How King Arthur took a wife, and wedded Guenever,
daughter to Leodegrance, King of the Land of Cameliard, with whom he
had the Round Table.
IN the beginning of Arthur, after he was chosen king
by adventure and by grace; for the most part of the barons knew not
that he was Uther Pendragon's son, but as Merlin made it openly known.
But yet many kings and lords held great war against him for that cause,
but well Arthur overcame them all, for the most part the days of his
life he was ruled much by the counsel of Merlin. So it fell on a time
King Arthur said unto Merlin, My barons will let me have no rest, but
needs I must take a wife, and I will none take but by thy counsel and
by thine advice. It is well done, said Merlin, that ye take a wife,
for a man of your bounty and noblesse should not be without a wife.
Now is there any that ye love more than another?
Yea, said King Arthur, I love Guenever the king's daughter, Leodegrance
of the land of Cameliard,
the which holdeth in his house the Table Round that ye told he had
of my father Uther. And this damosel is the most valiant and fairest
lady that I know living, or yet that ever I could find. Sir, said Merlin,
as of her beauty and fairness she is one of the fairest alive, but,
an ye loved her not so well as ye do, I should find you a damosel of
beauty and of goodness that should like you and please you, an your
heart were not set; but there as a man's heart is set, he will
be loath to return. That is truth, said King Arthur. But Merlin warned
the king covertly that Guenever was not wholesome for him to take to
wife, for he warned him that Launcelot should love her, and she him
again; and so he turned his tale to the adventures of Sangreal.
Then Merlin desired of the king for to have
men with him that should enquire of Guenever, and so the king granted
him, and
Merlin went forth unto King Leodegrance of Cameliard, and told him
of the desires of the king that he would have unto his wife Guenever
his daughter. That is to me, said King Leodegrance, the best tidings
that ever I heard, that so worthy a king of prowess and noblesse will
wed my daughter. And as for my lands, I will give him, wist I it might
please him, but he hath lands enow, him needeth none; but I shall send
him a gift shall please him much more, for I shall give him the Table
Round, the which Uther Pendragon gave me, and when
it is full complete, there is an hundred knights and fifty. And as for an hundred
good knights I have myself, but I faute fifty, for so many have been slain
in my days. And so Leodegrance delivered his daughter Guenever unto Merlin,
and the Table Round with the hundred knights, and so they rode freshly, with
great royalty, what by water and what by land, till that they came nigh unto
London.
Malory - Chapter I, Book III |