which she was come thither, that was right ancient, and a smell came Mother. She looketh before her to the head of the grave-yard, and thereof so sweet and glorious that no sweetness of the world might equal it. The damsel cometh toward the altar thinking to take the seeth the chapel, small and ancient. She smiteth her mule with her cloth, but it goeth up into the air as if the wind had lifted it, and Lady, to whom she prayeth right sweetly that She will preserve her knights that were dead in the forest, wherof the bodies lay not in the black, and spears had they withal, and came one against another, and and found a great brightness of light. Within was an image of Our perilous place. She seeth above the altar the most holy cloth for the made such uproar and alarm as it seemed all the forest resounded was so high that she might not reach it above an ancient crucifix that draweth wide his nostrils and goeth in much fear. The damsel signeth XVI. the grave-yard. The damsel seeth them, and hath such affright thereof whereinto she was come. She seeth them surrounded of knights, all whip, and cometh thitherward and alighteth. She entered therewithin thereof. The most part held swords all red as of fire, and ran either blessed burial-ground. that she nigh fell to the ground in a swoon. The mule whereon she sate upon other, and gashed one another's hands and feet and nose and face. was there within. And great was the clashing they made, but they could not come a-nigh her of the cross and commendeth her to the Saviour and to His sweet The damsel beholdeth their sepulchres all round about the graveyard senses and her life and enable her to depart in safety from this