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BALIN AND BALAN


The story of Balin is recounted in the Old French Suite du Merlin and in Malory's Morte d'Arthur. Balin and Balan are the tragic brothers who, despite their nobility, wind up killing each other. Balin in particular seems cursed by fate. For example, when he offers protection to a knight, he is unable to foresee--or even see--the danger that kills that knight, the treacherous Garlon who rides invisible. When he attempts to avenge the death, he does so in the castle of King Garlon and winds up defending himself and wounding the lord of the castle, King Pellam, with the sacred spear that pierced the side of Christ. Though the action was performed blindly and in self-defense, the blow is the Dolorous Stroke, which lays the land waste and produces a wound that can only be healed when the Grail is achieved. Balin's misfortune lasts to his final act, combat with his brother, whom he doesn't recognize. In the battle, both are fatally wounded. Ironically, this battle was fated from the first appearance of Balin in Malory's version of the story, when he proves himself to be "a passynge good man" by removing a sword that a lady has been forced to wear and thus, because he wins a second sword becoming known as The Knight with Two Swords. After achieving this test of virtue, he decides to keep the sword even after being warned that if he does so he will slay the man he loves most in the world and bring about his own destruction. Unwilling to believe this prophecy, he keeps the sword and seals the doom of his brother and himself.

Tennyson makes Balin an important figure in developing some of the major themes in The Idylls of the King. His Balin is known as "the Savage" (Malory called him "Balin Le Savage") and figures in the struggle of Arthur to destroy the bestial both in the realm and in his subjects and thus to raise themselves to a higher level, the level of the angels. Published in 1885 in the volume Tiresias and Other Poems, the "Balin and Balan" idyll was the last to be written. Swinburne also retold the story of Balin in his The Tale of Balen, which follows Malory much more closely than Tennyson's version does. The story of Balin is modernized by John Steinbeck in The Acts of King Arthur. In one of the most interesting parts of the first novel in her Guinevere trilogy, Persia Woolley presents Balin and Balan as two sides of the same personality.

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Le Roman de Balain. Ed. M. Dominica Legge with an introduction by Eugène Vinaver. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1942. (An edition of the Balain section of the Suite du Merlin.)