The Once and Future King. T. White H.

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I must say,’ exclaimed the King, ‘it never hails but it pours.’

      ‘Hail,’ said Merlyn.

      ‘Hail,’ said King Pellinore.

      ‘Hail,’ said the Wart.

      ‘Now I really won’t shake hands with anybody else,’ announced the monarch. ‘We must assume that we have all met before.’

      ‘Is Sir Grummore really coming,’ inquired the Wart, hastily changing the subject, ‘to challenge King Pellinore to a battle?’

      ‘Look yonder,’ said Merlyn, and both of them looked in the direction of his outstretched finger.

      Sir Grummore Grummursum was cantering up the clearing in full panoply of war. Instead of his ordinary helmet with a visor he was wearing the proper tilting-helm, which looked like a large coal-scuttle, and as he cantered he clanged.

      He was singing his old school song:

       We’ll tilt together.

       Steady from crupper to poll,

       And nothin’ in life shall sever

       Our love for the dear old coll.

       Follow-up, follow-up, follow-up, follow-up, follow-up,

       Till the shield ring again and again

       With the clanks of the clanky true men.

      ‘Goodness,’ exclaimed King Pellinore. ‘It’s about two months since I had a proper tilt, and last winter they put me up to eighteen. That was when they had the new handicaps.’

      Sir Grummore had arrived while he was speaking, and had recognized the Wart.

      ‘Mornin’,’ said Sir Grummore. ‘You’re Sir Ector’s boy, ain’t you? And who’s that chap in the comic hat?’

      ‘That is my tutor,’ said the Wart hurriedly. ‘Merlyn, the magician.’

      Sir Grummore looked at Merlyn – magicians were considered rather middle-class by the true jousting set in those days – and said distantly, ‘Ah, a magician. How-de-do?’

      ‘And this is King Pellinore,’ said the Wart. ‘Sir Grummore Grummursum – King Pellinore.’

      ‘How-de-do?’ inquired Sir Grummore.

      ‘Hail,’ said King Pellinore. ‘No, I mean it won’t hail, will it?’

      ‘Nice day,’ said Sir Grummore.

      ‘Yes, it is nice, isn’t it, what?’

      ‘Been questin’ today?’

      ‘Oh, yes, thank you. Always am questing, you know. After the Questing Beast.’

      ‘Interestin’ job, that, very.’

      ‘Yes, it is interesting. Would you like to see some fewmets?’

      ‘By Jove, yes. Like to see some fewmets.’

      ‘I have some better ones at home, but these are quite good, really.’

      ‘Bless my soul. So these are her fewmets.’

      ‘Yes, these are her fewmets.’

      ‘Interestin’ fewmets.’

      ‘Yes, they are interesting, aren’t they? Only you get tired of them,’ added King Pellinore.

      ‘Well, well. It’s a fine day, isn’t it?’

      ‘Yes, it is rather fine.’

      ‘Suppose we’d better have a joust, eh, what?’

      ‘Yes, I suppose we had better,’ said King Pellinore, ‘really.’

      ‘What shall we have it for?’

      ‘Oh, the usual, I suppose. Would one of you kindly help me on with my helm?’

      They all three had to help him on eventually, for, what with the unscrewing of screws and the easing of nuts and bolts which the King had clumsily set on the wrong thread when getting up in a hurry that morning, it was quite a feat of engineering to get him out of his helmet and into his helm. The helm was an enormous thing like an oil drum, padded inside with two thicknesses of leather and three inches of straw.

      As soon as they were ready, the two knights stationed themselves at each end of the clearing and then advanced to meet in the middle.

      ‘Fair knight,’ said King Pellinore, ‘I pray thee tell me thy name.’

      ‘That me regards,’ replied Sir Grummore, using the proper formula.

      ‘That is uncourteously said,’ said King Pellinore, ‘what? For no knight ne dreadeth for to speak his name openly, but for some reason of shame,’

      ‘Be that as it may, I choose that thou shalt not know my name as at this time, for no askin’.’

      ‘Then you must stay and joust with me, false knight.’

      ‘Haven’t you got that wrong, Pellinore?’ inquired Sir Grummore. ‘I believe it ought to be “thou shalt”.’

      ‘Oh, I’m sorry, Sir Grummore. Yes, so it should, of course. Then thou shalt stay and joust with me, false knight.’

      Without further words, the gentlemen retreated to the opposite ends of the clearing, fewtered their spears, and prepared to hurtle together in the preliminary charge.

      ‘I think we had better climb this tree,’ said Merlyn. ‘You never know what will happen in a joust like this.’

      They climbed up the big beech, which had easy branches sticking out in all directions, and the Wart stationed himself toward the end of a smooth bough about fifteen feet up, where he could get a good view. Nothing is so comfortable to sit in as a beech.

      To be able to picture the terrible battle which now took place, there is one thing which ought to be known. A knight in his full armour of those days, or at any rate during the heaviest days of armour, was generally carrying as much or more than his own weight in metal. He often weighed no less than twenty-two stone, and sometimes as much as twenty-five. This meant that his horse had to be a slow and enormous weight-carrier, like the farm horse of today, and that his own movements were so hampered by his burden of iron and padding that they were toned down into slow motion, as on the cinema.

      ‘They’re off!’ cried the Wart, holding his breath with excitement.

      Slowly and majestically, the ponderous horses lumbered into a walk. The spears, which had been pointing in the air, bowed to a horizontal line and pointed at each other. King Pellinore and Sir Grummore could be seen to be thumping their horses’ sides with their heels for all they were worth, and in a few minutes the splendid animals had shambled into an earthshaking

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