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When evening came, Llewelyn returned to his bedchamber,
eager to see his son and his old friend Gelert. But alas!
his heart leaped to his throat when he entered the room,
for it looked like the scene of a mighty battle. Draperies
were torn from the windows, and tapestries from the walls.
The crib was turned on its side, its bedding strewn across
the floor and splashed with crimson. The baby was nowhere
in sight and then Gelert came forward to meet his master;
his head, which he usually carried high and happy and proud,
hung slightly down, and his great jowls and neck and chest
were smeared and spattered with blood.
In a frenzy of rage and grief, believing Gelert had
betrayed their long friendship and killed the infant prince,
Llewelyn drew his sword from its scabbard and plunged it
into his dog’s heart. Gelert sank to the floor, sounding
one last mournful cry.
As the great hound’s howl died away, another took its
place. It was the howl of a baby startled from sleep, and
it came from under Prince Llewelyn’s wooden bed. The prince
ran to the bed and peered underneath. Then he pulled the
bed away from the wall and found his young son, safe and
whole and rosy-cheeked, lying on the blanket by which Gelert
had pulled him to safety. And a few feet from the babe he
found the body of a gray wolf, gaunt from the hunger that
drove it into the castle in search of a tender meal but
still fearsome even in death. Its throat had been torn,
and it was blood from that wound and his own that covered
brave Gelert.
His heart breaking, Llewelyn gently placed the baby
in the crib and knelt beside his faithful hound. He cradled
the great shaggy head in his arms, and promised Gelert that
in honor of the hound’s courage and loyalty, and as a sign
of his own remorse, he would forever forbid the slaying
of a dog in his realm without trial by jury. He would, he
whispered, build a monument to remind all who saw it that
hasty judgments lead to regret. Gelert forgave his friend
with a lick of the hand, and died.
History
or hoax?
As have many legends, the story of Prince Llewelyn’s
faithful hound Gelert has been the subject of considerable
debate. Did it really happen? Did it happen in Wales to
Prince Llewelyn and his hound? If not, then why has the
story been told as if true?
In
fact, the story as it is told here is just one version
of the legend of Gelert—the version I heard as a child from
my mother, who learned the legend from her mother, who believed
the story that she had learned in Scotland.
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