The White Knight: Tirant Lo Blanc - LightNovelsOnl.com
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Plaerdemavida rode by back roads to the hermitage where Tirant was, and when he saw her he forgot his pain. When Plaerdemavida went up to him and saw how much his appearance had changed, she would not hold back her tears. And with a weak voice she said:
"Oh, I am the most miserable person in the world! I am so sorry when I think of your injury, because I am to blame for all the harm that has come to the best knight in the world. I can only ask you for mercy."
With a sigh Tirant said:
"Virtuous maiden, there is no reason at all for you to ask my forgiveness: you're not to blame for anything, and even if you were, I would pardon you not just once but a thousand times, because I know how much affection you've always had for me. I won't say another word about this because I want to know what the princess has been doing while I've been gone.
I'm sure Her Highness's love has grown weak, and she probably doesn't want to see me again."
Plaerdemavida, with a smile, told him she was very happy to do him such a service, and in a soft voice she said:
"After you left there was so much shouting and such a tumult in the palace that the emperor got out of bed. He went looking through all the rooms furiously, with a sword in his hand, saying whether it was a mouse or a man he would kill it without mercy.
The empress went back to her chambers to sleep. The love-sick Widow went to the princess with her own wickedness, because she is related to the old witch who brings only harm to those who love her. With a false expression of compa.s.sion on her face she told her: 'My lady, I saw Tirant lower himself by a rope, and half-way down it broke; and he fell from such a height that he was smashed to pieces.' And she began to wail very loudly.
When the princess heard the news she could say only, 'Jesus, Jesus, Jesus,' three times, and immediately her spirit left her.
I don't know where it went or on what business, because she was senseless for three hours. All the doctors came, but they couldn't revive her, and at that moment the emperor thought he was losing everything that nature and fortune had given him. And the tumult and cries in the palace were even greater than they had been the first time."
Then she told him everything she and the princess had said to each other.
"All her anger is feigned. She can't make up her mind about how to behave the first time she sees you: Whether or not to show that she is bothered by your injury. Because she says that if she smiles at you, you'll want to come back every day, and if she doesn't, you will be angry with her."
Tirant replied:
"What crime does Her Highness say that I've committed besides loving her? Her Majesty would do me a great favor if she would just grant me a visit. I believe that then most of her anger would disappear."
Plaerdemavida answered:
"My lord, do me a favor. Write her a letter, and I'll work with her so that she'll give you an answer. That way you'll be able to know what she is thinking."
As they were talking, the men that the princess had sent in search of Plaerdemavida entered the chamber. When they saw her they told her what the princess had ordered them to do.
Plaerdemavida answered:
"Tell my lady that she can't force me to serve her. I want to go to my parents' home."
"If I had found you someplace else," said the knight, "I would have forced you to go back. But I don't imagine the captain will be happy if the princess's will isn't carried out, and as a virtuous knight he will take care of the situation."
"Don't doubt for a minute," said Tirant, "that my lady will be served in every way. This maiden will quickly go with you."
Tirant had ink and paper brought, and with the great pain he felt in his leg he could not write as well as he wanted to, but in spite of his injury he wrote the following words of love:
"Who knows the great perfection that I see in Your Majesty, and in no one else? The fear I have of not having Your Highness'
love makes me feel twice as much pain, because if I lost Your Majesty I would lose everything. You must know that in you all perfection is contained. My pet.i.tion is based on that moment when you heard about my injury and said, 'Jesus, Jesus, Jesus!'--which has moved me deeply."
When Plaerdemavida had left Tirant, and the princess knew that she was coming, she ran to the landing of the stairs and said to her:
"Oh, my beloved sister! What made you so angry that you wanted to leave me?"
"Why, my lady!" said Plaerdemavida: "Your Excellency swept me from your mind and didn't want to see me again."
The princess took her by the hand, and led her to her bedchambers. She turned to the men who had brought her, and thanked them. When they were inside the chambers the princess said:
"Don't you know, Plaerdemavida, that disagreements between parents and their children often reach heights of anger, and that the same thing happens between brothers or sisters? Even if you and I had words, that's no reason for you to be angry with me.
You know very well that I love you more than all the maidens in the world, and you know all my secrets as you do my heart."
"Your Majesty spins very fine words," said Plaerdemavida, "but your actions are bad. You want to believe Widow Repose and all her wickedness, and you won't listen to me or anyone else. She was the cause of all this trouble. I remember that night when my lord Tirant broke his leg and Your Highness fainted: there was nothing but tears and anguish. But the Widow was the only one who was glad. Your Excellency has many virtues, but you lack patience."
"Let's stop talking about these things now," said the princess.
"Tell me about Tirant: How is he? When can I see him? The happiness he brings me makes me think about him more than I would like to."
"Since the time he left you, all the memories of Your Excellency make him sigh and grieve. You can be sure that no one deserves you as much as Tirant does. And he sends you this letter."
The princess took it very happily, and when she had read it she decided to write an answer:
"I tried to beg you several times not to steal my chast.i.ty; and if my words did not move you to pity, my tears should have. But you brought so much pain to your princess. The sound of my last words was carried to the ears of Widow Repose, and the empress came. I don't know how it was that I said, 'Jesus, Jesus, Jesus,' and I threw myself in the d.u.c.h.ess' lap because I hated life..."
When she had finished her answer she gave it to Hippolytus. When Hippolytus returned to Tirant, he gave him the letter. Tirant was very pleased to get it. He had paper and ink brought to him, and despite his injury he wrote the following letter:
"Now is the time when all things are at rest, except I who am awake, thinking of Your Highness and how you have forgotten about all the years I have been in love with you. But I give thanks to G.o.d for allowing me to know a maiden who is so full of perfection. And I see full well that no one but myself deserves Your Majesty's beauty. If you feel that I am worthy of reply, I am prepared to obey everything Your Excellency commands me."
When Tirant had finished writing the letter he gave it to Hippolytus and begged him to give it to the princess in Plaerdemavida's presence, and to get a reply if possible.
Hippolytus gave the letter to the princess as he had been commanded, and the princess took it, very pleased. As the empress came to see her daughter at that moment, she could not read it immediately. But when she saw that the empress was engaged in conversation with Hippolytus, asking him about Tirant's injury, and him answering her, the princess got up from where she had been sitting and went into her chamber with Plaerdemavida to read the letter.
After they had spoken at length about Tirant's illness, the empress said to Hippolytus:
"Your face looks quite altered, Hippolytus, thin and discolored.
The illness of such a valiant knight as Tirant must bring grief to all his relatives. I have been suffering greatly too. At night I wake up, filled with anxiety. Then, after I remember his injury, I go back to sleep."
Hippolytus quickly answered:
"If I were near a lady, and found myself in her bed, I wouldn't let her have as much rest as Your Majesty gets, no matter how deeply she slept. But it doesn't surprise me in Your Majesty: you sleep alone, and no one says a word to you. That's what is making my face so thin, not Tirant's illness. Everyday I ask Our Lord with all my heart to take away these painful thoughts that I keep having. Only those who know what love is have a real knowledge of what suffering means."
The empress presumed that Hippolytus must be in love and that all the sadness in his face was nothing but the pa.s.sion of love. She thought also that since Plaerdemavida had said many times that she loved Hippolytus, she must be the one he was troubled about.
And the empress unhesitatingly asked Hippolytus who the lady was that was causing him so much grief.
"Tell me, who is bringing you so much sadness?"
"My bitter misfortune," said Hippolytus. "And here, where I am, don't let Your Majesty think that my life is in less danger than Tirant's."
"In case you should tell me," said the empress, "I would keep it to myself always."
"Who would dare reveal his grief," said Hippolytus, "to a lady of such excellence?"
"There is no one," said the empress, "who should not listen to what another wants to say. And the loftier one's position, the more humbly he should listen."
"My lady," said Hippolytus, "since you want to know: love, it's love that I have, and it's not clothing that I can remove." "I'm not lacking in knowledge," said the empress, "about what you're saying. You say you're in love, and I ask you: With whom?"
"I don't have my five senses," said Hippolytus, "to tell you."
"Oh, man of little understanding" said the empress. "Why don't you say what it is that's making you suffer?"