ROM Palma to Palestine Percival sailed,
On Roman roads restless he traveled;
Pathward compelled to the place of the Grail.
He thought then to thank Heaven
With prayer and praise, plaudits singing,
Te Deum laudamus te Dominum confitemur.
Then without warning the way was shut
His travels turning to a trackless waste,
His refrains ran dry and rolled to an end.
From palfrey he fell face to his hands,
And let out laments, lost all to tears.
[ Hadn’t that hermit holding oak staff
Reckoned a-right the road to Sarras? ]
The forest he found was fearful and dark,
Webbed and wild, a waste of foul smell.
He slept not nor sat for seven days
In that hollow house, a heaven-less place
Where animals mated not nor made a sound;
A boneyard bubbling with black odour
Of corpses and carcasses. A cry he heard then,
The first, and fairest, from a distance singing,
Among oak and elm, a redoubtable voice,
And Percival compelled, by its power turned,
Saw this spectre of silver-clad mail.
Now there was a knight known in those parts;
Hawkcrest they call him for the clad of his helm.
Lord-less he was, in leisure ruling,
King of his own keep. From Kentish wilds
He’d hailed for awhile, a haughty man,
A thankless thane overthrown to pride,
From his master’s mark, his merit taken,
And faithless he fell, to disfavor and scorn.
Neither from negligence nor weakness
Did he fall—he was fearless, and fierce enough!
It’s true in tournament he trampled his foe,
A princely opponent, prevailed him by fiat,
Judged the joust-winner. The judges wit well,
For they feared him, forced to agree,
And give him those gifts which granted his fame.
Ah! then envy came, dark angel of old,
Spun spacious castles soft in the air,
Brought him bright dreams of beddings of gold,
Shimmering sheets that showered with light.
Alas, overthrown, to his wealth doomed,
He ruled beyond realm this warren of death.
He it was who sang and Percival approached,
On a mare mounted, but made no gesture,
Without a word awaited Arthur’s knight
To utter a remark and return his answer.
“Sir,” said Percival sighing gratitude,
“My eyes have yearned for your arrival,
Too little of life lingers in this wood;
Where flint sparks flame the fumes are poison;
My nostrils burn so noxious is this place
Where I am not wanted, nor want to be.
To Sarras I am certain my soul is bound,
But its location is lost. My Lord King Arthur
This quest bequeathed me, to quit it so soon
Would be dishonor to myself
IS opponent paused for praise he loved
To hear of himself, however little,
From unwashed wastrel and wealthy alike,
So to flash his fame, and fan it too.
Percival perceived this plotting next
New numbers to enumerate
His foe’s triumphs, his flagrant gagnons.
“If modesty permit me a monk’s song
Have I heard lately a humble chanson;
Sung ‘tis true solo sine choro,
By a bald monk beaten down
By a knavish knight who knocked him flat
(He was merry with mud, hardly embarrassed by it!)
Restoring thereby his repentant heart.
For among monks— so his melody tells—
Why, a sinner he was— a serpent ‘mong fowls—
A robber, a wretch, an unrighteous clerk—
Seducing servant girls, a sacrist unholy—
Why, sir knight, this monk to sulfrous flames
Was nearing nigh till you nudged him!
Let it not be said ‘a knave steals worth
Only from the oppressed’, for in that instance
You gave back to God the gift of a soul.
Or am I mistaken? Mercy and pardon
Through and through! For truth I see
Now not that knight— No, you are another.”
Here Hawkcrest canted with cruel howling,
Silver visage shaking an endless void his eyes.
“Among all the world does Arthur command
A thane so thoroughly good? So thoughtful
Of religion and righteousness, reward an afterthought?”
His laughter rang false an offense to truth,
And Percival answered: “My lord Arthur
Would not wish his name awash in your spittle,
Yet your ears may melt to uselessness at his name—
Galahad the Great— his given title,
So we hail him and he never blushes,
Or chides us as children, nor eschews
This high heavenly title, for humility
Is wise in allowance which washes out pride.”
Hawkcrest called again his callous mirth
For all the forest to hear, and fitfully replied:
“Your games are girlish, by God, I cry for you,
Seeking man for savior, who can only sinful be.”
“Sinless, no, neither sinful, and God will save him,
As a man among men— but his might is divine,
That is to say, sent from Heaven,
But innocence impedes sin— he is impervious,
Why, he is the prince of purity,” said Percival gladly.
“‘Prince of purity’, ‘impervious to sin’,
‘Galahad the Great’? Why girls he had
About him all over this past afternoon!
To Turlock I took him as a true friend,
Shared my caches my shipments of wine,
My women and wenches — and how low they were!
Why, Galahad gave no mind gladly partaking.
Even lusty Lancelot would look askance
On such bold behaviour. A bastard, alas!
He killed one of my kin— kissed my stepsister
Then murdered her and mocked her corpse.
Even now in dungeon alone to reflect
In solitary cell he spits venomous words,
Cares not for the Quest considers it lowly—
A ‘nifty thing for knights’— he named you thus.
He curses the Christian faith as cause of his woes—
Renounces righteousness. These ravings, understand,
Pass me by impervious, for perfection to me
I find in fine things. My own fate I own
As safely as my castle. Alas, once my friend,
Galahad the Great now given over to sin,
Is now my perfect prisoner to dispose of at dawn.”
BIO: Sam Stephens has lived all over the United States and now lives in Nashville, Tennessee. He studied literature at the University of Middle Tennessee where he learned to love poetry. His poem Mozart’s Jupiter was published by Early Music America Magazine.
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