Where Part II focuses attention on a Welsh-French-English cultural triangulation, Part III, “Insular Losses,” examines insular and regional collocations in some fifteenth-century texts. In Chapter 6, rivalry and brotherhood take center stage in two shorter romances from the north of the island: The Avowing of Arthur and Awntyrs off Arthure at the Terne Wathelyn. Both texts offer poignant evidence that chivalric rivalry disciplines knights. Knightly victimization and sacrifice remain crucial to the creation of Arthur’s brotherhood. In the context of the Wars of the Roses, moreover, these texts suggest regional critiques of Arthur that can be read as contestations over the geography of insular British union. Female aggression and brotherly heterosexuality function in these texts as means to cope with the losses and deaths required by militarism. My final chapter considers Malory’s massive tome, Le Morte Darthur. I join those who position this volume in the context of England’s territorial losses in France; yet, against the grain of Malory’s text, I read the poignant tale of Arthur’s loss as a fantasy that can provide hope for historical coherence while accommodating innovation and change, the very things Malory deplores as “newfangleness.” Le Morte Darthur thus implies the necessity of eschewing old loyalties for new ones; by the early modern period, Welsh and English, Yorkist and Lancastrian have all had to refashion their hearts and memories to a London-based Britain and for an Arthur whose court is at Winchester. The Afterword moves this study into the early modern period, suggesting very briefly the implications of this work would have for a reading of Edmund Spenser’s Faerie Queene.
In its analysis of legend and its attention to historico-literary fantasies, this study foregrounds the fantasmatic character of communitarian loyalties and loves. The nation is always an illusion, a fantasy of wholeness that threatens again and again to fragment from the inside out. Fantasies of national identity teach peoples to desire union; they help inculcate in a populace the apparent “truth” that unity, regulation, coordination, and wholeness are always better, more satisfying and more fascinating, than the alternatives. Yet in order to promote desires for national unity, the nation, its core identity, must appear to have always already been there, poised to fascinate its people, and ready to be desired.25 And this too, as we will shortly see, is one of the riches of Arthurian romance. Arthurian tales constitute powerful fantasies because they trace a heritage to the most ancient of British days. Through Arthur an increasingly literate public can learn to desire a unified future by delighting in the imagined glories of a unified past.
PART I
The Matter of Britain
CHAPTER ONE
Arthurian Imagination and the “Makyng” of History
I have not been able to discover anything at all on the kings who lived here before the Incarnation of Christ, or indeed about Arthur and all the other who followed on after the Incarnation. Yet the deeds of these men were such that they deserve to be praised for all time. What is more, these deeds were handed joyfully down in oral tradition, just as if they had been committed to writing, by many peoples who had only their memory to rely on.
—Geoffrey of Monmouth, Historia regum Britanniae1
This is the Arthur about whom the trifles of the Britons rave even now, one certainly not to be dreamed of in false myths, but proclaimed in truthful histories—indeed, who for a long time held up his tottering fatherland, and kindled the broken spirits of his countrymen to war.
—William of Malmesbury, Gesta regum Anglorum
KING Arthur has long been subject to controversy. Even in the twelfth century, as the quotes from William of Malmesbury and Geoffrey of Monmouth suggest, Arthur’s relationship to Britain’s past was a vexed one. Malmesbury, on one hand, deplores some stories about Arthur as “delirium”; Monmouth, on the other, seems troubled that such Arthurian traditions had not yet influenced the “official” histories of his time.2 In response Monmouth’s Historia regum Britanniae offers the fullest (and most influential) account of Arthurian sovereignty of his day, rendering stories of Arthur in the prestigious, and official, language of Latin. But twelfth-century history writers (followed by more than a few of their twentieth-century readers) would vehemently condemn Geoffrey’s work as an excessively extravagant fiction.
William of Malmesbury, Gerald of Wales, and William of Newburg all judge Geoffrey’s history to be flawed, and unflatteringly contrast his work with the Venerable Bede’s sacred history. Their criticisms emphasize the falseness of Geoffrey’s popular account, characterizing the distinction between Geoffrey’s and other narratives of early Britain in the opposition of fiction to truth. Geoffrey’s “false myths” are stacked against the “truthful histories” read in William’s work and Bede’s, an opposition which recurs even today. Malmesbury’s opposition of “false myths” to “truthful histories,” moreover, raises an issue important to readers of history and literature both in Monmouth’s time and in our own. The relation of historical narrative to imaginative literature has been the subject of rich and persistent analysis for at least a quarter of a century; Arthurian scholars and devotees continue to debate Arthur’s historicity, and their discussions frequently complicate the standard opposition of fact to fable. Malmesbury’s remarks suggest, however, that there may be other issues at stake in this opposition than a simple search for the truth.
William of Malmesbury alludes to the cultural power of Arthur’s image, invoking the historic king as support for a tottering fatherland and praising Arthur’s monumental greatness, a hero who can “kindl[e] the broken spirits of his countrymen to war” (quippe qui labantem patriam diu sustinuerit, infractasque civium mentes ad bellum acuerit). Truthful histories need figures like Arthur, Malmesbury implies, sovereign icons to inspire and captivate their countrymen. Yet a captivating Arthur, Malmesbury also suggests, has a dangerous relation specifically to the “trifles” of the raving Welsh (Britonum nugae hodieque delirant).3
Emphasizing Arthur’s popular appeal, Malmesbury insists that Arthur’s popularity can sponsor his nation’s endurance. Though deeply admired, Arthur’s popularity is also suspect: Arthur apparently inspires excessive ravings among the Welsh. Malmesbury’s condescension toward the “trifles” of the Welsh, the strength of his rhetoric in casting Welsh stories as delirium, intimates disquieting elements to Arthur’s power. Arthur’s apparently dangerous inspirations, Malmesbury anxiously implies, need to be constrained by historical