for the high Lord which he served he him preserved.
Then made they a great fire, and did off all his clothes,
and the hair off his back. And then this dead
man hermit said unto them: Ween you to burn me?
It shall not lie in your power nor to perish me as
much as a thread an there were any on my body.
No, said one of them, it shall be essayed. And
then they despoiled him, and put upon him this shirt,
and cast him in a fire, and there he lay all that
night till it was day in that fire, and was not dead,
and so in the morn I came and found him dead; but
I found neither thread nor skin tamyd, and so took
him out of the fire with great fear, and led him here
as ye may see. And now may ye suffer me to go
my way, for I have said you the sooth. And then
he departed with a great tempest. Then was the
good man and Sir Launcelot more gladder than they were
tofore. And then Sir Launcelot dwelled with that
good man that night. Sir, said the good man,
be ye not Sir Launcelot du Lake? Yea, sir, said
he. What seek ye in this country? Sir, said
Sir Launcelot, I go to seek the adventures of the
Sangreal. Well, said he, seek it ye may well,
but though it were here ye shall have no power to see
it no more than a blind man should see a bright sword,
and that is long on your sin, and else ye were more
abler than any man living. And then Sir Launcelot
began to weep. Then said the good man: Were
ye confessed sith ye entered into the quest of the
Sangreal? Yea, sir, said Sir Launcelot.
Then upon the morn when the good man had sung his mass,
then they buried the dead man. Then Sir Launcelot
said: Father, what shall I do? Now, said
the good man, I require you take this hair that was
this holy man’s and put it next thy skin, and
it shall prevail thee greatly. Sir, and I will
do it, said Sir Launcelot. Also I charge you
that ye eat no flesh as long as ye be in the quest
of the Sangreal, nor ye shall drink no wine, and that
ye hear mass daily an ye may do it. So he took
the hair and put it upon him, and so departed at evensong-time.
And so rode he into a forest, and there he met with
a gentlewoman riding upon a white palfrey, and then
she asked him: Sir knight, whither ride ye?
Certes, damosel, said Launcelot, I wot not whither
I ride but as fortune leadeth me. Ah, Sir Launcelot,
said she, I wot what adventure ye seek, for ye were
afore time nearer than ye be now, and yet shall ye
see it more openly than ever ye did, and that shall
ye understand in short time. Then Sir Launcelot
asked her where he might be harboured that night.
Ye shall not find this day nor night, but tomorn ye
shall find harbour good, and ease of that ye be in
doubt of. And then he commended her unto God.
Then he rode till that he came to a Cross, and took
that for his host as for that night.
CHAPTER III
Of A vision that sir launcelot had, and how he told it to an hermit, and desired counsel of him