Le Morte D'Arthur (Book IV)

Week 9: Medieval Heroes - Assignments - Reading - Resources - Images


CHAPTER VI How King Arthur, King Uriens, and Sir Accolon of Gaul, chased an hart, and of their marvellous adventures.

Reading time: 3 minutes. Word count: 500 words.

King Arthur is now about to go on an adventure with Uriens and Accolon. This spells trouble: Uriens is the husband of Arthur's sister, Morgan, who is his arch-enemy, and Accolon is Morgan's lover! Strange things happen to them when they begin to chase after a great stag, and Arthur ends up in dire straights.

THEN it befell that Arthur and many of his knights rode a-hunting into a great forest, and it happed King Arthur, King Uriens, and Sir Accolon of Gaul, followed a great hart, for they three were well horsed, and so they chased so fast that within a while they three were then ten mile from their fellowship. And at the last they chased so sore that they slew their horses underneath them.

Then were they all three on foot, and ever they saw the hart afore them passing weary and enbushed.

What will we do? said King Arthur, we are hard bestead.

Let us go on foot, said King Uriens, till we may meet with some lodging.

Then were they ware of the hart that lay on a great water bank, and a brachet biting on his throat, and more other hounds came after.

Then King Arthur blew the prise and dight the hart. Then the king looked about the world, and saw afore him in a great water a little ship, all apparelled with silk down to the water, and the ship came right unto them and landed on the sands. Then Arthur went to the bank and looked in, and saw none earthly creature therein.

Sirs, said the king, come thence, and let us see what is in this ship.

So they went in all three, and found it richly behanged with cloth of silk.

By then it was dark night, and there suddenly were about them an hundred torches set upon all the sides of the ship boards, and it gave great light; and therewithal there came out twelve fair damosels and saluted King Arthur on their knees, and called him by his name, and said he was right welcome, and such cheer as they had he should have of the best. The king thanked them fair.

Therewithal they led the king and his two fellows into a fair chamber, and there was a cloth laid, richly beseen of all that longed unto a table, and there were they served of all wines and meats that they could think; of that the king had great marvel, for he fared never better in his life as for one supper. And so when they had supped at their leisure, King Arthur was led into a chamber, a richer beseen chamber saw he never none, and so was King Uriens served, and led into such another chamber, and Sir Accolon was led into the third chamber passing richly and well beseen; and so they were laid in their beds easily. And anon they fell asleep, and slept marvellously sore all the night.

And on the morrow King Uriens was in Camelot abed in his wife's arms, Morgan le Fay. And when he awoke he had great marvel, how he came there, for on the even afore he was two days' journey from Camelot.

And when King Arthur awoke he found himself in a dark prison, hearing about him many complaints of woful knights.


Questions. Make sure you can answer these questions about what you just read:

  • what happened when Uriens, Accolon and Arthur chased after the deer?
  • what kind of ship did they find and who was on board?
  • where did Uriens find himself the next morning? where did Arthur wake up?

Source: Malory's Le Morte d'Arthur, published by William Caxton (1485), with spelling modernized. Weblink. The original Caxton text is also available online: weblink.


Modern Languages / Anthropology 3043: Folklore & Mythology. Laura Gibbs, Ph.D. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License. You must give the original author credit. You may not use this work for commercial purposes. If you alter, transform, or build upon this work, you may distribute the resulting work only under a license identical to this one.
Page last updated: October 9, 2004 12:52 PM