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Okay, X is not really for Excalibur, but I thought I’d cheat a bit, because very few words in the Arthurian universe actually do start with X, and if they do, I’m not familiar with them. Please tell me if you know of one and I’ll look it up.
Strictly speaking, I could have put this into the C post, because it’s also called Caliburn. But I thought C and E were more interesting as they were - Culhwch and Elaine.
So... Excalibur! Arthur’s amazing sword. There are plenty of famous, named swords in legend and even, occasionally, history. Charlemagne’s sword Joyeuse, for example. Roland’s sword Durandal. The Grass-Cutting Sword of Japan. El Cid’s two swords Colada and Tizona. Read about them and others here. https://www.storypick.com/sword-history/
What is not always picked up by readers is that Excalibur is not the sword from the stone. That unnamed sword got broken when the youthful Arthur got into a fight in his attempt to have a knightly “adventure”, the silly boy!
Mind you, in the film Excalibur it was the sword. Arthur breaks it, yes, killing Lancelot early in the movie(unfortunately, Lancelot is brought back to life, but the film would have ended there if he hadn’t been). However, the broken bits are repaired instantly by the Lady of the Lake, who hands it back to him. In that film, Uther wields it first. He is about to die and thrusts it into the stone, in an unsuccessful attempt to break it, declaring that nobody shall have it but him. Whoops!
Later in the film, Arthur finds his wife and Lancelot sleeping naked out in the woods and thrusts the sword between them so they will know he was there.
In Malory, Excalibur is the sword given to him, complete with scabbard, by the Lady of the Lake, to whom he returns it at the end. Merlin asks him whether he prefers the sword or the scabbard. “Oh, the sword, of course!” the boy says enthusiastically, and Merlin, who just can’t stop teaching, tells him that he’s a fool - the scabbard will protect the owner from bleeding to death. Well, how was he supposed to know?
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In any case, he does lose the scabbard when his sister Morgana steals it. She also steals Excalibur, which she hands over to her lover Accolon, promising him the throne in exchange for killing Arthur in a duel to the death. Luckily, our girl Nimue gets involved, making Accolon drop the sword in time for Arthur to grab it back and win the fight. Arthur has unwittingly been using a copy.
I wrote this episode into my novella A Matter Of Honour. If you want to read it, email me. It’s only available free until I find a home for it. It’s in PDF or ePub.
In Rosemary Sutcliff’s Sword At Sunset, Artos’s(Arthur’s) sword is just a standard Roman cavalry blade; what makes it unique is the royal seal gem in it, given to him by his uncle, Ambrosius. But it is still too recognisable to allow it to fall into enemy hands. The dying Artos asks Bedwyr to throw it into the water so that the enemy won’t know he is dead. No Lady of the Lake. No hand in white samite. Just a good, logical reason for disposing of it.
In Peter David’s Knight Life, Arthur and his reborn knights return. Arthur is in New York, not the UK. He knows the British royal family won’t be letting him take over, so he stays where he is and runs for Mayor of New York, before standing for President. (Merlin has forged US records for him) First he goes to the lake in Central Park, where he retrieves Excalibur from the Lady, who is covered in wrappers and other bits of pollution. “Never again!” she declares.
The most unusual version of Excalibur I have read about was in Jack Whyte’s series beginning with The Skystone. It’s set in Roman, and post-Roman Britain. Two Roman army buddies start a colony called New Camulodunum, after the town where they come from. One of them is a skilled blacksmith and when they find a meteorite, the metal is used to forge a statue of the goddess Coventina, whom they call the Lady of the Lake. Later in the series, the statue is melted down and reforged into a very special blade...
Just one more reference, though. Has anyone reading this seen the SF show Babylon 5? There is an episode called “A Late Delivery From Avalon”. In it, a man in ring mail armour(played by the wonderful Michael York) turns up on the titular space station. He is carrying a sword. He says he is King Arthur and immediately proceeds to do good, rescuing the poor and vulnerable from criminals, with the help of the Narn Ambassador G’Kar, whom he dubs with his sword as the Brown Knight.
The thing is, he isn’t King Arthur. He is a man who did something for which he felt terribly guilty, and associated with the Arthurian legend; he believes he is Arthur. The only way he can be healed, the regular characters decide, is to finish the story, by returning his sword to the Lady of the Lake. So that part is played by the Minbari Ambassador, Delenn, who is appropriate for reasons you will need to see the show to understand.
That is the only time I saw that sword in a science fiction show, though the spaceship in the spinoff series Crusade was called the Excalibur, and there was a nice touch in the opening credits when you hear the sound of a sword being drawn.
Time to let you have your say! Tomorrow I will be talking about Ygerna, the mother of Arthur. See you then!
I get so annoyed every time someone says "Arthur pulled Excalibur from the stone." No, he didn't! Poor Lady of the Lake gets forgotten :D
ReplyDeleteThe Multicolored Diary
Exactly! Except for the hand in white samite.
ReplyDeleteI say that X for eXcalibur is a most eXcellent cheat! Well done.
ReplyDeleteI have seen "Babylon 5", but mostly just was watching it because my husband was, and it was a long time ago, and I don't remember that episode at all. Oh well.
Black and White (Words and Pictures)
It's probably a combination of the film Excalibur and the children's story The Sword in the Stone which finishes with Arthur having pulled the sword from the stone (I had this story when I was young).
ReplyDeleteAndI think Excalibur is the perfect 'x' =)
I wondered what you were going to do for "X" -- well played, madame, well played.
ReplyDeleteHi Stuart! I’ve heard of Camelot 3000, not read it. I may have to wait till libraries reopen to seek it out - unlikely to be in ebook?
ReplyDeleteThank you, Anne! I just mentioned the episode because of its connection with the theme. I enjoyed the series in general, for its characters and for the various themes. There was an entire Tolkien story arc in it which fascinated me. But I loved this episode.
Thanks, Debra! I usually manage it, sometimes without even cheating, eg last year the X post featured the novel Xenocide. A lot of people cheat in this, because there are just not enough X words around! 😁
ReplyDeleteThanks, Anita! And The Sword In The Stone was a delightful adaptation of the White novel, don’t you think? I had it on video and burned it to DVD when I threw out all my old videos. I still have it.
ReplyDeleteI read it a number of times as a kid, so I must have thought so!
ReplyDeleteI have a copy of the novel, apart from The Once And Future King, and I t’s different. He rewrote.
ReplyDeleteGlad you did not mistake the sword in the stone with Excalibur. I wrote about it too: https://vraiefiction.blogspot.com/2017/09/excalibur-and-find-three-mistakes.html
ReplyDeleteI really enjoyed Babylon 5, although I haven't watched most of the series. Crusade I think was truly half baked and had a weaker casting.
My favourite fictional sword :-)
ReplyDeleteAn A-Z of Faerie: Fates
Mine too, Ronel!
ReplyDeleteX for eXcalibur is not cheating - well, not as much as my 2015 X-mark (signature). After my sword, Durandal, this has to be 'the sword' for me - well, I'm a Nothung fan too...and give me a silver blade and I'll tackle monsters for a fee. Anyway, great post as usual with some fun links.
ReplyDeleteAnd yes, the SF show Babylon 5 - I watched avidly throughout. I remember the episode called “A Late Delivery From Avalon” with Tybalt as Arthur - neat nod to the legends.
Hi, Roland! Well, yes, Durandal IS indeed the Sword of Roland.
ReplyDeleteTybalt, eh? In his autobiography Zeffirelli said Michael York accepted the role graciously after assuming he was going to be Romeo, but Zeffirelli wanted teenagers in those title roles. You know who else played the role? A very young Alan Rickman. He was 22 when he was in the BBC Shakespeare version.
I also like to think of him as D’Artagnan.
Anyway, he was lovely in Babylon 5.