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Page, Squire, and Knight
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PAGE, SQUIRE, AND KNIGHT
[1] IT must have been a sight well worth seeing when a
knight mounted his horse and galloped away from a
castle. Of course his armor was polished and shining,
and, as Lowell says of Sir Launfal, he "made morn
through the darksome gate." The children of the castle
especially must have watched him with the greatest
interest. The girls looked wistfully at the scarf or
glove on his helmet, each one hoping that he who would
some day wear her colors would be the bravest man that
ever drew a sword. As for the boys, they could hardly
wait for the day to come when they, too, could don
glittering armor and sally forth into the world in
quest of adventures.
LEAVING THE CASTLE
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Even the youngest of these children knew that a boy
must pass through long years of training before he
could become a knight. This began when he was a small
child, perhaps not more than seven years old. It was
not the custom for the son of a noble to be brought up
in the
[2] home of his father. He was sent for his education and
training to the castle of some lord of higher rank or
greater reputation, sometimes to the court of the king.
He was taught to look with the utmost respect upon the
man who trained him to be a knight, to reverence him as
a father, and to behave toward him with humility and
meekness. Even if the time ever came when they were
fighting on opposite sides, the foster son must never
harm the man whose castle had been his home. In those
days of warfare and bloodshed, the king himself might
well be glad to have as devoted supporters and friends
a band of young men who had been carefully trained in
the practice of arms. It is no wonder that kings and
nobles looked upon it as a privilege to receive these
boys into their castles. Indeed, when their fathers
were inclined to keep them at home, the king sometimes
demanded that they be sent to him.
The boys of the days of knighthood were not so very
different from those of to-day, and many of their
amusements were the same as now. They had various
games of ball, they played marbles, they see-sawed, and
walked on stilts, much as if they belonged to the
twentieth century. Of course they played at being
knights, just as boys to-day play at being merchants or
manufacturers. There is an
[3] old picture of some pages, as these boys were called,
playing that two toy knights mounted on wooden horses
are having a contest. The two horses are pushed toward
each other, and if either knight is struck by the spear
of the other and thrust out of his place he is
vanquished.
PLAYING AT TOURNAMENTS
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This was only play, and there were many things that a
page must learn and learn thoroughly before he was
fourteen or fifteen. How much of "book learning" was
given him is not known. Probably the custom differed in
different places. In most cases, it could not have
been a great amount, perhaps only a little reading, and
it seems to have been regarded as no disgrace to a
knight if he did not even know his letters. He must
learn to sing, however, and to
[4] play his accompaniments on the harp; and he must play
backgammon and chess, for these games were looked upon
as accomplishments which no gentleman could be without.
He was taught to say his prayers and to have respect
for the Church and religion. It was especially
impressed upon him that he must be "serviceable," that
is, he must wait upon the ladies and lords of the
castle. He must run on errands for them and he must do
their bidding in all things, for it was an honor to him
to be permitted to serve them. A page who was
disobedient would have been scorned and despised by the
other pages, for they all hoped to become knights, and
no true knight would refuse to obey the commands of his
lord or the gentler behests of his lady-love. Such a
one would have been looked upon as no knight, indeed,
but rather as a rude, boorish churl. The page, or valet
or damoiseau or babee, as he was also called, must
always be gentle and polite; for the knight was an
ideal gentleman, and the gentleman must never fail in
courtesy. There is a quaint little volume called "The
Babees' Book" which tells just how a boy who wished to
become a knight was expected to behave. When he entered
the room of his lord, he must greet all modestly with a
"God speed you," and he must kneel on one knee before
his lord. If his lord spoke to
[5] him, he must make an obeisance before answering. He
must not lean against a post or handle things, but
stand quietly, listen to what was said, and speak when
he was spoken to. When the meal was prepared, he must
bring water for hand-washing, presenting it first to
his lord, and must hold a towel ready for him to use, a
most desirable part of the preparation for a meal, as
it was the custom for two persons to use the same
trencher, or wooden plate, and forks were not in use.
When the time came for the page himself to eat, he must
not lean upon the table or soil the cloth or throw any
bones upon the floor. If he chanced to use the same
trencher with any one of higher rank than he, he must
take meat from the trencher first, but he must be
especially careful not to take the best piece.
Thus it was that the indoor life of the page passed.
Most of his indoor teaching was given him by the ladies
of the castle. It was they who taught him to choose a
lady-love for whose sake he was to be ever brave and
pure and modest. The story is told of one shy little
page at the court of France that when one of the court
ladies asked whom he loved best, he replied, "My lady
mother first, and after her my sister." "That is not
what I mean," said the lady. "Tell me who is your
lady-love in
chiv- [6] alry." The little fellow admitted that he had none. After a
severe lecture because he was so unchivalric, he chose
a little girl of his own age. "She is a pretty little
girl," replied the lady, "but she cannot advise you or
help you on as a knight. You must choose some lady of
noble birth who can give you counsel and aid. Then you
must do everything in your power to please her. You
must be courteous and humble and strive with all your
might to win her favor."
Out of doors, too, the page had much to learn. If his
lord went to the field of battle, the page went with
him to help him in every way that a boy could. He was
in no danger, for a knight who attacked a page would
have been shamed and disgraced. As for riding, of
course he had not been allowed to reach the age of
seven without knowing how to sit on a horse; but now
riding became a matter of business. It was not a mere
canter on a pony whenever he took a fancy; it was a
careful training, for he must practice leaping over
ditches and walls, he must be able to spring into the
saddle without touching the stirrup, and, in short, he
must learn to be as perfectly at home on the back of a
horse as on his own feet. Light weapons were provided
for him, and he must learn how to use sword and lance
and bow, and how to swim and
[7] box and fence. He must meet the other boys of the
castle in mock contests. These were carefully watched
by the elders, who were eager to see whether or not the
son of some valiant knight bade fair to maintain the
reputation of his father.
A KING RECEIVING A KNIGHT
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A most important part of the boy's instruction was
hunting, or the "mystery of the woods," and hawking, or
the "mystery of the rivers," so called because it was
often pursued on the open banks of streams. The page
who
[8] understood hawking had conquered a most complicated
branch of his education. He had to learn the different
kinds of falcons, how to train the birds to throw
themselves upon their prey, how to feed them, and what
calls to use with them. There was a rule for every act;
for instance, there was only one way in which a hawk
might be properly carried. The master's arm must be
held parallel with his body, but not touching it, and
the forearm must be held out at a right angle as a
perch for the bird. A man who would practice the
mystery of the rivers and did not carry his falcon in
the approved fashion would have been the laughing-stock
of his companions. Even pages had their own falcons,
and a taste for hunting and hawking was looked upon as
a mark of noble blood. When a page was sent to bear a
letter, he sometimes carried his falcon on his wrist
for company on the way. There were possible dangers on
every journey, but I fancy that the page was always
glad to be sent with a message, especially if it was a
pleasant one, for then he was sure of a warm welcome
and generous gifts from the happy recipient.
During the seven or eight years that he was a page, the
boy was always looking forward to the time when he
would become a squire, for this was the next step
[9] toward knighthood. Now that he had grown older and
stronger, more service was required of him, and his
exercises became more severe. Within the castle he
continued to serve at the table; but he was now
privileged to present the first or principal cup of
wine. He still brought water for the hand-washing, and
he carved the meat. He never sat at the same table with
his lord. Indeed, in many places a knight would not
permit his own son to eat with him until he, too, had
been made a knight. In Chaucer's description of a
squire, he makes it clear that the young man of twenty
years was a brave young fellow who had had considerable
experience in warfare, but
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Curteys he was, lowly and servisable,
And carf beforn his fader at the table.
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After the meal was over, squires and pages together
cleared the hall for dancing, or they brought tables
for checkers or for the heavy chessboards then in use.
Whatever amusement was on foot, the squire was
permitted to share. Indeed, throughout all the training
of a boy for knighthood, it was never forgotten that he
must be taught to make himself as agreeable within the
castle as he was expected to be courageous without its
walls. An important part of his education was practice
in composing love
[10] songs. He was expected of course to have his lady-love,
for whom he must be ready to endure all hardships and
meet all dangers.
He continued the exercises of his days as a page; but
he gave much more time to them. He learned to leap
farther, to run longer distances, to climb jagged
cliffs almost as perpendicular as the walls of the
cities which he hoped some day to be able to aid in
capturing. He learned to bear hunger and thirst and
heat and cold and to keep himself awake through long
nights of watching. His weapons were now made larger
and heavier. He was taught to wield the great
battle-axe, to endure the weight of armor, and to move
about in it easily. A battle in the Middle Ages was
more like a large number of duels than a contest
between bodies of troops, and an exceedingly good
preparation for this kind of warfare was an exercise
known as the quintain. For this a post was set in the
ground on top of which was a crosspiece that would
whirl around at a touch. From one end of the
crosspiece hung a board and from the other a sand-bag.
The squire must ride up to this at full tilt and strike
the board with his lance. But woe to him who was slow
or clumsy, for quick as a flash the crosspiece whirled
about, and he was struck a substantial blow by the
sand-bag.
[11] Often the figure of a knight was used, so hung that
unless the young squire was skillful enough to strike
it on the breast it struck him—and the wooden knight
never missed his stroke.
QUINTAIN
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Each squire in turn became "squire of the body," that
is, he was the closest attendant of his lord. When his
master went to the field of battle, the helmet was
often entrusted to a page, but to carry the shield and
armor was the task of the squire of the body. A much
more
[12] difficult part of his duty was to array the knight in
his armor with all its complicated fastenings. Every
knight had his pennon. If he had given long service
and had many followers, the point or points of his
pennon were cut off, leaving a square banner. He was
then called a banneret. Both banneret and baron were
privileged to act as commanders of little armies of
their own. They were under the king, but each one had
his own war-cry and called his men together under his
own standard. Whether the squire served banneret or
baron or knight, it was his honorable task to bear the
banner or pennon. He needed to have his wits about him,
for if the knight dropped his weapon, he must be ready
to pass him a fresh one. If the knight was unhorsed,
the squire must catch his horse if necessary, and help
him to mount; and if the horse itself was wounded
seriously, the squire must have another one ready or
must bring forward his own. If the knight took a
prisoner, he was passed over into the charge of the
squire, that the knight might be left free for further
contests. If the knight was getting the worst of the
fight or was attacked by several at once, the squire
must come to his aid; if he was taken prisoner, the
squire must rescue him if possible; if he was wounded,
must carry him to a place of safety; and if he was
killed, it
[13] was the sad duty of the squire to see that he received
an honorable burial.
KNIGHTS FIGHTING
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Every year brought the time nearer when the squire was
to be made a knight. The one thing necessary to bring
this about was for the king or some other knight to
give him the accolade, that is, a blow on his shoulder
or the back of his neck as he knelt to receive it. This
was usually followed by the words, "In the name of God, of
Saint Michael, and of Saint George, I dub thee knight.
Be brave, ready, and loyal." Sometimes all that was
said was, "Be a good knight." When a number of squires
were to be made knights, as often happened just before
or just after a battle, the ceremony was no more
com- [14] plicated than this. Sometimes on the very
battle-field, when a squire had done some praiseworthy
deed of bravery, he was knighted in this simple and
direct fashion.
When there was plenty of time, however, the process was
much longer. First, the hair of the candidate was cut.
To give up one's hair was looked upon as a mark of the
devotion of one's self to God. Generally the cutting
of a single lock was regarded as sufficient, but
sometimes the head was shaved in the fashion of the
tonsure
[15] of the priest. The candidate was put into a bath and
then into a bed. Every part of the ceremony had a
meaning, and these acts signified, first, purity, and
then the rest which he who had been pure would enjoy in
Paradise. He was now supposed to be cleansed from all
sins of his previous life, and to symbolize this he was
arrayed in a white shirt, or long tunic. Over it a red
garment with long sleeves and a hood was thrown to
indicate that he was ready to shed his blood in the
service of God, and finally a close black coat was put
upon him to remind him of the death which all must
meet. After twenty-four hours of fasting, he spent a
night in a church, keeping what was called the vigil
of arms, that is, kneeling by his armor, praying and
meditating. When the sun rose, he made his confession
to a priest, heard mass, and partook of the Holy
Sacrament.
CONFERRING KNIGHTHOOD ON THE BATTLE-FIELD
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This was his final preparation. Later in the day he and
his friends went to the church or the castle hall. The
young man gave his sword to the priest, and the priest
laid it upon the altar, praying that God would bless it
and that it might defend the Church and protect widows
and orphans. The candidate took a solemn oath that it
should be used for these purposes. The priest then
returned the sword to him and made a little address on
the
[16] duties that lay before him in his new life and reminded
him of the happiness that awaited him who performed
these duties with faithfulness and zeal.
Now came the moment for which every one was waiting.
The young man went forward to the lord who was to make
him a knight and knelt before him with clasped hands.
The lord questioned him somewhat in this wise: "Why do
you wish to be made a knight? Is it with the hope of
gaining treasure? Is it that men may show you honor?"
On the young man's declaring that he had no such
wishes, both knights and ladies united in arming him.
The golden spurs came first, then the other pieces of
armor, and last of all the sword. The lord then gave
him the accolade, sometimes a light touch with the
sword on the shoulder or the nape of the neck, and
sometimes a hearty blow with the hand or even the
clenched fist. This was followed by the charge, to be
brave, ready, and loyal. The older knights drew their
swords and repeated the vows which they had taken on
entering chivalry, and the priest pronounced the
blessing of the Church upon one and all. So it was that
in the ceremony of making a knight, the Church, the
soldier, and the woman had each a share. The assembly
then passed out into the open air. The horse of the
newly made knight stood
[17] waiting. He sprang upon its back—and unless he wished
to disgrace his new honors, he must not touch the
stirrup—and rode about the court, prancing and
caracoling, brandishing his glittering sword, and
showing how well he knew the use of his lance. The
servants and minstrels of the castle had waited
patiently, and now they had their share in the
rejoicings, for to prove his gratitude for receiving
the noble gift of knighthood the young knight made as
generous a gift to each one as his purse would permit.
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