IX. Milun 
One who tries to present a new
story must pay attention to
verisimilitude and then
to entertaining the women and men
to whom he speaks. I shall now tell
the tale of “Milun” and I may as well
say a word or two about how
and why I wrote what you’re reading now.
Milun, born in Wales, was a knight
who triumphed in every tourney and fight,
for no one had been able to
unhorse him. Everybody knew
his reputation, which had spread
throughout Scotland. It may be said
that in Gotland, Ireland, and even as far
as Norway he was a kind of star,
a model of strength and chivalry,
admired universally.
He was as you will understand
envied by some; on the other hand
he was loved and honoured by even more
for his ability and for
his courtliness. There lived nearby
a wealthy nobleman whom I
cannot name (it has slipped my mind)
and he had a daughter, sweet and refined,
who’d heard of Milun, and from this she
conceived a passion and wanted to be
his love. She sent to tell him this.
Milun of course was charmed and his
answer was that he would be true
and so forth and so on, as you
can imagine. He sent back word that he
would like to meet her privately,
if that could be arranged. He sent
a golden ring, significant
of abiding love. The messenger bore
the ring to his mistress and the more
important news that he would come
as soon as he had a message from
her to do so. In her delight
she sent for him and they met at night
in the garden her bedroom opened on.
Then, at dawn, he would be gone.
Terrific, right? It was for a time
but they were taking chances, and I’m
sure you’re not surprised to discover
that she got pregnant. She told her lover
what had happened and was upset:
her reputation, because she’d let
this come about was gone and she
faced punishment. She might even be
tortured or else sold as a slave.
(The curious reason that she gave
for such concerns was that these had been
the ancient family custom in
these awkward cases.) True or not,
Milun answered that he’d do what-
ever she wanted. She had a sister
in Northumbria; she’d enlist her
help. She said, “When the child is born,
you’ll take it to her, and when you’ve sworn
that it is ours, she’ll accept it and see
that it is brought up properly,
male or female, whatever it is.
I’ll give it the ring and along with this
letter with its father’s name
and the story of its mother’s shame.
When the child has grown to the age
of reason, it will reach the stage
when my sister can give it the ring and the letter,
and tell it to try to find its begetter,
so that one day you may see
your offspring and may think of me.”
He agreed to do this for her. She gave
birth (with the aid of a loyal and brave
servant who had helped her hide
her state) to a baby boy. With pride
she gave him to this nurse who hung
the golden ring around his young
neck. In his swaddling they hid
a silk purse with a note to bid
the world be kind to him. His bed
had a costly pillow beneath his head
and a coverlet with marten trim
to keep him warm and comfort him.
The nurse then gave Milun the child
and as he accepted it he smiled.
He set off that night with a few
servants he trusted on the way to
Northumbria. They had to pause
many times a day — there was
a wet nurse he’d brought along to keep
the baby fed. When he was asleep
again they would set forth and make
what speed they could for the baby’s sake.
They reached the aunt at last and he
gave her the infant. As soon as she
learned whose child it was she swore
to love him and do everything for
his welfare. Milun thanked her and
returned to his own native land.
But then what happens? Milun goes
to fight as a mercenary — those
engagements can bring wealth and fame.
The woman he had loved became
engaged to a nobleman nearby,
which was a prospect that made her cry
and bemoan her fate, for Milun still
was the one she loved. A bitter pill
to marry someone else, who would
discover that her maidenhood
was long gone and that she’d had
a child, which he would think was bad.
What then to do? Would she now be
a servant doomed to misery
that would continue without end?
“I had expected happiness
but I find myself in deep distress
with servants who I realize
are guardians and even spies
who seem to be resentful of
their betters when we fall in love.”
She concluded with a sigh
and even the wish that she might die.
But eventually there came the day
when her bridegroom came to take her away.
At length Milun returned and he
was sad, as one would expect him to be,
but still he was able to take some cheer
on account of the fact that she lived near
enough for him to hope. But how
could he let her know that he was now
at home again? He wrote a note
that he tied around the snowy throat
of a pet swan, the loveliest
of birds. In the feathers of its breast
he hid the paper. He called a squire
and told him to put on different attire
and take the swan to the castle where
his beloved lived. When he got there
he was to see that she received
the bird herself. The lad believed
he could do this and was on his way
with the swan, proceeding without delay.
As soon as he reached the castle he
spoke to the porter quietly,
explaining that he was by trade
a fowler and that he had made
the trip here to present this bird
to the lady within of whom he’d heard
good things — hoping that she might be
a friend in any emergency
in which bird catchers sometimes get
entangled in someone’s legal net.
The porter explained that nobody
was allowed to speak to the lady, but he
could find a spot in which he might
have a chance to give her the white
swan he carried. The squire expressed
his gratitude to this brightest and best
of fellows. The porter entered the hall
where a couple of knights sat at a small
table playing chess. He came
back and led the squire the same
way. The knights, intent on their board,
did not look up as they tiptoed toward
the lady’s quarters. They knocked at the door
and explained to a maid the reason for
their visit. The lady accepted the swan
and ordered the servants who waited upon
her to care for the bird — but the maid
told her what the squire bade
her say — that nobody else but her
should receive it from the offerer.
It was a lovely specimen
as the lady noticed at once, but then
she stroked its snow-white feathers and found
the letter that had been tied around
its neck. Immediately she knew
from whom it came. She took a few
breaths and ordered, “Let money be
given the man who brought it to me.”
When she was alone with only one
serving maid, the knot was undone,
the seal broken, and the envelope
opened in a moment of hope
she tried to control, but she’d hardly begun
to read when she saw the name “Milun”
at the top of the paper. As she spelled
out the dear letters teardrops welled
up in her eyes so it took her
a moment or two before the blur
resolved to meaningful words: he wrote
of how he had suffered in all his remote
travels both night and day. She could
decide for him if his life would
be worth living. She had to devise
a way to avoid suspicious eyes
so they could meet. He would comply
with any instruction she sent him by
return swan. Let the bird
go and it would return with word
of what she proposed. She brooded upon
his plan and decided to feed the swan
well and then withdraw all food
so it would be hungry and therefore would
return at once to its native ground
where it knew its usual food could be found.
She cared for it for a month to allow
it to regain its strength. Somehow
she got hold of ink and a pen
to write a note to Milun and when
she’d finished hung it on the bird
as he had done. And it all occurred
exactly as she’d planned: it flew
back home to Milun’s town and to
his very dwelling where it alit.
Delighted. Milun made much of it
and immediately had it fed.
Only then was it that he read
its message that confirmed that she
still loved him and could never be
happy without him. Thus, the two
sent the notes that the swan flew
back and forth for twenty years
of fidelity. It even appears
that now and then they managed to
meet, although these occasions were few,
but no guards can frustrate forever
the schemes of lovers who are clever.
Meanwhile, the sister (remember her?)
brought up the baby, handsomer
and stronger every day. He grew
to an age when she entrusted to
his care the letter and the ring
and related to him everything
she knew about him. He was delighted
and set his heart on getting knighted.
“To have a father of such rare
qualities would be hard to bear
if I did not attempt to achieve
a like fame. I’ll have to leave,”
he said and set out at once to be
a perfect model of chivalry.
He went to Southampton where he crossed
the English Channel, tempest-tossed,
to reach Barfleur and then from there
to Brittany, a region where
he jousted in tournaments and won
all his contests. He played for fun
and gave poor knights a goodly share
of his winnings. People everywhere
sang praises of “The Peerless One,”
which is what how they referred to him, for none
knew his name. But his reputation
spread nonetheless, and the approbation
reached the ears of Milun who thought
anyone else who was famous ought
to be tested — could this upstart be
better in combat even than he?
If not, he should be unhorsed,
taught to respect his betters, and forced
to acknowledge freely that Milun
was the best in the world. When that was done,
he would search for the son who he
believed had recently crossed the sea.
All this he set down in a note
he tied around the old swan’s throat,
and his love, approving, wrote to say
she did not wish to stand in his way.
He travelled to Normandy and then
to Brittany, met many men,
took part in tournaments, and he
entertained most lavishly.
He spent the entire winter there
till Easter when from everywhere
knights came to Mont St Michel to find
worthy opponents of every kind —
Normans, Flemish, Bretons, too,
and French. (From England, very few.)
It was easy for Milun to spot
this arriviste. He had a lot
of time to study his technique:
how he spurred his horse to seek
an opponent’s weakness and how he struck
blows that couldn’t have been sheer luck.
Milun did well enough but he
awaited the opportunity
to meet this rising star and show
what jousting was like years ago.
At last he drew the other’s name
and mounted his charger. He nearly came
to unhorsing him but his lance broke.
The other, in a counterstroke,
unseated Milun and he fell
to the ground — where onlookers could tell
his age, revealing his white beard
and white hair. The other knight
took the horse by the reins and he
presented it respectfully
to its rider: “Sir, I do regret
my act against an elder. Let
me help you mount your steed again.
Milun got up and it was then —
a most extraordinary thing —
he saw and recognized the ring
the other wore. He said, “For the love
of God, tell me what you know of
your parents. Who was your father? Who
was you mother? No knight has been able to do
what you just did. My admiration
you have. But give me the information!”
The other said, “I was fathered by
a Welshmen named Milun, and my
mother was some rich man’s daughter
whose love, it is said, Milun had sought. Her
child was sent to Northumbria where
her sister — my aunt — assumed my care.
My hope is that I may find this knight
and show him the ring and other quite
persuasive tokens. Then I shall see
if he will acknowledge and cherish me.”
Milun could hear no more. He leapt
forward and with one hand kept
a grip on the other’s hauberk while
he announced, “You are my son and I’ll
love you. My life is whole once more,
You are the one I’ve been looking for.”
They wept for joy as they embraced
and then they turned together and faced
the other knights who were delighted
witnessing an old wrong righted.
Later, alone, the father explained
how his love for the lady remained
as fresh as ever and he went on
even to tell him about the swan
and how it carried their secret notes
over the castle’s walls and moats.
The son was enchanted by all of this
and on the instant offered his
help to bring his father and mother
together again. It would be no bother
to kill the husband so that the two
could marry as most parents do.
The next day they headed home with a breeze
that was fresh and fair. The vagaries
of life being what they are, they’d gone
not very far when they came upon
a servant from Milun’s lady whose
duty it was to deliver the news
to Milun that the husband was dead.
He told her what the lady had said —
that he should hasten to her at once.
The father’s reaction and the son’s
was to thank heaven. Nothing stood
in their way now and they could
get married. Which they did forthwith.
Before the summoned kin and kith,
the brave son gave his mother away
and they all lived happily from that day.
Not all endings are tragic and we
may share in their felicity.