"King Mark sends me on a good many errands, but this wouldn't be a very likely one for him."
Dahut appears again in the Arthurian legend of King Mark.
Upon returning to Cornwall, he is involved in a move to have King Mark marry.
They eventually end up having a clandestine relationship, and are caught by King Mark.
I bet old King Mark left some treasure behind somewhere and that's why there's a map.
The lovers are then buried by King Mark, who finally discovers the cause of their love and pardons them.
The peasants cut it back three times, but always it grew again, until King Mark told them to leave it alone.
King Mark made his nephew give him a minute recital of his adventures.
King Mark was fascinated with the description, and, choosing a favorable time, demanded a boon* of his nephew, who readily granted it.
King Mark could not by the laws of knighthood withhold the boon.
"King Mark sends me on a good many errands, but this wouldn't be a very likely one for him."
Upon returning to Cornwall, he is involved in a move to have King Mark marry.
They eventually end up having a clandestine relationship, and are caught by King Mark.
I bet old King Mark left some treasure behind somewhere and that's why there's a map.
King Mark's Head: the same name on both maps.
The lovers are then buried by King Mark, who finally discovers the cause of their love and pardons them.
The peasants cut it back three times, but always it grew again, until King Mark told them to leave it alone.
King Mark made his nephew give him a minute recital of his adventures.
King Mark was fascinated with the description, and, choosing a favorable time, demanded a boon* of his nephew, who readily granted it.
King Mark could not by the laws of knighthood withhold the boon.