discretion. Both, indeed, were ignorant of the
conflicts by which he was agitated. To recall
his former fondness for his wife, and to conciliate
his duty and affection, was no longer possible:
to betray and dishonour the amiable Guilliadun would
be infamous; and to encourage her passion and his
own, without being hurried too far, was extremely
difficult; yet on this he ultimately resolved; and,
having mounted his horse, set off for the palace under
pretence of paying his court to the king, but with
the real view of obtaining an interview with his daughter.
The monarch was at that moment in the apartment of
the princess, to whom, while be played a game of chess
with a foreign knight, he explained the moves.
On the entrance of Eliduc he immediately introduced
him to her, enjoining her to entertain and form an
acquaintance with a knight, who had few equals in merit;
and the young lady, gladly obeying the injunction,
retired with her lover to the farther end of the apartment.
After a long silence equally painful to both, and
which each ineffectually attempted more than once to
interrupt, Eliduc luckily bethought himself of returning
thanks for the ring and girdle; which, as he assured
her, he valued far beyond all his earthly possessions.
This warmth of expression encouraging the princess,
she frankly proceeded to make an avowal of her passion,
declaring, if he should reject her hand, there was
no other man on earth whom she would ever accept as
a husband; and, when he mysteriously replied, that,
as far as his wishes were concerned, there could be
no bar, but that it was his purpose, after the year
of service for which he was pledged to her father,
to return and establish himself in his own country,
she told him she had full confidence in his honour,
and was persuaded, when the time arrived, he would
make all proper arrangements for her future destiny.
Thus ended the interview to their mutual satisfaction.
Eliduc, watchful, enterprizing, and indefatigable,
soon recovered for her father all the lost provinces,
and insured future tranquillity by the capture of his
enemy; but scarcely was the war concluded, when the
knight received an embassy from his former master,
whose ingratitude had been punished by the loss of
half his kingdom, and the jeopardy of the rest, adjuring
him to come with all speed to the rescue of a country
which was now purged of the monsters whose false accusations
had occasioned his exile. Such an embassy, a
few months sooner would have been most welcome, but
to part with Guilliadun now appeared the heaviest
of misfortunes. He felt, however, that duty called
him away, and determined to obey the summons.
He went to the king; read the letters he had received;
and earnestly requested leave to depart, though his
stipulated term of service was not expired; observing,
at the same time, that the state of his majesty’s
affairs no longer required his attendance; and, promising
at the first appearance of difficulty, he would return