do with me what you will. But,
lord, remember the Queen!”</p>
<p>And as he knelt at the King’s feet he still complained:</p>
<p>“Remember the Queen; for if any man of your household make so bold
as to maintain the lie that I loved her unlawfully I will stand up armed
to him in a ring. Sire, in the name of God the Lord, have mercy on her.”</p>
<p>Then the barons bound him with ropes, and the Queen also. But had Tristan
known that trial by combat was to be denied him, certainly he would not
have suffered it.</p>
<p>For he trusted in God and knew no man dared draw sword against him in the
lists. And truly he did well to trust in God, for though the felons mocked
him when he said he had loved loyally, yet I call you to witness, my lords
who read this, and who know of the philtre drunk upon the high seas, and
who, understand whether his love were disloyalty indeed. For men see this
and that outward thing, but God alone the heart, and in the heart alone is
crime and the sole final judge is God. Therefore did He lay down the law
that a man accused might uphold his cause by battle, and God himself
fights for the innocent in such a combat.</p>
<p>Therefore did Tristan claim justice and the right of battle and therefore
was he careful to fail in nothing of the homage he owed King Mark, his
lord.</p>
<p>But had he known what was coming, he would have killed the felons.</p>
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