"Lords, which coffin is that of the Lord of Camelot?" well-nigh void of people, for he himself had slain the greater part was eldest of all the brethren." uncles. Right joyous were the hermits for that he was come thither, islands of Great Britain. He arriveth at the head of a forest under told them that Alain li Gros was his father and all the other his coffin lay over against the altar in each chapel. father and in the others where he might. He entered into the ship and mounteth on his destrier, all armed, and goeth amidst the land that was ship and came to land, and his mariner with him. He prayed the hermits he cometh straight into the hold, and seeth a knight lying in the that they would lead him to the graveyard where the knights lay, and gladly did they so. Perceval is come thither and seeth the coffins right rich and fair, and the chapels full fairly dight, and every right sweetly for the soul of his father, and in like manner he went to and the morrow, or ever he departed, he heard mass in the chapel of his "This, the highest," say the hermits, "and the most rich, for that he forest, and he bethought him that he would go into the hermitage, and all the other coffins. He harboured the night with the hermits, and the Red Tower whereof he had slain the lord, there where Meliot country, that he cometh toward evensong to a hold that was in a great thereof, albeit he knew it not. He rideth so long, right amidst the Perceval kneeleth down before it, then embraceth the coffin and prayeth delivered Messire Gawain. He is issued forth of the ship and leadeth entrance of the gate on a straw mattress, and a damsel sate at the forth his horse and is armed, and commendeth the pilot to God. He sped full swift, and so far hath the ship run that he draweth nigh the