So six years passed and then, one night, Lancelot had a vision. It seemed to him that one said to him:
“Lancelot, arise and go in haste to Almesbury. There shalt thou find Queen Guinevere dead and it shall be for thee to bury her.”
Sir Lancelot arose at once and, calling his fellows to him, told them his dream. Immediately, with all haste, they set forth toward Almesbury and, arriving there the second day, found the Queen dead, as had been foretold in the vision. So with the state and ceremony befitting a great Queen, they buried her in the Abbey of Glastonbury, in that same church where, some say, King Arthur’s tomb is to be found. Lancelot it was who performed the [funeral rites] and chanted the requiem; but when all was done, he pined away, growing weaker daily. So at the end of six weeks, he called to him his fellows and, bidding them all farewell, desired that his dead body should be conveyed to the Joyous Garde, there to be buried, for that in the church at Glastonbury he was not worthy to lie. And that same night he died, and was buried, as he had desired, in his own castle. So passed from the world the bold Sir Lancelot du Lac, bravest, most courteous, and most gentle of knights, whose peer the world has never seen nor ever shall see.
After Sir Lancelot’s death, Sir Bors and the pious knights, his companions, took their way to the Holy Land and there they died in battle against the Turk.
So ends this story of King Arthur and his noble fellowship of the Round Table.
NOTES AND QUESTIONS
Discussion. 1. Were Arthur and his knights successful in restoring order in the kingdom? 2. Why were they so successful? 3. What value have union and loyalty in any cause? 4. When did this union of King Arthur and his knights begin to weaken? 5. Whose unfaithfulness and treachery began its destruction? 6. What was the great fault in Modred that prevented him from being loyal? 7. How did “true knights” regard Sir Lancelot? 8. Did Arthur think it right to take the law into his own hands? 9. Read lines which show that he did not think himself greater than the law. 10. Can good government exist without respect for law? 11. Trace the progress of disunion from its beginning in Modred’s jealousy as follows: jealousy; plot; combat; deaths; vengeance; false accusation; decree of death by burning; rescue; deaths; vow of vengeance; war. 12. What proof did Sir Lancelot give of his love for the King, even while at war with him? 13. Was King Arthur at fault when he allowed himself to be persuaded by Sir Gawain to make war on Sir Lancelot? 14. Read the lines that show the King loved Lancelot, in spite of all that had come between them. 15. Read lines that show how Sir Gawain’s love and generosity triumphed over his desire for vengeance. 16. Over what did King Arthur grieve when he lay wounded after the “battle in the West”? 17. Do you think it is the fine ideals of these old legends—union for defense of the weak, mercy to all, and wrongful gain to none—that make them live?
Phrases
- [boded ill, 149, 2]
- [jealous rage, 149, 11]
- [ill counsel, 150, 33]
- [from the press, 151, 21]
- [rendered me account, 152, 14]
- [safe conduct, 152, 28]
- [housings of the horses, 152, 33]
- [it behooves me, 153, 17]
- [felon knight, 153, 22]
- [under surety of my word, 154, 8]
- [fasten a quarrel upon him, 154, 9]
- [by stealth, 154, 13]
- [fulfilling your behest, 155, 14]
- [to hie us home, 156, 25]
- [the scoff of all men, 156, 25]
- [faith I owe to knighthood, 156, 32]
- [noised abroad, 158, 12]
- [idle rumor, 158, 14]
- [as was his wont, 158, 35]
- [Modred and his array, 159, 2]
- [sorrowing beyond measure, 159, 10]
- [heathen hosts, 160, 6]
- [I charge thee, 162, 24]
- [chafed his hands, 163, 20]
- [donned the serge gown, 165, 31]
- [funeral rites, 166, 15]