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Sir Agravaine
by
Handicapped in this manner, it is no wonder that he should feel sad and lonely in King Arthur’s court. At heart he ached for romance; but romance passed him by. The ladies of the court ignored his existence, while, as for those wandering damsels who came periodically to Camelot to complain of the behaviour of dragons, giants, and the like, and to ask permission of the king to take a knight back with them to fight their cause (just as, nowadays, one goes out and calls a policeman), he simply had no chance. The choice always fell on Lancelot or some other popular favourite.
* * * * *
The tournament was followed by a feast. In those brave days almost everything was followed by a feast. The scene was gay and animated. Fair ladies, brave knights, churls, varlets, squires, scurvy knaves, men-at-arms, malapert rogues–all were merry. All save Agravaine. He sat silent and moody. To the jests of Dagonet he turned a deaf ear. And when his neighbour, Sir Kay, arguing with Sir Percivale on current form, appealed to him to back up his statement that Sir Gawain, though a workman-like middle-weight, lacked the punch, he did not answer, though the subject was one on which he held strong views. He sat on, brooding.
As he sat there, a man-at-arms entered the hall.
‘Your majesty,’ he cried, ‘a damsel in distress waits without.’
There was a murmur of excitement and interest.
‘Show her in,’ said the king, beaming.
The man-at-arms retired. Around the table the knights were struggling into an upright position in their seats and twirling their moustaches. Agravaine alone made no movement. He had been through this sort of thing so often. What were distressed damsels to him? His whole demeanour said, as plainly as if he had spoken the words, ‘What’s the use?’
The crowd at the door parted, and through the opening came a figure at the sight of whom the expectant faces of the knights turned pale with consternation. For the new-comer was quite the plainest girl those stately halls had ever seen. Possibly the only plain girl they had ever seen, for no instance is recorded in our authorities of the existence at that period of any such.
The knights gazed at her blankly. Those were the grand old days of chivalry, when a thousand swords would leap from their scabbards to protect defenceless woman, if she were beautiful. The present seemed something in the nature of a special case, and nobody was quite certain as to the correct procedure.
An awkward silence was broken by the king.
‘Er–yes?’ he said.
The damsel halted.
‘Your majesty,’ she cried, ‘I am in distress. I crave help!’
‘Just so,’ said the king, uneasily, flashing an apprehensive glance at the rows of perturbed faces before him. ‘Just so. What–er–what is the exact nature of the–ah–trouble? Any assistance these gallant knights can render will, I am sure, be–ah–eagerly rendered.’
He looked imploringly at the silent warriors. As a rule, this speech was the signal for roars of applause. But now there was not even a murmur.
‘I may say enthusiastically,’ he added.
Not a sound.
‘Precisely,’ said the king, ever tactful. ‘And now–you were saying?’
‘I am Yvonne, the daughter of Earl Dorm of the Hills,’ said the damsel, ‘and my father has sent me to ask protection from a gallant knight against a fiery dragon that ravages the country-side.’
‘A dragon, gentlemen,’ said the king, aside. It was usually a safe draw. Nothing pleased the knight of that time more than a brisk bout with a dragon. But now the tempting word was received in silence.
‘Fiery,’ said the king.
Some more silence.
The king had recourse to the direct appeal. ‘Sir Gawain, this Court would be greatly indebted to you if–‘
Sir Gawain said he had strained a muscle at the last tournament.
‘Sir Pelleas.’
The king’s voice was growing flat with consternation. The situation was unprecedented.