The Hallowed Isle Book Four

Home > Other > The Hallowed Isle Book Four > Page 20
The Hallowed Isle Book Four Page 20

by Diana L. Paxson


  Henry frowns. “I have passed him, then, for I am fifty-six. I wonder, do you mean to threaten or to flatter me?”

  The bard shrugs. “Arthur walked the earth, and loved greatly, and strove greatly to make good laws and keep the peace and preserve the land from her enemies.”

  “So also have I,” the king replies, more softly. “But you take the magic from the story, telling it so!”

  “Is it not a greater wonder that this same history should still be recounted some six centuries after Arthur died, and in every country of Christendom?” the bard answers more softly still.

  King Henry shakes his head, laughing. “You will never make your fortune telling such tales to mortal kings! We prefer to believe that Arthur lived in an age of marvels, and avoid comparisons!”

  “But what if it were true?”

  “If it could be proved, you mean?” Suddenly the king grasps his sinewy arm. “Who are you, to know such things?”

  For a moment the bard considers him. Then, very gently, he smiles, and Henry finds his grip loosening. “I have been called by many names. I am a Wild Man in the wood, and a bard in the courts of kings. I am a wanderer upon the roads of the world, and the prophet of Arthur. And you yourself can prove the truth of my words—”

  He leans forward. “The abbey at Glastonbury burned five years ago, and the monks are still rebuilding. Command them to dig deep between the two pyramids in the churchyard. They will find there a coffin hollowed from a log of oak, and in it the bones of Arthur, and at his feet, Guenivere, with a leaden cross that gives their names.”

  “That would settle the Welsh!” exclaims the king, then sobers. “They claim Arthur as their Defender, but so do the English, and we Normans likewise, for my grandson bears his name. These days, he belongs to everyone. Why is that, do you suppose?” Henry says then. “Why should he matter so?”

  “Because he loved Britannia . . .” answers the bard. “Because for a little while he kept her safe against the dark.” He sits back, considering the king.

  “I tell you these things so that you may know that such deeds can be achieved by mortal men. And yet what the Welsh and the Bretons tell you is the truth as well. Arthur’s spirit never departed—neither to Heaven nor to the Otherworld. He watches over the Hallowed Isle. . . .”

  PEOPLE AND PLACES

  A note on pronunciation:

  British names are given in fifth-century spelling, which does not yet reflect pronunciation changes. Initial letters should be pronounced as they are in English. Medial letters are as follows:

  SPELLED PRONOUNCED

  P...........................b

  t...........................d

  k/c......................(soft) g

  b...........................v (approximately)

  d...........................soft “th” (modern Welsh “dd”)

  g...........................“yuh”

  m..........................v

  ue.........................w

  †

  PEOPLE

  CAPITALS = major character

  * = historical personnage

  ( ) = dead before story begins

  [ ] = name as given in later literature

  Italics = deity or mythological personnage

  *Aelle—king of the South Saxons

  Aggarban [Agravaine]—third son of Morgause

  *Agricola—prince of Demetia

  *Alaric II—king of the Visigoths

  (*Ambrosius Aurelianus—emperor of Britannia and Vitalinus’ rival)

  (*Amlodius—Artor’s grandfather)

  Amminius—one of Artor’s men

  ARTOR [Arthur]—son of Uthir and Igierne, high king of Britannia

  (Artoria Argantel—Artor’s grandmother)

  Beowulf—king of the Geats in Denmark

  BETIVER [Bedivere]—nephew to Riothamus, one of Artor’s Companions

  Bleitisbluth—a Pictish chieftain

  Brigantia/Brigid—British goddess of healing, inspiration, and the land

  *Budic—a grandson of Riothamus, lord of Civitas Aquilonia

  CAI—son of Caius Turpilius, Artor’s foster-brother and Companion

  *Caninus [Aurelius Caninus]—son of the prince of Glevum, ally of Medraut

  CATAUR [Cador]—prince of Dumnonia

  Cathubodva—Lady of Ravens, a British war goddess

  *Ceawlin—son of Cynric and grandson of Ceretic

  Ceincair—a priestess on the Isle of Maidens

  (*Ceretic [Cerdic]—king of the West Saxons)

  *Chlodovechus [Clovis]—king of the Franks in Gallia

  *Chlotild—queen of the Franks

  *Conan—lord of Venetorum

  *Constantine—son of Cataur, prince of Dumnonia

  *Creoda—son of Icel of Anglia

  *Cuil—a brigand

  *Cunobelinus—warleader of the northern Votadini

  *Cunoglassus—a prince of Guenet, ally of Medraut

  Cunovinda—a young priestess on the Isle of Maidens

  *Cymen—Aelle’s eldest son

  *Cynric—son of Ceretic, king of the West Saxons

  *Daniel Dremrud—son of Riothamus

  Doli—a Pictish warrior in the service of Morgause

  *Drest Gurthinmoch—high king of the Picts

  (*Dubricius—bishop of Isca and head of the church in Britannia)

  *Dumnoval [Dyfnwal]—lord of the Southern Votadini

  Edrit—a young warrior in the service of Aggarban

  Eldaul the younger [Eldol]—prince of Glevum

  *Eormenric—son of Oesc, child-king of Cantuware

  *Feragussos [Fergus]—king of the Scotti of Dal Riada

  *Gipp—Norse founder of Gippewic in Essex, Medraut’s ally

  GORIAT [Gareth]—fourth son of Morgause

  (Gorlosius [Gorlois]—first husband of Igierne, father of Morgause)

  Gracilia—wife of Gualchmai

  GUALCHMAI [Gawain]—first son of Morgause

  GUENDIVAR [Gwenivere]—Artor’s queen

  *Guenomarcus—lord of Plebs Legionorum

  Gwyhir [Gaheris]—second son of Morgause

  Hæthwæge—a Saxon wisewoman

  (*Hengest—king of Cantuware, leader of Saxon revolt)

  *Henry II—king of England

  *Icel—king of the Anglians in Britannia

  IGIERNE [Igraine]—Artor’s mother, Lady of the Lake

  Johannes Rutilius—brother-in-law to Riothamus, Betiver’s father

  Julia—a nun from the Isle of Glass, Guendivar’s companion

  (Kea—a British slave girl among the Picts, Medraut’s first woman)

  Father Kedi—an Irish priest at the court of Artor

  Leodegranus [Leodegrance]—prince of Lindinis, Guendivar’s father

  (Leudonus [Lot]—king of the Votadini)

  Maglouen [Maelgwn]—a prince of Guenet, Medraut’s ally

  (*Magnus Maximus [Maxen Wledig]—general serving in Britain who was proclaimed emperor 383–388)

  Marcus Conomorus [Mark of Cornwall]—son of Constantine

  Martinus of Viroconium—an ally of Medraut

  Maxentius—a grandson of Riothamus

  MEDRAUT—fifth son of Morgause, by Artor

  Melwas [Meleagrance]—an Irishman born in Guenet, abductor of Guendivar

  MERLIN—druid and wizard, Artor’s advisor

  Morcant Bulc—heir to Dun Breatann

  MORGAUSE—daughter of Igierne and Gorlosius, queen of the Votadini

  (*Naitan Morbet—king of all the provinces of the Picts)

  Nest—a priestess on the Isle of Maidens

  Ninive—daughter of Gualchmai by a woman of the hills

  (*Oesc—grandson of Hengest and king of Cantuware, Eormenric’s father)

  *Othar, Ela, Adgils, Admund [Othere, Onela, Eadgils, Eadmund]—King Ottar of Sweden, his brother Ali, his sons Adils and Eadmund

  Paulinus Clutorix—lord of Viroconium

  *Peretur [Peredur]—son of E
leutherius, lord of Eboracum

  *Pompeius Regalis [Riwal]—lord of Domnonia

  *Ridarchus—king at Alta Cluta and protector of Luguvalium

  Rigana—widow of Oesc, Eormenric’s mother

  *Riothamus—ruler of Armorica

  *Theodoric—a Gothic admiral in the service of Britannia

  *Theuderich—king of the Franks, son of Chlodovechus and a concubine and one of his successors, along with Chlodomer, Childebert, and Lothar (by Queen Clotild)

  Uorepona—the “Great Mare,” high queen of the Picts

  (Uthir [Uther Pendragon]—Artor’s father)

  Verica—a young priestess on the Isle of Maidens

  (*Vitalinus, the Vor-Tigernus—ruler of Britannia who brought in the Saxons)

  *Vortipor—son of Agricola, prince of Demetia

  †

  PLACES

  Afallon [Avalon]—Isle of Apples, Glastonbury

  Alba—Scotland

  Altaclutha—kingdom of the Clyde

  Ambrosiacum—Amesbury

  Anglia—Lindsey and Lincoln

  Annuen [Annwyn]—the land of the dead

  Aquae Sulis—Bath

  Armorica—Britanny

  Belisama fluvius—River Ribble, Lancashire

  Bodotria aestuarius—Firth of Forth

  Britannia—Great Britain

  Caellwic—Kelliwic, Cornwall

  Caledonian forest—southern Scotland

  Calleva—Silchester

  Camalot [Camelot]—Cadbury Castle, Somerset

  Camboglanna [Camlann]—fortress of Birdoswald, the Wall

  Camulodunum—Colchester

  Cantium, Cantuware—Kent

  Castra Legionis—Caerleon

  Cendtire—Kintyre peninsula

  Civitas Aquilonia—Quimper, Brittany

  Clutha—River Clyde

  Demetia—Pembroke and Carmarthen

  Domnonia—Cotes du Nord, Brittany

  Dumnonia—Cornwall and Devon

  Dun Bara—Barry Hill, Perth

  Dun Breatann—”fortress of the Britons,” Dumbarton Rock

  Dun Eidyn—Edinburgh Rock

  Durnovaria—Dorchester, Dorset

  Durobrivae—1. Rochester, Kent; 2. Water Newton, Cambridge

  Fodreu—Fortriu, Fife

  Forest of Caledon—Caledonian forest, southern Scotland

  Gallia—France

  Giants’ Dance—Stonehenge

  Gippewic—in Essex

  Glevum—Gloucester

  Guenet [Gwynedd]—Denbigh and Caernarvon

  Isca (Silurum)—Caerwent

  Isle of Glass (Inis Witrin)—Glastonbury

  Isle of Maidens in the Lake—Derwentwater, Cumbria

  Lindinis—Ilchester, Somerset

  Lindum—Lincoln

  Londinium—London

  Metaris aestuarius—the Wash

  Mona—Anglesey

  Plebs Legionorum—St. Pol de Léon, Brittany

  Pyrenaei montes—the Pyrenees

  Sabrina fluvia—the Severn River and estuary

  Segontium—Caernarvon, Wales

  Sorviodunum—Salisbury

  Summer Country—Somerset

  Tava—River Tay

  Tolosa—Toulouse

  Urbs Legionis (Deva)—Chester

  Uxela fluvius—River Axe, Severn estuary

  Venetorum—Vannes, in Brittany

  Venta Belgarum—Winchester

  Venta Siluricum—Caerwent, Wales

  Viroconium—Wroxeter

  Voreda—Old Penrith, Cumberland

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  DIANA L. PAXSON is the award-winning author of The Lord of Horses, The Wolf and the Raven, The Dragons of the Rhine, and The White Raven, and co-author (with Adrienne Martine-Barnes) of Master of Earth and Water, The Shield Between the Worlds, and Sword of Fire and Shadow, the chronicles of Fionn mac Cumhal. She lives in Berkeley, California.

  Visit www.AuthorTracker.com for exclusive information on your favorite HarperCollins authors.

  ALSO BY DIANA L. PAXSON

  The Hallowed Isle cycle

  The Book of the Sword

  The Book of the Spear

  The Book of the Cauldron

  The Book of the Stone

  Wodan’s Children Trilogy

  The Dragons of the Rhine

  The Wolf and the Raven

  The Lord of Horses

  With Adrienne Martine-Barnes

  Master of Earth and Water

  The Shield Between the Worlds

  Sword of Fire and Shadow

  COPYRIGHT

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental and beyond the intent of either the author or the publisher.

  Published by arrangement with the author

  ISBN 0-380-80548-0

  EPub Edition May 2013 ISBN 9780062288899

  THE HALLOWED ISLE: BOOK FOUR: THE BOOK OF THE STONE. Copyright © 2000 by Diana L. Paxson. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the nonexclusive, nontransferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse-engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

  Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data:

  First Avon Eos Trade Printing: January 2000

  Paxson, Diana L.

  The book of the stone / Diana L. Paxson.

  p. cm. — (The hallowed isle : bk. 4)

  1. Great Britain—History—Anglo Saxon period. 449–1066 Fiction. 2. Arthurian romances Adaptations. 3. Arthur, King Fiction. I. Title. II. Series: Paxson, Diana L. Hallowed isle : bk. 4.

  PS3566.A897B664 2000

  99-39528

  813’.54—dc21

  CIP

  AVON EOS TRADEMARK REG. U.S. PAT. OFF. AND IN OTHER COUNTRIES, MARCA REGISTRADA, HECHO EN U.S.A.

  OPM 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

  ABOUT THE PUBLISHER

  Australia

  HarperCollins Publishers (Australia) Pty. Ltd.

  Level 13, 201 Elizabeth Street

  Sydney, NSW 2000, Australia

  http://www.harpercollins.com.au

  Canada

  HarperCollins Canada

  2 Bloor Street East - 20th Floor

  Toronto, ON, M4W, 1A8, Canada

  http://www.harpercollins.ca

  New Zealand

  HarperCollins Publishers (New Zealand) Limited

  P.O. Box 1

  Auckland, New Zealand

  http://www.harpercollins.co.nz

  United Kingdom

  HarperCollins Publishers Ltd.

  77-85 Fulham Palace Road

  London, W6 8JB, UK

  http://www.harpercollins.co.uk

  United States

  HarperCollins Publishers Inc.

  10 East 53rd Street

  New York, NY 10022

  http://www.harpercollins.com

 

 

 


‹ Prev