When Chrétien de Troyes died in 1190 he left his final Arthurian story unfinished. Perceval ended up being his most perplexing and impactful work. Not only did it inspire many adaptations and independent efforts to tell the story, but his unfinished story was picked up and finished by four different poets over the next 40 years. The first continuer is unknown, but the others are thought to be Wauchier de Denian, Gerbert de Montreuil, and Manessier. The latter seems to have written his continuation at the same time as Gerbert, both picking up at the end of the second, unaware of the other’s work. Most surviving manuscripts of Perceval include at least three of the continuations. Altogether, these form one of the most sweeping and epic sagas of medieval literature.
In addition to the four continuations, there are two prologues added to many manuscripts, one known as the Eludication Prologue, which attempts to prepare the audience for the vast epic they are about to hear. It explains how the Waste Land in which Perceval grows up became so dreadful — the raping of the maidens of the wells by numerous lords of the lands, bringing about the tribulations that make the land so unpleasant. The other prologue is a brief prequel to the story of Perceval, called Bliocadran, after Perceval’s father. This short but valuable prelude explains his father’s and uncles’ deaths, and his mother’s resultant fear of her son growing up to be a knight. Unlike in Perlesvaus, in which his father and uncles are killed in war, here they are killed in tournaments.
The continuations are not each intended as a distinct and stand-alone ending to the grail quest. They build off one another, and more than resolve the quest, they seem intended to serve as a long running series of new adventures and explorations, new chances for magnificent deeds and feats of valor and heroism and illustrations of high character, of spiritual athleticism. There is no eagerness to get to the end, to resolve the mysteries. Rather, multiple threads are begun and these lead to many new adventures unrelated to the grail.
The first continuation picks up immediately at end of Chrétien’s unfinished work, with Gawain’s impending battle with Guiromelant. Arthur and his companions come to witness the battle at the castle where his mother and Gawain’s sister and mother reside. Their battle goes on for a couple days, through Gawain’s ebbing strength as the sun moves across the sky. His sister, now aware of his identity, and also being the object of his opponent’s love, is ashamed that her brother and lover are fighting. She attempts to intervene and finally they call a truce, with the agreement that if Guiromelant rescinds his accusation against Gawain, Gawain will give him his sister’s hand in marriage. This does not happen, and Arthur gives Guiromelant Gawain’s sister, much to Gawain’s anger. He sets off away from all to fulfill his quests, swearing never to return to Arthur’s court.
Instead of returning to Perceval, this continuation strangely introduces many additional threads, seemingly uninterested in resolving Perceval’s saga or even acknowledging that it exists and was the focus of the whole grail story. This continuation spreads out across many years, at least enough years for characters who didn’t exist in Chrétien’s story to be conceived and to grow up as knights. I don’t know what the author’s goal was, but I suspect he wanted to tell his own Arthurian epics with all of his own ideas and stories, building off of Chrétien’s work with little concern for properly finishing it. It’s an amazing piece of work.
There is an episode like Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, but not quite in its final form. Gawain is not the main hero, and the knight is an enchanter name Eliavret who conceived a child through deception, thought to be the son of Caradoc. Carados, his son, is the protagonist of this tale, and decapitates the mysterious knight, who returns a year later ostensibly to return the blow, but instead tells the boy the truth of his conception, which he confronts his parents with. His mother is imprisoned in a tower by her husband, Caradoc, who believes Carados was his son.
Carados, as a knight, becomes the focus of the narrative for a while. Perceval’s only appearance at all in the first continuation is at a tournament, though our attention is directed to many other knights besides himself. His achievement here is that he unhorses Cliges, another legendary Arthurian knight never mentioned anywhere besides in Chrétien’s story of him. Carados becomes the main focus of the story for a long time. Eliavret and Carados’s mother bring about horrors for their son after he avenges their infideity by forcing Eliavret to have sex with animals.
They get an enchanted wyvern to latch onto his arm, seep him of life and fill him with poison, slowly bringing him toward death for years. This episode brings Arthur and Guinire, Carados’s love, and others to search for Carados while he is on the run, ashamed of his plight and wanting to die alone. The final resolution sees his plight lifted by Guinire sitting in a tub of milk with her breast upon the rim, and Carados submerged in a tub of vinegar — this is the only thing that gets the serpent off his arm, as it lunges for the breast. It is decapitated and hacked to pieces by Cador, Guinire’s brother. Carados later becomes king of Caradoc’s lands and frees his mother from the tower she’s been imprisoned in for years, apologizing for the grief he causes his parents.
Gawain earlier in the story had left Arthur’s siege of a castle to find his own adventures, and met a maiden with a stitched portrait of him. She loved him, they made love. Her brother came home to find Gawain and attacked him, then her father too, and both were killed. Then her second brother came home and fought Gawain, until they called off the fight and agreed to pick it up later if and when this knight, Bran de Lis, came across Gawain. Later, Gawain is with Arthur as they’re on a quest to free Girflet from the Proud Castle and they come across Bran de Lis. Gawain tells them the story of how they met, but he portrays himself as a villain in the tale, as though he was a rapist when in fact the girl desperately wanted him. Interesting detail, as this aligns with what we know of Arthurian knights and their modesty.
This continuation eventually returns to the grail with Gawain, and focuses on a third mysterious item: the broken sword. He who can mend the sword can learn the secrets of the grail. Gawain asks the right questions but cannot mend the sword. The Grail story is only sort of resolved, with Gawain and not Perceval. He’s not worthy of knowing all the secrets, but this telling seems to follow Robert de Boron’s Joseph of Arimathea lore. He is able at least to learn their origins but not the importance of the sword. Translator Nigel Bryant offers an insightful hypothesis: the grail mysteries are no longer important, the grail now serves as a catalyst for further adventures. A sort of frame story.
Gawain has many other spellbinding adventures and rough encounters. He travels through remote and beautiful lands whose wonders are rendered exceptionally well in writing, for example the relentless storming night of one particular evening, or the calming serenity of a forest filled with birdsongs and sunlight. The imposing and incredible character of castles and fortresses are always presented with a sense of awe, as are the daunting obstacles and tribulations knights come across on their adventures.
Gawain battles his son after he has been kidnapped and is missing for years. It is another appearance of the father unknowingly battling his son trope, popular in medieval legends. The author takes some bizarre detours and some of it makes no sense from the point of view of the original story. But it’s magnificent anyway, an amazing sprawling epic saga that brings Gawain to the forefront and makes him the hero we’ve always known he was.
Other figures, some I’ve never before encountered in Arthurian lore, have their moments of fame and heroism. Gawain’s brother, while off looking for Gawain and not knowing he has returned to Arthur’s court, has his own remarkable adventure, wrapping into a mysterious happening at one of Arthur’s castles one night, while Arthur can’t sleep. He goes down to rest beside the ocean and a ship drifts into shore, pulled by a swan. On the ship is a dead knight with a lance pierced through his chest, and a note that instructs Arthur to lay his body out for all to see, until someone pulls the lance out and uses it to avenge the knight by piercing his killer in the same place. The resolution of this final quest, like so many others that have appeared, is entirely unrelated to the grail saga. But it doesn’t matter.
The Second continuation is evidently supposed to pick up in sequence, as a follow up to the first continuation. There are a few details that eventually make this apparent, and Nigel Bryant’s notes suggest this is the case. But there are some huge inconsistencies and impossibilities in it if this is the expectation. This continuation picks up Perceval’s story, just after leaving his hermit uncle’s place, from Chrétien’s story. It’s made clear that the events at the beginning of Perceval, his killing of the red knight, and his leaving of home, were only ten years ago. This means the space of time between the end of Chrétien’s story and this one is even fewer years.
It’s impossible over that even shorter period of time for Gawain to have fathered a son —Ginglain, the Fair Unknown, and that son to have been kidnapped and have grown old enough to do battle with Gawain, as happens in part of the first continuation. There are a lot of chronology errors one begins to notice, as it is impossible for all the events of the first continuation, clearly transpiring over a span closer to multiple decades, to have occurred in just a few short years, but that’s part of Arthurian tradition. Hell, Carados Shortarm’s adventure with the snake that his parents set upon him took a few years alone. One has to suspend their disbelief just enough to look past what to a modern reader appears careless, but in the age they were written is merely unimportant. There are far more interesting things afoot.
Here Perceval is seeking out the Fisher king and the grail to learn their mysteries, but he is easily distracted and pulled into new adventures. He fights the Lord of the Horn, discovers the castle of the magical chessboard that plays on its own, encounters a mysterious knight of the tomb who briefly tricks and imprisons Perceval but then releases him. He is lended a hunting dog in order to hunt a majestic stag so he can bring the stag’s head back to a maiden — but both the head and dog are stolen and Perceval gets pulled into long quests to regain them. He battles a giant, a lion, reunites with his love Blancheflor, defeats the Fair Bad Knight, returns to his sister, finds the castle of maidens, and seeks the mysteries of Mount Dolorous.
Gawain, too, receives due attention, as he and the other knights of the round table set off to find Perceval, missing now for years. Tournaments and wars and encounters with strange knights and later his son see Gawain performing the deeds for which he is best known, high heroism and chivalry.
There is no final resolution of the grail mysteries here, and the sword has only deepened the questions. Perceval mends it, but imperfectly — leading to new stories to be told.
Gerbert’s continuation picks up immediately at the end of the second. This continuation did not appear in most manuscripts of the complete grail story, and survives only in two. It was written at the same time as the third continuation, and so they both pick up in mid sentence, and tell of quite different events.
Perceval is unworthy of the grail and must seek improvement. He goes to discover his mother’s fate, then must have his sword repaired by the legendary smith Trebuchet, who is fated to die upon completion of this final task. Upon finally returning to Arthur after years of absence, Perceval, as he did in Robert de Boron’s version, sits in the perilous seat, although this seat is not at the round table. Six others have sat in it, hoping to be deemed the greatest knights the world will ever see, as the seat will reveal. Instead the earth swallows each and they are gone — until Perceval sits upon the seat and the earth opens to release them from their subterranean imprisonment. It is then recognized that Percival is, or will become, the greatest of all knights.
On the subject of great knights, Tristran makes an appearance here, coming disguised to Arthur’s court, challenging his knights, and defeating four before clashing with Gawain, at which point Arthur learns who it is and he breaks up the fight.
Perceval defeats the Knight of the Dragon, as in Perlesvaus, in which a knight has been possessed by the power of the devil, and his shield is a demon, or a dragon, that scorches everything and everyone in fire, making him unbeatable. Perceval has just won a magic shield from a maiden, made of wood from the cross of Jesus’s crucifixion, and with this, after grueling combat, is able to vanquish his foe.
There’s a sequence in which Perceval must pay for his killing of the Red Knight, when he ends up in the castle of his sons and is the only knight able to open the ivory chest that contains the red knight’s body. A scroll with his body claims that he who is finally able to open the chest is the murderer of the knight within. The sons will each battle Perceval, and the oldest son of the red knight goes first, dealing wounds Perceval has never experienced before. It’s the most punishing battle he’s ever encountered.
Gawain undergoes a similar episode immediately after being freed from the castle in the above sequence, in which we learn he was taken captive after being unable to open the ivory chest. He comes across a castle peopled by the relatives of a knight he slayed some time ago. He engages in combat with many men of a family, cuts off hands and arms and scalps and heads, deflowers a maiden who he falls in love with, and fights her father after being promised a most dishonorable execution.
Gerbert, unlike the other continuers, employs Chrétien’s financial metaphors in writing some of his battle scenes, as well as a few other nods and allusions, throwing back to the author who began this wildly growing epic. His treatment of this material seems colored by the crusades, already a prominent inspiration to the authors, but now characterizing Perceval in the garb of crusader, much like other stories of Perceval before. Since this continuation was written after Perlesvaus, or Parzival, or the Quest of the Holy Grail, or De Boron’s works, influences from each of these can be detected.
The third continuation picks up directly at the end of the second. Gerbert’s was later amended by scribes with an ending paragraph identical to that of the second continuation, so that the third continuation could be seen as a continuation of Gerbert’s or the second continuation, depending on which were included in a manuscript. In the two manuscripts which include Gerbert’s continuation, slight alterations were made to maintain consistency with Gerbert, like adjusting references to past events that occurred only in Gerbert’s work, attempting to make his work canonical with the rest.
An example is the smith Trebuchet, the creator of the sword Perceval must mend. In Gerbert, Perceval meets him, has the sword repaired, and Trebuchet dies, having fulfilled his one last purpose. In the third continuation, written without the knowledge of Gerbert’s, Trebuchet is met for the same purpose, under different circumstances. In one manuscript only, a scribe amended the text to make this Trebuchet the son of the elder Trebuchet who died in Gerbert’s continuation, and spoke of multiple swords in an attempt to meld the two stories into a coherent whole, in which the father Trebuchet has mended a sword and died, and the son has mended a different sword.
Manessier was commissioned by Countess Jeanne of Flanders to finish the story, but by this point the secrets of the grail had become known to the audience through the work of Robert de Boron, whose canon was adopted by all the continuers. So, like those who came before, he focuses on things other than the grail.
This continuation introduces an independent episode of Sagremor, a knight often referred to in Arthurian romance but never given direct attention. He stays at the Castle of Maidens and rescues them from a siege by a lord who would take one of the maidens captive. Although it’s not an entirely original episode it does show Sagremor as a distinctly unique knight of the Round Table who’s quite different than Perceval or Gawain, with a love and adoration for his horse that we don’t often see, and a compassionate side that seems to dwarf the compassion with which either other knight is often attributed.
In this continuation are episodes that have appeared elsewhere, like that of the Coward Knight, who becomes the Fair Brave Knight after being thrown into combat unwillingly and prevailing over his enemies, although the details here are quite different; or that of Boort (Bors) rescuing a maiden on the verge of being raped instead of rescuing his brother Lionel, taken captive by knights, stripped, and beaten bloody. The two brothers later do battle, as a result of Lionel’s anger toward his brother for the perceived neglect. There is no shortage of bloodshed and violence and severed limbs and decapitations in this continuation, and Satan or his demons make multiple appearances, almost bringing our heroes to their demise on multiple remarkable occasions.
The major goal of the final continuation is no longer to learn the mysteries of the grail, for these are not what will heal the Fisher King. Now, Perceval must avenge the Fisher King against Partinal, a lord responsible for the king’s state. Revenge is a recurring theme throughout the final continuation, not just with Perceval seeking it for the Fisher King, but Gawain, Sagremor, and even minor characters enacting their own forms of vengeance throughout, to right the devastating wrongs that have been inflicted upon them and upon others. But alongside these episodes of revenge are reflections on a milder, wiser path, the healing powers of the grail, the importance of mercy and tempered justice.