ad we have
nought to fear of them, but God protect us from the living."
III.
While they were talking thus, behold you a damsel that cometh into the
dwelling on foot and all alone, and she cometh lamenting right
grievously.
"Ha, God!" saith she, "How long a penance is this for me, and when will
it come to an end?"
She seeth the knights sitting in the midst of the house. "Fair Lord
God," saith she, "Is he there within through whom I am to escape from
this great dolour?"
The knights hearken to her with great wonderment. They look and see
her enter within the door, and her kirtle was all torn with thorns and
briars in the forest. Her feet were all bleeding for that she was
unshod. She had a face of exceeding great beauty. She carried the half
of a dead man, and cast it into the chamber with the others. She knew
Lancelot again so soon as she saw him.
"Ha, God!" saith she, "I am quit of my penance! Sir," saith she,
"Welcome may you be, you and your company!"
Lancelot looketh at her in wonderment. "Damsel," saith he, "Are you a
thing on God's behalf?"
"Certes, Sir," saith she, "Yea! nor be you adread of nought! I am the
Damsel of the Castle of Beards, that was wont to deal with knights so
passing foully as you have seen. You did away the toll that was levied
on the knights that passed by, and you lay in the castle that demanded
it of them that passed through the demesne thereof. But you had me in
covenant that so the Holy Graal should appear unto you, you would come
back to me, for otherwise never should I have been willing to let you
go. You returned not, for that you saw not the Graal. For the shame
that I did to knights was this penance laid upon me in this forest and
this manor, to last until such time as you should come. For the
cruelty I did them was sore grievous, for never was knight brought to
me but I made his nose be cut off or his eyes thrust out, and some were
there as you saw that had their feet or their hands stricken off. Now
have I paid full dear thereof since, for needs must I carry into this
chamber all the knights that are slain in this forest, and within this
manor must I cast them according to the custom thereof, alone, without
company; and this knight that I carried in but now hath lain so long in
the forest that wild beasts have eaten half of his body. Now am I quit
of this foul penance, thanks to God and to you, save only that I must
go back when it shall be dayligh
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