Le Morte d'Arthur, Vol. 1 (Chap. 5.4) by Sir Thomas Malory
Le Morte d'Arthur, Vol. 1 (Chap. 5.4) by Sir Thomas Malory

Le Morte d’Arthur, Vol. 1 (Chap. 5.4)

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Le Morte d'Arthur, Vol. 1 (Chap. 5.4) by Sir Thomas Malory

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Sir Thomas Malory

Le Morte d’Arthur, Vol. 1 (Chap. 5.4) Annotated

CHAPTER IV.How King Arthur being shipped and lying in his cabin
had a marvelous dream and of the exposition thereof.

AND as the king lay in his cabin in the ship, he fell in a slumbering and dreamed a marvelous dream: him seemed that a dreadful dragon did drown much of his people, and he came flying out of the west, and his head was enameled with azure, and his shoulders shone as gold, his belly like mails of a marvelous hue, his tail full of tatters, his feet full of fine sable, and his claws like fine gold; and an hideous flame of fire flew out of his mouth, like as the land and water had flamed all of fire. After, him seemed there came out of the orient, a grimly boar all black in a cloud, and his paws as big as a post; he was rugged looking roughly, he was the foulest beast that ever man saw, he roared and roamed so hideously that it were marvel to hear. Then the dreadful dragon advanced him and came in the wind like a falcon giving great strokes on the boar, and the boar hit him again with his grizzly tusks that his breast was all bloody, and that the hot blood made all the sea red of his blood. Then the dragon flew away all on an height, and came down with such a sough, and smote the boar on the ridge, which was ten foot large from the head to the tail, and smote the boar all to powder both flesh and bones, that it fluttered all abroad on the sea.

And therewith the king awoke anon, and was sore abashed of this dream, and sent anon for a wise philosopher, commanding to tell him the signification of his dream. Sir, said the philosopher, the dragon that thou dreamed of betokeneth thine own person that sail-est here, and the colors of his wings be thy realms that thou hast won, and his tail which is all to-tattered significant the noble knights of the Round Table; and the boar that the dragon slew coming from the clouds betokeneth some tyrant that tormenteth the people, or else thou art like to fight with some giant thyself, being horrible and abominable, whose peer ye saw never in your days, wherefore of this dreadful dream doubt thee nothing, but as a conqueror come forth thyself.

Then after this soon they had sight of land, and sailed till they arrived at Barflete in Flanders, and when they were there he found many of his great lords ready, as they had been commanded to wait upon him.

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