Romance

Erle of Tolous

Date of compositionSecond half of the fourteenth century
Place of compositionNorth east Midlands
Form

Twelve-line tail-rhyme stanzas: aa4b3cc4b3dd4b3ee4b3 

IMEV
1681
Keywords Accused Queen Bedchamber Disguise Dreams Marriage Merchants Military Combat Religious Figures Religious Spaces Sacrament Secular Spaces Tokens of Recognition Treachery

Diocletian, the emperor of Germany, unjustly takes lands from Sir Barnard, the earl of Toulouse. His wife, Beulybon, begs him to return them, but he refuses. There is a bloody battle and, despite a huge number of deaths on each side, the earl is victorious. The emperor again ignores his wife's pleas and vows vengeance. Meanwhile the earl discusses Beulybon's famed beauty with Sir Trylabas, one of his prisoners. He releases the knight, who agrees to arrange for him to see the Empress. The pair travels to Diocletian's city, where the earl disguises himself as a hermit. Trylabas informs Beulybon that he has the earl, and offers to kill him. She replies that he must not break his promise and tells him to bring the earl to her chapel the next morning. Here Beulybon, richly clothed, allows the earl, who is still dressed as a hermit, to gaze on her. As she leaves, he asks her for alms and she conceals her ring among the coins. Delighted, he returns home, resisting an attempted ambush by Trylabas.

Diocletian entrusts his wife to two knights. After swearing her to secrecy, they both proposition her, but are rejected and, fearing that she will tell her husband, plot her downfall. They persuade a young knight to hide in her chamber and they 'discover' and kill him. Beulybon is accused of adultery and imprisoned. Diocletian has a prophetic dream and returns home, where he is met by the traitors demanding that she be burned. A parliament is called, and an old knight suggests finding a champion to fight for Beulybon. News of this reaches the earl and he decides to accept the challenge, but first to determine that she is innocent. He accompanies a merchant to Germany and they lodge at an abbey. The abbot, who is Beulybon's uncle, professes her honesty: he is her confessor and she is guilty of nothing but giving the Earl her ring. Swearing him to secrecy, the earl reveals his identity. On the day of the execution, he dresses in a monk's habit and himself acts as Beulybon's confessor. Satisfied of her innocence, he defeats the two traitors, makes them admit their guilt, and has them burned on the empress's pyre. Diocletian searches for the monk, but the abbot will not fetch him until the emperor swears to be his friend no matter what. He agrees, and the earl is produced. Having embraced him, the emperor returns his lands and makes him his steward. When Diocletian dies, three years later, the earl is elected emperor. He marries Beulybon and they live together for twenty three years and have fifteen children.

Edition used for plot summary: Fellows, Of Love and Chivalry (1993).

Manuscripts

Manuscript Date Folio
Cambridge, University Library, MS Ff.2.38 Middle of the 15th century 63r-70v
Lincoln, Cathedral Library, MS 91 (Lincoln Thornton Manuscript) Middle of the 15th century 114v-122r
Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS Ashmole 45 15th-17th century 3r-31v
Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS Ashmole 61 End of the fifteenth to the beginning of the sixteenth century 27v-38v

Modern editions

J. Ritson, ed., Ancient English Metrical Romances, 3 vols (London, 1802).

Vol 3. Pp. 93-144. Uses Cambridge Ff.2.38.

Gustav Lüdtke, ed., The Erle of Tolous and the Emperes of Almayne. Sammlung englischer Denkmaler 3 (Berlin, 1881).

Edits texts from all MSS.

W. H. French and C. B. Hale, eds., The Middle English Metrical Romances, 2 vols (New York: Prentice-Hall, 1930).

Vol 1. Pp. 381-419. Uses Cambridge Ff.2.38.

Thomas C. Rumble, ed., Breton Lays in Middle English (Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1965).

Pp. 135-77. Uses Cambridge Ff.2.38.

Jennifer Fellows, ed., Of Love and Chivalry: An Anthology of Middle English Romance (London: J.M. Dent, 1993).

Pp. 231-65. Uses Cambridge Ff.2.38.

Anne Laskaya and Eve Salisbury, eds., The Middle English Breton Lays (Kalamazoo, MI: University of Western Michigan for TEAMS, 1995).

Pp. 309-365. Uses Cambridge Ff.2.38.

George Shuffelton, ed., Codex Ashmole 61: A Compilation of Popular Middle English Verse (Kalamazoo, MI: University of Western Michigan for TEAMS, 2008).

Pp. 83-111. Uses Ashmole 61.