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really_ going to Kerglas?' cried the woman, turning pale. 'Yes; and in order to get there I have come from a country so far off that it has taken me three months' hard riding to travel as far as this.' 'And why do you want to go to Kerglas?' said she. 'I am seeking the basin of gold and the lance of diamonds which are in the castle,' he answered. Then Peronnik looked up. 'The basin and the lance are very costly things,' he said suddenly. 'More costly and precious than all the crowns in the world,' replied the stranger, 'for not only will the basin furnish you with the best food that you can dream of, but if you drink of it, it will cure you of any illness however dangerous, and will even bring the dead back to life, if it touches their mouths. As to the diamond lance, that will cut through any stone or metal.' 'And to whom do these wonders belong?' asked Peronnik in amazement. 'To a magician named Rogear who lives in the castle,' answered the woman. 'Every day he passes along here, mounted on a black mare, with a colt thirteen months old trotting behind. But no one dares to attack him, as he always carries his lance.' 'That is true,' said the knight, 'but there is a spell laid upon him which forbids his using it within the castle of Kerglas. The moment he enters, the basin and lance are put away in a dark cellar which no key but one can open. And _that_ is the place where I wish to fight the magician.' 'You will never overcome him, Sir Knight,' replied the woman, shaking her head. 'More than a hundred gentlemen have ridden past this house bent on the same errand, and not one has ever come back.' 'I know that, good woman,' returned the knight, 'but then they did not have, like me, instructions from the hermit of Blavet.' 'And what did the hermit tell you?' asked Peronnik. 'He told me that I should have to pass through a wood full of all sorts of enchantments and voices, which would try to frighten me and make me lose my way. Most of those who have gone before me have wandered they know not where, and perished from cold, hunger, or fatigue.' 'Well, suppose you get through safely?' said the idiot. 'If I do,' continued the knight, 'I shall then meet a sort of fairy armed with a needle of fire which burns to ashes all it touches. This dwarf stands guarding an apple-tree, from which I am bound to pluck an apple.' 'And next?' inquired Peronnik. 'Next I shall find the flower that laughs, prot
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