"Be silent, Oliver," answered Roland. "He is my stepfather. I will not hear him ill spoken of." Then Oliver went down the hill and told his soldiers what he had seen. "No battle will ever be like this one," he said; "you will need all your strength to keep your ground and not be driven back." "Cursed be he who runs away," answered they. "There is not one of us but knows how to die."
"The Infidels are many," said Oliver again, "and our Franks are but few. Roland, blow your horn; Charles will hear it and come to our help."
"You are mad to say that," replied Roland, "for in France I should lose all my glory. No; but my sword Durendal knows how to strike, and our Franks will fight hard, and with what joy! It was an ill day for the Unbelievers when they came here, for none, I tell you, none will escape."
"The Unbelievers are many," said Oliver again, "and we are very few.
Roland, my friend, sound your horn; Charles will hear it, and come to our help."
"I should be mad if I did so," answered Roland. "In France, when they knew it, I should lose all my glory! No; but my sword Durendal knows how to strike, and our Franks will fight hard, and with what joy! It was an ill day for the Unbelievers when they came here, for none, I tell you, none will escape death."
"O Roland, I pray you sound your horn, and Charles will hear it as he pa.s.ses the defiles, and the Franks, I will swear it, will come to our help."
"Now G.o.d forbid," said Roland, "that through me my parents should be shamed, or that I should bring dishonour on the fair land of France.
No; but my sword Durendal knows how to strike. The Unbelievers have come to their death, and they will find it."
"I see no dishonour," said Oliver. "With my own eyes have I beheld the Saracens of Spain; the mountains and the valleys alike are full of them. And how few are we!"
"Then we shall have the more fighting," answered Roland. "G.o.d forbid that I should turn my Franks into cowards! Rather death than dishonour. The more we kill, the better the Emperor will love us."
Roland was brave, but Oliver was wise also, and the souls of both were as high as their words. "Look round you, and think for a moment," said Oliver; "they are close to us, and Charles is far. Ah! if you would only have sounded your horn, the King would have been here, and our troops would not have been in danger. The poor rear-guard will never more be again such as it is to-day."
"You speak foolishly," answered Roland. "Cursed be he whose heart is afraid. We will be strong to hold our ground. From us will come the blows, from us the battle."
When Roland saw that he must give battle to the Infidels, he called his Franks and bade Oliver stand beside him. "Do not say these things, my friend and comrade," said he. "The Emperor has left us twenty thousand picked men, with not one craven heart amongst them. For our liege lord, one must be ready to suffer cold and heat, hunger and thirst, and cheerfully shed his blood and endure every ill. Strike with your lance, Oliver, as I shall strike with Durendal, the sword which was given me by the King himself. And if I am slain, the man who wins it may say, "it was the sword of a n.o.ble va.s.sal.""
Then from a little hill Turpin the Archbishop spoke to them. "Charles has left us here; he is our King, and it is our duty to die for him.
Christianity is in danger, and you must defend it. You cannot escape a battle; then fight, and ask G.o.d"s pardon for your sins. In His Name, I will give you absolution, and already they wait for you in Paradise."
The Franks got off their horses and knelt on the ground, and the Archbishop blessed them. After this they mounted again, and placed themselves in order of battle.
Like lightning Roland on his horse Veillantif swept along the defiles, his face bright and smiling, his lance in rest. Oliver his friend was close behind him, and the Franks said to each other, "Look at our champion!" He glanced proudly at the Infidels, but when his eyes fell upon the Franks they were soft and gentle. "Go slowly, n.o.ble barons,"
said he; "the Unbelievers to-day are seeking their martyrdom, and you will find richer booty than ever King of France did before."
"Words of mine are useless," said Oliver; "you would not let Charles know of our peril, so you cannot blame him for our danger. Ride as hard as you can, and think only of two things, how best to give and receive blows. And do not forget the battle cry of King Charles."
"Montjoie! Montjoie!" shouted the Franks, as the two armies came together with a crash.
It were long to tell of that battle and of the brave deeds that were done both by Christians and Unbelievers. Roland was there where the strife was hardest, and struck with his lance till the wood snapped.
Then he drew Durendal from the scabbard and drove a b.l.o.o.d.y path through the ranks of the Infidels. Oliver and the Twelve Peers were not far behind him, and the ground was red from the corpses of the pagans. "Well fought, well fought!" cried the Archbishop, "Montjoie, Montjoie!"
Oliver seemed to be everywhere at once. His lance was broken in two, and there was only the head and a splinter remaining, but it dealt more death blows than the sword of many another man. "What are you doing, comrade?" cried Roland, when for a moment their horses touched.
"It is not wood that is needed in this battle, but well-tempered steel! Where is your sword Hauteclair, with its guard of gold and its handle of crystal?"
"I have no time to draw it," said Oliver. "There are too many blows to strike."
Fiercer and fiercer grew the combat; thicker and thicker the corpses lay on the ground. Who could count the Franks who were stretched there, never more to see their wives or their mothers, or the comrades that awaited them in the defiles? But the number of the dead Saracens was greater even than theirs. And while they fought on Spanish soil, a strange tempest arose in France, thunder and wild winds, and a trembling of the earth; walls fell down, and at mid-day there was darkness. Men whispered to each other: "It is the end of the world."
No, no; the end of all things was not yet, it was nature mourning for the death of Roland. At length the Saracens turned and fled, and the Franks pursued them, and Margaris the Valiant was left alone. His lance was broken, his shield pierced with holes, his sword-blade b.l.o.o.d.y, while he himself was sorely wounded. Heavens! what a warrior he would have made if he had only been a Christian. He rode fast to Marsile the King, and cried to him to mount his horse, and rally his men, and bring up fresh soldiers to deal the Franks a last blow, while they were exhausted from the long fight. "It will be easy to revenge the thousands that they have slain," said he; "but if you let them slip now the tide of battle may turn against us."
The King Marsile sent for fresh forces, and at sight of them the Franks embraced each other for the last time, while the Archbishop promised them a speedy entrance into Paradise. "The Emperor will avenge the treachery of Ganelon," cried Roland, "whether we live or die, but the worst part of the fight is before us, and we shall need all our strength to beat back the Unbelievers. They must not tell tales of cowardice in the fair land of France." Then they spurred their horses and advanced in line, crying "Montjoie! Montjoie!"
"Count Roland is not as other men," said King Marsile, "and as he is not content with two battles, we will give him a third. To-day Charles will cease to have power over Spain, and France will bow her head with shame." And he gave his orders to the vanguard to go forward, while he himself waited on a little hill till the moment came to charge. Fierce was the shock as the two armies met, and bravely did their leaders fight, hand to hand and sword to sword. None struck harder than Turpin the Archbishop, who cursed his foes as he bore them from their saddles. "He fights well," said the Franks who watched his blows. But the Franks had fought long, and were faint and weary. They had lost much blood, and their arms were weak to strike. "See how our brothers fall," they whispered one to another, and Roland heard their groans, and his heart was near breaking. Thousands lay dead, thousands more were wounded, but still the battle went on. Horses without riders wandered about the field neighing for their masters. Then Marsile bade the trumpets sound, and his army gathered round the great standard with the Dragon, borne by a Saracen named Abimus. When Turpin the Archbishop caught sight of him, he dashed straight towards the banner, and with one blow of his mighty sword stretched the Unbeliever dead on the ground before the Dragon. "Montjoie! Montjoie!" he cried, and the Franks heard, and said one to the other, "Heaven send that Charles has many like him!" The lances of the Franks were broken, and their shields were for the most part split in two, but three hundred naked swords still were left to deal blows at the shining helmets of the Infidels. "Help! help! O King!" cried the Saracens, and Marsile heard, and answered, "Better die than flee before these Franks. Let no one think of himself, but all press round Roland. If Roland dies, Charles is conquered. If Roland lives, all is over for us!" But Roland, with Oliver at his side, swept a clear s.p.a.ce with Durendal, and none might come near him; the Archbishop kept his enemies at bay with his lance.
Four times the Franks endured the shock of the onset, but at the fifth they were borne down by numbers, and now only sixty remained upon the ground.
Then Roland turned to Oliver and said, "Fair sir and dearest friend, well may we pity France who will henceforth be widowed of such brave warriors. O Charles, my King, why do you not come to us? Oliver, tell me, how can we let him know what straits we are in?" "There is no way," said Oliver, "and death rather than dishonour."
"I will sound my horn," said Roland, "and Charles will hear, and come back through the defiles. I know that the Franks will retrace their steps and come to our aid."
"That would be a shameful thing for them," replied Oliver; "all our kinsfolk would blush for us for ever, and we should likewise blush for ourselves. When I begged you to do it you would not, and now the time is past."
"The battle is sore," said Roland, "I shall sound the horn, and Charles will hear it."
"You refused to do it while yet there was time," answered Oliver. "If the Emperor had come then, so many of our best warriors would not be lying dead before us. It is not his fault that he is not here. But if you sound the horn now, I will never give you my sister, the fair Aude, for your wife."
"Why do you bear such malice?" said Roland.
[Ill.u.s.tration: ROLAND WINDS HIS HORN IN THE VALLEY OF RONCESVALLES]
"It is your fault," answered Oliver. "Courage and madness are not the same thing, and prudence is always better than fury. If so many Franks lie dead, it is your folly which has killed them, and now we can no longer serve the Emperor. If you would have listened to me, Charles would have been here, and Marsile and his Saracens would have been slain. Your courage, Roland, has cost us dear! For yourself, you will be killed and France be covered with dishonour. And before night falls our friendship will be ended." Then he wept, and Roland wept also.
The Archbishop had been near, and heard their words. "Do not quarrel at this hour," he said. "Your horn could not save them now. Charles is too far; it would take him too long to come. Yet sound it, for he will return and avenge himself on the Unbelievers. And they will take our bodies and put them on biers, and lay them on horses, and will bury us with tears of pity among the mountains, building up high walls round us, so that the dogs and the wild boar shall not devour us." "What you say is good," answered Roland, and he lifted his horn, and its mighty voice rang through the mountains and Charles heard the echo thirty miles away. "Our men are fighting," he cried, but Ganelon answered, "If another man had said that, we should have called him a liar."
Count Roland was sorely wounded and the effort to sound the horn caused the blood to pour from his mouth. But he sounded it once more, and the echoes leaped far. Charles heard it in the defiles, and all his Franks heard it too. "It is Roland"s horn," said the King, "and he is fighting."
"He is not fighting," answered Ganelon; "you are old, and your words are those of a child. Beside, you know how great is the pride of Roland; it is a marvel that G.o.d has suffered him to live so long. For a hare, Roland would sound his horn all day, and at this moment he is most likely laughing with his Twelve Peers over the fright he has caused us. And again, who is there who would dare to attack Roland?
No one. March on, sire; why make halt? France is still distant."
Count Roland suffered grievous pain and a great wound was across his forehead. He sounded his horn for the third time, and Charles and his Franks heard it. "That horn carries far," said he, and Naimes answered, "It is Roland who is calling for help. A battle is going on; some one has betrayed him. Quick, sire, he has called often enough.
Sound your war-cry and hasten to his help." Then the Emperor ordered his trumpets to be sounded, and his army gathered itself together and girded on their armour with what speed they might, and each man said to the other, "If only we are in time to save Roland from death, what blows we will strike for him." Alas, they are too late, too late!
But before the march back there was something for the Emperor to do.
He sent for his head cook to appear in his presence, and he delivered the traitor Ganelon into his custody, and told him to treat his prisoner as he liked, for he had shown himself unworthy to mix with warriors. So the head cook did as he pleased with him, and beat him with sticks and put a heavy chain about his neck. And thus he guarded him till Charles came back.
How tall the mountains seemed to the returning army! how deep the valleys, and how swift the streams! but all the while the trumpets were sounded, that Roland might hear them and take heart. And as he rode, Charles had only one thought, "If Roland is slain, shall I find one man alive?"
Roland stood looking at the mountains and at the plains, and wherever his eyes fell his dead comrades lay before him. Loudly he mourned their loss, and then he turned to Oliver, saying, "Brother, we must die here with the rest of the Franks." He spurred his horse and blew his horn, and dashed into the ranks of the foe, shouting "Montjoie!
Montjoie!" The remnant that was left closed eagerly round him, and the battle-cries were fierce and loud. If Marsile and his host fled before them, others not less valiant remained behind, and Roland knew that the hour of his doom was come. And in valour, Oliver was no whit behind him, but flung himself into the thickest of the battle. It was the Caliph who gave Oliver his death blow. "Charles made a mistake when he left you to guard these defiles," said he, "but your life will pay for many that you have slain." But Oliver was not dead yet, and the taunt of the Caliph stung his blood. With all the strength he had left, he swung his sword Hauteclair on high, and it came down upon the Caliph"s helmet with a crash, cleaving it clean through. "Ah, pagan,"
said he, "you will never boast now of the prizes you have taken in battle." Then "Roland! Roland!" he cried, and Roland came. When he saw Oliver before him, livid and bleeding, he swayed on his horse as if he should faint. Oliver"s sight was weak and troubled from loss of blood, and not hearing Roland"s voice he mistook him for an enemy, and struck him a hard blow on his helmet. This blow restored Roland to his senses, and he sat upright. "My friend," said he, "why have you done this? I am Roland, who loves you well, and never did I think you could lift your hand against me."
"I hear you," answered Oliver, "I hear you speak, but I cannot see you. If I have struck you, forgive me, for I knew it not."
"I forgive you from my heart," said Roland, and they embraced each other for the last time.
The agony of death was falling upon Oliver; his sight had failed, his hearing was fast failing too. Slowly he dismounted from his horse and laid himself painfully on the ground, making, in a loud voice, the confession of his sins. Then he prayed G.o.d to bless Charlemagne, fair France, and Roland his friend, and after that his soul left him. And Roland returned and found him dead, and wept for him bitterly. At last he stood up and looked around. Of all the twenty thousand men, not one was left except himself, and Turpin and Gautier. And these three placed themselves shoulder to shoulder, and sent many an Infidel to join his dead brothers. But the wounds they received in their bodies were without number, and at length the Archbishop tottered and fell.
But they had not slain him yet: with a mighty struggle he rose to his feet and looked round for Roland. "I am not conquered yet," he said; "a brave man dies but never surrenders." Then with his good sword he rushed into the _melee_ dealing death around him. Roland fought as keenly as his friend, but the moments seemed long till Charles brought them help. Again he sounded his horn, though the wound in his head burst out afresh with his effort. And the Emperor heard it, and stopped for an instant on his march. "My lords," he said, "things are going badly with us; we shall lose my nephew Roland to-day, for I know by the way he blows his horn that he has not long to live. Spur your horses, for I would fain see him before he dies. And let every trumpet in the army sound its loudest!" The Unbelievers heard the noise of the trumpets, which echoed through the mountains and valleys, and they whispered fearfully to each other, "It is Charles who is coming, it is Charles!" It was their last chance, and a band of their best warriors rode straight at Roland. At that sight the strength rushed back into his veins, and he waited for them proudly. "I will fight beside you,"
he said to Turpin, "and till I am dead I will never leave you. Let them strike as hard as they will; Durendal knows how to strike back."
"Shame be upon every man who does not fight his best," answered the Archbishop, "for this is our last battle. Charles draws near, and will avenge us."
The Infidels said afterwards that an army could not have wrought the ruin that was done that day by the Archbishop and Roland. Veillantif received thirty wounds in his body and then fell dead under his master. But Roland leaped off, and smote the Saracens, who turned and fled before him. He was too weak to follow after them, and turned to see if the Archbishop still breathed. Kneeling by his side he unlaced Turpin"s golden helmet, and bound up his gaping wounds. Then he pressed him closely to his heart and laid him gently on the ground. "O friend, we must take farewell of each other, now all our comrades have gone before us. But let us do all we can for their bodies, which cannot be left lying here. I will myself go and seek their corpses, and bring them here and place them in rows before you."