THE
DEFENCE OF GUENEVERE
AND OTHER POEMS
BY
WILLIAM MORRIS
Reprinted from the Kelmscott Press Edition
as revised by the Author
LONGMANS, GREEN, AND CO.
39 PATERNOSTER ROW, LONDON
NEW YORK, BOMBAY, AND CALCUTTA
1908
All rights reserved
Reprinted, 1875, for Ellis & White, and
Subsequently for Reeves & Turner
Kelmscott Press Edition (revised by the Author), 1892
Transferred to Longmans, Green, & Co., 1896
New Edition corrected by Kelmscott Press Edition, May 1900
Reprinted January 1908
CONTENTS
| PAGE | |
| The Defence of Guenevere | 1 |
| King Arthur's Tomb | 19 |
| Sir Galahad, a Christmas Mystery | 43 |
| The Chapel in Lyoness | 57 |
| Sir Peter Harpdon's End | 65 |
| Rapunzel | 111 |
| Concerning Geffray Teste Noire | 135 |
| A Good Knight in Prison | 148 |
| Old Love | 155 |
| The Gilliflower of Gold | 159 |
| Shameful Death | 163 |
| The Eve of Crecy | 166 |
| The Judgment of God | 169 |
| The Little Tower | 174 |
| The Sailing of the Sword | 178 |
| Spell-Bound | 182 |
| The Wind | 187 |
| The Blue Closet | 194 |
| The Tune of Seven Towers | 199 |
| Golden Wings | 202 |
| The Haystack in the Floods | 215 |
| Two Red Roses across the Moon | 223 |
| Welland River | 226 |
| Riding Together | 231 |
| Father John's War-Song | 234 |
| Sir Giles' War-Song | 237 |
| Near Avalon | 239 |
| Praise of My Lady | 241 |
| Summer Dawn | 246 |
| In Prison | 247 |
THE DEFENCE OF GUENEVERE
She threw her wet hair backward from her brow,
Her hand close to her mouth touching her cheek,
And feeling it shameful to feel ought but shame
All through her heart, yet felt her cheek burned so,
She walked away from Gauwaine, with her head
Still lifted up; and on her cheek of flame
[Pg 2]
O knights and lords, it seems but little skill
To talk of well-known things past now and dead.
And pray you all forgiveness heartily!
Because you must be right, such great lords; still
And you were quite alone and very weak;
Yea, laid a dying while very mightily
Of river through your broad lands running well:
Suppose a hush should come, then some one speak:
Now choose one cloth for ever; which they be,
I will not tell you, you must somehow tell
Yea, yea, my lord, and you to ope your eyes,
At foot of your familiar bed to see
[Pg 3]
Not known on earth, on his great wings, and hands,
Held out two ways, light from the inner skies
Seem to be God's commands, moreover, too,
Holding within his hands the cloths on wands;
Wavy and long, and one cut short and red;
No man could tell the better of the two.
'God help! heaven's colour, the blue;' and he said, 'hell.'
Perhaps you then would roll upon your bed,
'Ah Christ! if only I had known, known, known;'
Launcelot went away, then I could tell,
And roll and hurt myself, and long to die,
And yet fear much to die for what was sown.
[Pg 4]
Whatever may have happened through these years,
God knows I speak truth, saying that you lie.
But as it cleared, it grew full loud and shrill,
Growing a windy shriek in all men's ears,
She said that Gauwaine lied, then her voice sunk,
And her great eyes began again to fill,
But spoke on bravely, glorious lady fair!
Whatever tears her full lips may have drunk,
Spoke out at last with no more trace of shame,
With passionate twisting of her body there:
To dwell at Arthur's court: at Christmas-time
This happened; when the heralds sung his name,
[Pg 5]
Along with all the bells that rang that day,
O'er the white roofs, with little change of rhyme.
And over me the April sunshine came,
Made very awful with black hail-clouds, yea
And bowed my head down: Autumn, and the sick
Sure knowledge things would never be the same,
Of blossoms and buds, smote on me, and I grew
Careless of most things, let the clock tick, tick,
My eager body; while I laughed out loud,
And let my lips curl up at false or true,
Behold my judges, then the cloths were brought;
While I was dizzied thus, old thoughts would crowd,
[Pg 6]
By Arthur's great name and his little love;
Must I give up for ever then, I thought,
Glorifying all things; for a little word,
Scarce ever meant at all, must I now prove
Will that all folks should be quite happy and good?
I love God now a little, if this cord
Make me love anything in earth or heaven?
So day by day it grew, as if one should
Down to a cool sea on a summer day;
Yet still in slipping there was some small leaven
Until one surely reached the sea at last,
And felt strange new joy as the worn head lay
[Pg 7]
Sweat of the forehead, dryness of the lips,
Washed utterly out by the dear waves o'ercast,
Do I not know now of a day in Spring?
No minute of that wild day ever slips
And wheresoever I may be, straightway
Thoughts of it all come up with most fresh sting:
And went without my ladies all alone,
In a quiet garden walled round every way;
That shut the flowers and trees up with the sky,
And trebled all the beauty: to the bone,
With weary thoughts, it pierced, and made me glad;
Exceedingly glad, and I knew verily,
[Pg 8]
I dared not think, as I was wont to do,
Sometimes, upon my beauty; If I had
And, looking on the tenderly darken'd fingers,
Thought that by rights one ought to see quite through,
Round by the edges; what should I have done,
If this had joined with yellow spotted singers,
But shouting, loosed out, see now! all my hair,
And trancedly stood watching the west wind run
I lose my head e'en now in doing this;
But shortly listen: In that garden fair
Wherewith we kissed in meeting that spring day,
I scarce dare talk of the remember'd bliss,
[Pg 9]
And aching sorely, met among the leaves;
Our hands being left behind strained far away.
Had Launcelot come before: and now, so nigh!
After that day why is it Guenevere grieves?
Whatever happened on through all those years,
God knows I speak truth, saying that you lie.
If this were true? A great queen such as I
Having sinn'd this way, straight her conscience sears;
Slaying and poisoning, certes never weeps:
Gauwaine be friends now, speak me lovingly.
All through your frame, and trembles in your mouth?
Remember in what grave your mother sleeps,
[Pg 10]
Men are forgetting as I speak to you;
By her head sever'd in that awful drouth
I pray your pity! let me not scream out
For ever after, when the shrill winds blow
For ever after in the winter night
When you ride out alone! in battle-rout
Ah! God of mercy, how he turns away!
So, ever must I dress me to the fight,
See me hew down your proofs: yea all men know
Even as you said how Mellyagraunce one day,
All good knights held it after, saw:
Yea, sirs, by cursed unknightly outrage; though
[Pg 11]
This Mellyagraunce saw blood upon my bed:
Whose blood then pray you? is there any law
Lie on her coverlet? or will you say:
Your hands are white, lady, as when you wed,
I blush indeed, fair lord, only to rend
My sleeve up to my shoulder, where there lay
The honour of the Lady Guenevere?
Not so, fair lords, even if the world should end
Instead of God. Did you see Mellyagraunce
When Launcelot stood by him? what white fear
His side sink in? as my knight cried and said:
Slayer of unarm'd men, here is a chance!
[Pg 12]
By God I am so glad to fight with you,
Stripper of ladies, that my hand feels lead
For all my wounds are moving in my breast,
And I am getting mad with waiting so.
Who fell down flat, and grovell'd at his feet,
And groan'd at being slain so young: At least,
At catching ladies, half-arm'd will I fight,
My left side all uncovered! then I weet,
Upon his knave's face; not until just then
Did I quite hate him, as I saw my knight
With such a joyous smile, it made me sigh
From agony beneath my waist-chain, when
[Pg 13]
Ever Sir Launcelot kept him on the right,
And traversed warily, and ever high
Sudden threw up his sword to his left hand,
Caught it, and swung it; that was all the fight,
For it was hottest summer; and I know
I wonder'd how the fire, while I should stand,
Yards above my head; thus these matters went;
Which things were only warnings of the woe
For Mellyagraunce had fought against the Lord;
Therefore, my lords, take heed lest you be blent
Against me, being so beautiful; my eyes,
Wept all away to grey, may bring some sword
[Pg 14]
Like waves of purple sea, as here I stand;
And how my arms are moved in wonderful wise,
See through my long throat how the words go up
In ripples to my mouth; how in my hand
Of marvellously colour'd gold; yea now
This little wind is rising, look you up,
Within my moving tresses: will you dare,
When you have looked a little on my brow,
For any plausible lies of cunning woof,
When you can see my face with no lie there
But in your chamber Launcelot was found:
Is there a good knight then would stand aloof,
[Pg 15]
O true as steel come now and talk with me,
I love to see your step upon the ground
That gracious smile light up your face, and hear
Your wonderful words, that all mean verily
To me in everything, come here to-night,
Or else the hours will pass most dull and drear;
Get thinking over much of times gone by,
When I was young, and green hope was in sight:
And no man comes to sing me pleasant songs,
Nor any brings me the sweet flowers that lie
To see you, Launcelot; that we may be
Like children once again, free from all wrongs
[Pg 16]
What thing could keep true Launcelot away
If I said, Come? there was one less than three
Till sudden I rose up, weak, pale, and sick,
Because a bawling broke our dream up, yea
For he looked helpless too, for a little while;
Then I remember how I tried to shriek,
The stones they threw up rattled o'er my head
And made me dizzier; till within a while
On Launcelot's breast was being soothed away
From its white chattering, until Launcelot said:
Judge any way you will: what matters it?
You know quite well the story of that fray,
[Pg 17]
That caught up Gauwaine: all, all, verily,
But just that which would save me; these things flit.
Whatever may have happen'd these long years,
God knows I speak truth, saying that you lie!
She would not speak another word, but stood
Turn'd sideways; listening, like a man who hears
Of his foes' lances. She lean'd eagerly,
And gave a slight spring sometimes, as she could
Her cheek grew crimson, as the headlong speed
Of the roan charger drew all men to see,
The knight who came was Launcelot at good need.
KING ARTHUR'S TOMB
KING ARTHUR'S TOMB
Since sunrise through the Wiltshire downs, most sad
Of mouth and eye, he had gone leagues of way;
Ay and by night, till whether good or bad
That he was Launcelot, the bravest knight
Of all who since the world was, have borne lance,
Or swung their swords in wrong cause or in right.
The Glastonbury gilded towers shine,
A lady dwelt, whose name was Guenevere;
This he knew also; that some fingers twine,
[Pg 22]
(Making him good or bad I mean,) but in his life,
Skies, earth, men's looks and deeds, all that has part,
Not being ourselves, in that half-sleep, half-strife,
Was Launcelot most glad when the moon rose,
Because it brought new memories of her. "Lo,
Between the trees a large moon, the wind lows
Wishing for strength to make the herdsman hear:
The ripe corn gathereth dew; yea, long ago,
In the old garden life, my Guenevere
Had quite come on, hair loosen'd, for she said,
Smiling like heaven, that its fairness might
Draw up the wind sooner to cool her head.
As it did then: I tell myself a tale
[Pg 23] That will not last beyond the whitewashed wall,
Thoughts of some joust must help me through the vale,
A good course that day under my Queen's eyes,
And how she sway'd laughing at Dinadan.
No. Back again, the other thoughts will rise,
Verily then I think, that Guenevere,
Made sad by dew and wind, and tree-barred moon,
Did love me more than ever, was more dear
And kiss her feet, or, if I sat behind,
Would drop her hand and arm most tenderly,
And touch my mouth. And she would let me wind
Upon my red robe, strange in the twilight
With many unnamed colours, till the bell
Of her mouth on my cheek sent a delight
[Pg 24]
Wherewith God threw all men upon the face
When he took Enoch, and when Enoch woke
With a changed body in the happy place.
She turn'd a little, and laid back her head,
And slept upon my breast; I almost died
In those night-watches with my love and dread.
And I breathed low, and did not dare to move,
But sat and quiver'd inwardly, thoughts crept,
And frighten'd me with pulses of my Love.
Of her bodice, in the green sky overhead;
Pale in the green sky were the stars I ween,
Because the moon shone like a star she shed
And ruled all things but God: the night went on,
The wind grew cold, and the white moon grew low,
One hand had fallen down, and now lay on
[Pg 25]
For near an hour, and I fell asleep
In spite of all my striving, even when
I held her whose name-letters make me leap.
I did some loved one wrong, so that the sun
Had only just arisen from the deep
Still land of colours, when before me one
She seemed to have changed so in the night;
Moreover she held scarlet lilies, such
As Maiden Margaret bears upon the light
Through the fresh wet woods, and the wheat that morn,
Touching her hair and hand and mouth, and talk
Of love we held, nigh hid among the corn.
We went, and in a cool green room all day
[Pg 26] I gazed upon the arras giddily,
Where the wind set the silken kings a-sway.
For which may God forgive me! but I think,
Howsoever, that she was not in that place.
These memories Launcelot was quick to drink;
There rose yet others, but they wearied more,
And tasted not so sweet; they did not fall
So soon, but vaguely wrenched his strained heart sore
A longing followed; if he might but touch
That Guenevere at once! Still night, the lone
Grey horse's head before him vex'd him much,
Still night, and night, and night, and emptied heart
Of any stories; what a dismal load
Time grew at last, yea, when the night did part,
[Pg 27]
The horse's grey ears turn'd this way and that,
And still he watch'd them twitching in the glare
Of the morning sun, behind them still he sat,
Until about the dustiest of the day,
On the last down's brow he drew his rein in sight
Of the Glastonbury roofs that choke the way.
When she slept by him, tired out, and her hair
Was mingled with the rushes on the floor,
And he, being tired too, was scarce aware
A shiver ran throughout him, and his breath
Came slower, he seem'd suddenly amazed,
As though he had not heard of Arthur's death.
He rode on giddy still, until he reach'd
A place of apple-trees, by the thorn-tree
Wherefrom St. Joseph in the days past preached.
[Pg 28]
Not knowing it was Arthur's, at which sight
One of her maidens told her, 'He is come,'
And she went forth to meet him; yet a blight
With a long white veil only; she went slow,
As one walks to be slain, her eyes did lack
Half her old glory, yea, alas! the glow
As she lay last night on her purple bed,
Wishing for morning, grudging every pause
Of the palace clocks, until that Launcelot's head
Each side: when suddenly the thing grew drear,
In morning twilight, when the grey downs bare
Grew into lumps of sin to Guenevere.
Only her mouth was open, and her eyes
Gazed wretchedly about from hill to hill;
As though she asked, not with so much surprise
[Pg 29]
So cold and grey. After, a spasm took
Her face, and all her frame, she caught her hair,
All her hair, in both hands, terribly she shook,
Set her teeth hard, and shut her eyes and seem'd
As though she would have torn it from her head,
Natheless she dropp'd it, lay down, as she deem'd
O Lord Christ! pity on her ghastly face!
Those dismal hours while the cloudless blue
Drew the sun higher: He did give her grace;
And put her raiment on, and knelt before
The blessed rood, and with her dry lips said,
Muttering the words against the marble floor:
But go to hell? and there see day by day
Foul deed on deed, hear foulest word on word,
For ever and ever, such as on the way
[Pg 30]
That curled me up upon my jennet's neck
With bitter shame; how then, Lord, should I curl
For ages and for ages? dost thou reck
And your dear mother? why did I forget
You were so beautiful, and good, and true,
That you loved me so, Guenevere? O yet
But love you, Christ, yea, though I cannot keep
From loving Launcelot; O Christ! must I lose
My own heart's love? see, though I cannot weep,
Moreover, Christ, I cannot bear that hell,
I am most fain to love you, and to win
A place in heaven some time: I cannot tell:
Ah! now I weep!' The maid said, 'By the tomb
[Pg 31] He waiteth for you, lady,' coming fleet,
Not knowing what woe filled up all the room.
He did not hear her coming, as he lay
On Arthur's head, till some of her long hair
Brush'd on the new-cut stone: 'Well done! to pray
That ever lived.' 'Guenevere! Guenevere!
Do you not know me, are you gone mad? fling
Your arms and hair about me, lest I fear
'Pray you forgive me, fair lord Launcelot!
I am not mad, but I am sick; they cling,
God's curses, unto such as I am; not
'Yea, she is mad: thy heavy law, O Lord,
Is very tight about her now, and grips
Her poor heart, so that no right word
[Pg 32]
That she not knowing what she does, being mad,
Kills me in this way; Guenevere, bend low
And kiss me once! for God's love kiss me! sad
Yea once, once for the last time kiss me, lest I die.'
'Christ! my hot lips are very near his brow,
Help me to save his soul! Yea, verily,
Fair serpent mark'd with V upon the head!
This thing we did while yet he was alive,
Why not, O twisting knight, now he is dead?
Remember anything for agony,
Pray you remember how when the wind ran
One cool spring evening through fair aspen-tree,
The king came back from battle, and I stood
To meet him, with my ladies, on the stair,
My face made beautiful with my young blood.'
[Pg 33]
Wrung heart, how first before the knights there came
A royal bier, hung round with green and blue,
About it shone great tapers with sick flame.
Lay royal-robed, but stone-cold now and dead,
Not able to hold sword or sceptre more,
But not quite grim; because his cloven head
Being by embalmers deftly solder'd up;
So still it seem'd the face of a great lord,
Being mended as a craftsman mends a cup.
To their long trumpets; Fallen under shield,
Here lieth Lucius, King of Italy,
Slain by Lord Launcelot in open field.
And through the spears I saw you drawing nigh,
[Pg 34] You and Lord Arthur: nay, I saw you not,
But rather Arthur, God would not let die,
And in his great arms still encircle me,
Kissing my face, half blinded with the heat
Of king's love for the queen I used to be.
When he had kissed me in his kingly way?
Saying: This is the knight whom all the land
Calls Arthur's banner, sword, and shield to-day;
In such strange way unto my fingers then?
So eagerly glad to kiss, so loath to leave
When you rose up? Why among helmed men
And sway like an angel's in your saddle there?
Why sicken'd I so often with alarms
Over the tilt-yard? Why were you more fair
[Pg 35]
Why did you fill all lands with your great fame,
So that Breuse even, as he rode, fear'd lest
At turning of the way your shield should flame?
When as day passed by day, year after year,
I found I could not live a righteous life!
Didst ever think queens held their truth for dear?
Sometimes, always uncertain as the spring;
When I was sad she would be overbold,
Longing for kisses. When war-bells did ring,
'Now, Lord God, listen! listen, Guenevere,
Though I am weak just now, I think there's not
A man who dares to say: You hated her,
In the daisied meadows! lo you her thin hand,
That on the carven stone can not keep still,
Because she loves me against God's command,
[Pg 36]
Tears Launcelot keeps somewhere, surely not
In his own heart, perhaps in Heaven, where
He will not be these ages.' 'Launcelot!
The noisy back-toll'd bells of Camelot,
There were two spots on earth, the thrushes sang
In the lonely gardens where my love was not,
Weep quite in those days, lest one maid should say,
In tittering whispers: Where is Launcelot
To wipe with some kerchief those tears away?
And warning hand up, scarcely lower though:
You speak too loud, see you, she heareth it,
This tigress fair has claws, as I well know,
Why met he not with Iseult from the West,
[Pg 37] Or better still, Iseult of Brittany?
Perchance indeed quite ladyless were best.
Queen Guenevere, uncertain as sunshine
In March; forgive me! for my sin being such,
About my whole life, all my deeds did twine,
I think; in the lonely palace where each morn
We went, my maids and I, to say prayers when
They sang mass in the chapel on the lawn.
For Launcelot's red-golden hair would play,
Instead of sunlight, on the painted wall,
Mingled with dreams of what the priest did say;
Judging of strange sins in Leviticus;
Another sort of writing on the wall,
Scored deep across the painted heads of us.
[Pg 38]
And Mary Magdalen repenting there,
Her dimmed eyes scorch'd and red at sight of hell
So hardly 'scaped, no gold light on her hair.
To touch upon the sin they said we did,
(This in their teeth) they looked as if they deem'd
That I was spying what thoughts might be hid
Beneath quick thoughts; while they grew red with shame,
And gazed down at their feet: while I felt sick,
And almost shriek'd if one should call my name.
But where you were the birds were scared I trow:
Clanging of arms about pavilions fair,
Mixed with the knights' laughs; there, as I well know,
And scowling Gauwaine, like the night in day,
[Pg 39] And handsome Gareth, with his great white hand
Curl'd round the helm-crest, ere he join'd the fray;
All true knights loved to see; and in the fight
Great Tristram, and though helmed you could trace
In all his bearing the frank noble knight;
He fought, his face brush'd by his hair,
Red heavy swinging hair; he fear'd a scoff
So overmuch, though what true knight would dare
And bitter useless striving after love?
O Palomydes, with much honour bear
Beast Glatysaunt upon your shield, above
And think of Iseult, as your sword drives through
Much mail and plate: O God, let me be there
A little time, as I was long ago!
[Pg 40]
Gauwaine and Launcelot, and Dinadan
Are helm'd and waiting; let the trumpets go!
Bend over, ladies, to see all you can!
Throws Kay from out his saddle, like a stone
From a castle-window when the foe draws near:
Iseult! Sir Dinadan rolleth overthrown.
Fly fathoms up, and both the great steeds reel;
Tristram for Iseult! Iseult! and Guenevere!
The ladies' names bite verily like steel.
Or else die kissing him, he is so pale,
He thinks me mad already, O bad! bad!
Let me lie down a little while and wail.'
And slay me really, then we shall be heal'd,
[Pg 41] Perchance, in the aftertime by God above.'
'Banner of Arthur, with black-bended shield
Here let me tell you what a knight you are,
O sword and shield of Arthur! you are found
A crooked sword, I think, that leaves a scar
Twisted Malay's crease beautiful blue-grey,
Poison'd with sweet fruit; as he found too late,
My husband Arthur, on some bitter day!
That the husbandman across his shoulder hangs,
And, going homeward about evensong,
Dies the next morning, struck through by the fangs!
Lest you meet Arthur in the other world,
And, knowing who you are, he pass you by,
Taking short turns that he may watch you curl'd,
[Pg 42]
Lest he weep presently and go away,
Saying: I loved him once, with a sad sigh,
Now I have slain him, Lord, let me go too, I pray.
[Launcelot falls.
If I run fast it is perchance that I
May fall and stun myself, much better so,
Never, never again! not even when I die.'
Launcelot, on awaking.
How long I lay in swoon I cannot tell:
My head and hands were bleeding from the stone,
When I rose up, also I heard a bell.'
SIR GALAHAD, A CHRISTMAS MYSTERY
SIR GALAHAD, A CHRISTMAS MYSTERY
Near on the day when the Lord Christ was born;
Six hours ago I came and sat down here,
And ponder'd sadly, wearied and forlorn.
Sang out a moody tune, that went right well
With mine own thoughts: I look'd down on the floor,
Between my feet, until I heard a bell
And toll on steadily; a drowsiness
[Pg 46] Came on me, so that I fell half asleep,
As I sat there not moving: less and less
Upon my steel-shoes; less and less I saw
Between the tiles the bunches of small weeds:
Heartless and stupid, with no touch of awe
I thought: O Galahad! the days go by,
Stop and cast up now that which you have found,
So sorely you have wrought and painfully.
The sere damp fern, night after night you sit
Holding the bridle like a man of stone,
Dismal, unfriended: what thing comes of it?
And over many a mountain and bare heath
Follow the questing beast with none beside?
Is he not able still to hold his breath
With weary striving, to seem best of all
[Pg 47] To her, 'as she is best,' he saith? to fail
Is nothing to him, he can never fall.
So dear a thing unto his constant heart,
That even if he never win one kiss,
Or touch from Iseult, it will never part.
Than in his happiest dreams he thinks she is:
Good knight, and faithful, you have 'scaped the curse
In wonderful-wise; you have great store of bliss.
Can he not think of Guenevere's arms, round
Warm and lithe, about his neck, and shout
Till all the place grows joyful with the sound?
And think, 'Next month I kiss you, or next week,
And still you think of me': therefore the place
Grows very pleasant, whatsoever he seek.
[Pg 48]
Dead in my arms in the half-melted snow,
When all unkindly with the shifting wind,
The thaw comes on at Candlemas: I know
If he had lived had been a right good knight;
Ah! poor chaste body!' but they will be glad,
Not most alone, but all, when in their sight
The gay-dress'd minstrels sing; no maid will talk
Of sitting on my tomb, until the leaves,
Grown big upon the bushes of the walk,
To see the minster therefrom: well-a-day!
Before the trees by autumn were well bared,
I saw a damozel with gentle play,
To her dear knight, just riding out to find
(Why should I choke to say it?) the Sangreal,
And their last kisses sunk into my mind,
[Pg 49]
Rather, scarce stood; the back of one dear hand,
That it might well be kiss'd, she held and press'd
Against his lips; long time they stood there, fann'd
Till Mador de la porte a-going by,
And my own horsehoofs roused them; they untwined,
And parted like a dream. In this way I,
Kept musing half asleep, till suddenly
A sharp bell rang from close beside the door,
And I leapt up when something pass'd me by,
I stagger'd after, a great sense of awe
At every step kept gathering on my mind,
Thereat I have no marvel, for I saw
Whose face no man could say he did not know,
[Pg 50] And though the bell still rang, he sat alone,
With raiment half blood-red, half white as snow.
Not as one kneels in church when mass is said,
But in a heap, quite nerveless, for I felt
The first time what a thing was perfect dread.
'Rise up, and look and listen, Galahad,
Good knight of God, for you will see no frown
Upon my face; I come to make you glad.
I will be with you always, and fear not
You are uncared for, though no maiden moan
Above your empty tomb; for Launcelot,
Meantime, take note whose sword first made him knight,
And who has loved him alway, yea, and who
Still trusts him alway, though in all men's sight,
[Pg 51]
This love is happy even as you say,
But would you for a little time be glad,
To make ME sorry long, day after day?
The hot love-tears burn deep like spots of lead,
Yea, and the years pass quick: right dismally
Will Launcelot at one time hang his head;
Poor Palomydes fretting out his soul!
Not always is he able, son, to move
His love, and do it honour: needs must roll
And then 'tis weary work; he strives beside
Seem better than he is, so that his trust
Is always on what chances may betide;
When all these things are gone, and wretchedly
He sits and longs to moan for Iseult, who
Is no care now to Palomydes: see,
[Pg 52]
Now even, all these things are on your side,
But these you fight not for; look up, I say,
And see how I can love you, for no pride
See now you have ME always; following
That holy vision, Galahad, go on,
Until at last you come to ME to sing
The garden where I am.' He ceased, my face
And wretched body fell upon the ground;
And when I look'd again, the holy place
Came to the chapel-door, there entered
Two angels first, in white, without a stain,
And scarlet wings, then, after them, a bed
The very altar-step, and while for fear
I scarcely dared to move or draw my breath,
Those holy ladies gently came a-near,
[Pg 53]
Rest here awhile and sleep, and take no thought
Of any other thing than being glad;
Hither the Sangreal will be shortly brought,
Right so they went away, and I, being weary,
Slept long and dream'd of Heaven: the bell comes near,
I doubt it grows to morning. Miserere!
Enter Two Angels in white, with scarlet wings; also, Four Ladies in gowns of red and green; also an Angel, bearing in his hands a surcoat of white, with a red cross.
An Angel
Rise and be arm'd: the Sangreal is gone forth
Through the great forest, and you must be had
Unto the sea that lieth on the north:
The spindles of King Solomon are laid,
[Pg 54] And the sword that no man draweth without sin,
But if he be most pure: and there is stay'd,
In some short space upon that ship: first, though,
Will come here presently that lady sweet,
Sister of Percival, whom you well know,
These ladies will to arm you.
First Lady, putting on the hauberk.
That I may stand so close beneath your brow,
I, Margaret of Antioch, am glad.
Second Lady, girding him with the sword.
O Galahad, I, Cecily, am glad.
Third Lady, buckling on the spurs.
And gaze at me, O holy Galahad,
Fourth Lady, putting on the basnet.
[Pg 55] That you bow down to us in reverence,
We are most glad, I, Katherine, with delight
Must needs fall trembling.
Angel, putting on the crossed surcoat.
Come Percival's sister, Bors, and Percival.
[The Four Ladies carry out the bed, and all go but Galahad.
Galahad.
They come, too, for I hear the horsehoofs fall.
Enter Sir Bors, Sir Percival, and his Sister.
A many marvels have been here to-night;
Tell me what news of Launcelot you have,
And has God's body ever been in sight?
Sir Bors.
As we were riding slowly side by side,
[Pg 56] An hour ago, we heard a sweet voice sing,
And through the bare twigs saw a great light glide,
And so pass'd quickly: from the court nought good;
Poor merry Dinadan, that with jape and scoff
Kept us all merry, in a little wood
And Gauwaine have come back from the great quest,
Just merely shamed; and Lauvaine, who loved well
Your father Launcelot, at the king's behest
Perhaps is dead now; everywhere
The knights come foil'd from the great quest, in vain;
In vain they struggle for the vision fair.
THE CHAPEL IN LYONESS
THE CHAPEL IN LYONESS
Sir Ozana le cure Hardy. Sir Galahad.
Sir Bors de Ganys.
Sir Ozana.
From Christmas-Eve to Whit-Sunday,
Within that Chapel-aisle I lay,
And no man came a-near.
And deep within my breast did lie,
Though no man any blood could spy,
The truncheon of a spear.
Those days. Alas! the sunlight slips
From off the gilded parclose, dips,
And night comes on apace.
[Pg 60]
Over my raised-up knees was spread
A samite cloth of white and red;
A rose lay on my face.
But as in dream of battle-rout,
My frozen speech would not well out;
I could not even weep.
Fade off the pillars one by one,
My heart faints when the day is done,
Because I cannot sleep.
Not like a tomb is this my bed,
Yet oft I think that I am dead;
That round my tomb is writ,
Knight of the Table Round,
Pray for his soul, lords, of your part;
A true knight he was found.'
[Pg 61]
Sir Galahad.
Till his madness pass'd away,
I watch'd Ozana as he lay
Within the gilded screen.
As I sung my heart grew hot,
With the thought of Launcelot
Far away, I ween.
From out the chapel, bathed my face
In the stream that runs apace
By the churchyard wall.
Hard by where the linden grows,
Sighing over silver rows
Of the lilies tall.
The sparkling drops seem'd good for drouth;
[Pg 62] He smiled, turn'd round towards the south.
Held up a golden tress.
He drew the covering from his breast,
Against his heart that hair he prest;
Death him soon will bless.
Sir Bors.
I saw a knight's helm lying there:
I raised my eyes from off the floor,
And caught the gleaming of his hair.
I laid my chin upon his head;
I felt him smile; my eyes did swim,
I was so glad he was not dead.
'There comes no sleep nor any love.'
But Galahad stoop'd and kiss'd his brow:
He shiver'd; I saw his pale lips move.
[Pg 63]
Sir Ozana.
Ah me! I shiver with delight.
I am so weak I cannot move;
God move me to thee, dear, to-night!
Christ help! I have but little wit:
My life went wrong; I see it writ,
Knight of the Table Round,
Pray for his soul, lords, on your part;
A good knight he was found.'
Sir Bors.
What strange things may his eyes see,
Great blue eyes fix'd full on me?
On his soul, Lord, have mercy.
Sir Galahad.
Her cheek is laid to thine;
[Pg 64] No long time hence, also I see
Thy wasted fingers twine
That shineth gloriously,
Thinly outspread in the clear air
Against the jasper sea.
SIR PETER HARPDON'S END
SIR PETER HARPDON'S END
In an English Castle in Poictou.
Sir Peter Harpdon, a Gascon knight in the English
service, and John Curzon, his lieutenant.
John Curzon.
We took down at St. John's hard by the mill,
Two are good masons; we have tools enough,
And you have skill to set them working.
Sir Peter.
John Curzon.
And Peter Plombiere, but,
Sir Peter.
Has Peter now? has Jacques got bow legs?
John Curzon.
Or Peter's legs to us?
Sir Peter.
Throw all your mason's tools down the deep well,
Hang Peter up and Jacques; They're no good,
We shall not build, man.
John Curzon (going).
To hang them, sir? and yet, sir, for the tools,
We'd better keep them still; sir, fare you well.
[Muttering as he goes.
What have I done that he should jape at me?
And why not build? the walls are weak enough,
And we've two masons and a heap of tools.
[Goes, still muttering.
[Pg 69]
Sir Peter.
For his lieutenant! I must call him back,
Or else, as surely as St. George is dead,
He'll hang our friends the masons: here, John! John!
John Curzon.
Sir Peter.
This weighty matter out; there, we've no stone
To mend our walls with, neither brick nor stone.
John Curzon.
Sir Peter.
Ten miles to fetch us stone enough to build.
In three hours' time they would be taken or slain,
The cursed Frenchmen ride abroad so thick.
John Curzon.
Sir Peter.
[Pg 70] They would go off to Clisson or Sanxere,
And tell them we were weak in walls and men,
Then down go we; for, look you, times are changed,
And now no longer does the country shake
At sound of English names; our captains fade
From off our muster-rolls. At Lusac bridge
I daresay you may even yet see the hole
That Chandos beat in dying; far in Spain
Pembroke is prisoner; Phelton prisoner here;
Manny lies buried in the Charterhouse;
Oliver Clisson turn'd these years agone;
The Captal died in prison; and, over all,
Edward the prince lies underneath the ground,
Edward the king is dead, at Westminster
The carvers smooth the curls of his long beard.
Everything goes to rack—eh! and we too.
Now, Curzon, listen; if they come, these French,
Whom have I got to lean on here, but you?
A man can die but once, will you die then,
Your brave sword in your hand, thoughts in your heart
Of all the deeds we have done here in France—
And yet may do? So God will have your soul,
Whoever has your body.
[Pg 71]
John Curzon.
Will fight till the last moment, until then
Will do whate'er you tell me. Now I see
We must e'en leave the walls; well, well, perhaps
They're stronger than I think for; pity, though!
For some few tons of stone, if Guesclin comes.
Sir Peter.
I doubt them.
John Curzon.
Sir Peter.
'Tis a good lump. Why then, if Guesclin comes;
Some dozen stones from his petrariae,
And, under shelter of his crossbows, just
An hour's steady work with pickaxes,
Then a great noise—some dozen swords and glaives
A-playing on my basnet all at once,
And little more cross purposes on earth
For me.
Now this is hard: a month ago,
And a few minutes' talk had set things right
[Pg 72] 'Twixt me and Alice; if she had a doubt,
As, may Heaven bless her! I scarce think she had,
'Twas but their hammer, hammer in her ears,
Of how Sir Peter fail'd at Lusac Bridge:
And how he was grown moody of late days;
And how Sir Lambert, think now! his dear friend,
His sweet, dear cousin, could not but confess
That Peter's talk tended towards the French,
Which he, for instance Lambert, was glad of,
Being, Lambert, you see, on the French side.
Well,
If I could but have seen her on that day,
Then, when they sent me off!
I like to think,
Although it hurts me, makes my head twist, what,
If I had seen her, what I should have said,
What she, my darling, would have said and done.
As thus perchance.
To find her sitting there,
In the window-seat, not looking well at all,
Crying perhaps, and I say quietly:
Alice! she looks up, chokes a sob, looks grave,
Changes from pale to red, but, ere she speaks,
[Pg 73] Straightway I kneel down there on both my knees,
And say: O lady, have I sinn'd, your knight?
That still you ever let me walk alone
In the rose garden, that you sing no songs
When I am by, that ever in the dance
You quietly walk away when I come near?
Now that I have you, will you go, think you?
Still kneeling there.
What! they have frighted you,
By hanging burs, and clumsily carven puppets,
Round my good name; but afterwards, my love,
I will say what this means; this moment, see!
Do I kneel here, and can you doubt me? Yea:
For she would put her hands upon my face:
Yea, that is best, yea feel, love, am I changed?
And she would say: Good knight, come, kiss my lips!
And afterwards as I sat there would say:
What all those things they talk of really were,
For it is true you did not help Chandos,
[Pg 74] And true, poor love! you could not come to me
When I was in such peril.
I should say:
I am like Balen, all things turn to blame.
I did not come to you? At Bergerath
The constable had held us close shut up,
If from the barriers I had made three steps,
I should have been but slain; at Lusac, too,
We struggled in a marish half the day,
And came too late at last: you know, my love,
How heavy men and horses are all arm'd.
All that Sir Lambert said was pure, unmix'd,
Quite groundless lies; as you can think, sweet love.
Started a little at Sir Lambert's name,
But otherwise she listen'd scarce at all
To what I said. Then with moist, weeping eyes,
And quivering lips, that scarcely let her speak,
She said: I love you.
Other words were few,
The remnant of that hour; her hand smooth'd down
[Pg 75] My foolish head; she kiss'd me all about
My face, and through the tangles of my beard
Her little fingers crept!
Not this good way: my lord but sent and said
That Lambert's sayings were taken at their worth,
Therefore that day I was to start, and keep
This hold against the French; and I am here:
[Looks out of the window.
A sprawling lonely garde with rotten walls,
And no one to bring aid if Guesclin comes,
Or any other.
There's a pennon now!
At last.
But not the constable's: whose arms,
I wonder, does it bear? Three golden rings
On a red ground; my cousin's by the rood!
Well, I should like to kill him, certainly,
That's for a herald;
I doubt this does not mean assaulting yet.
[Pg 76]
Enter John Curzon.
John Curzon.
He has good will to talk with you.
Sir Peter.
I'll talk with him, close by the gate St. Ives.
Is he unarm'd?
John Curzon.
Sir Peter.
With the long sleeves, and under it I'll wear,
By Lambert's leave, a secret coat of mail;
And will you lend me, John, your little axe?
I mean the one with Paul wrought on the blade?
And I will carry it inside my sleeve,
Good to be ready always; you, John, go
And bid them set up many suits of arms,
Bows, archgays, lances, in the base-court, and
Yourself, from the south postern setting out,
With twenty men, be ready to break through
[Pg 77] Their unguarded rear when I cry out, St. George!
John Curzon.
And slay him unarm'd?
Sir Peter.
The reason why he comes here with sleeved gown,
[Pg 78]
Outside the castle by the great gate; Sir Lambert and Sir Peter seated; guards attending each, the rest of Sir Lambert's men drawn up about a furlong off.
Sir Peter.
Still, does it hurt you?
Sir Lambert.
I see you sneering, Why take trouble then,
Seeing you love me not? Look you, our house
(Which, taken altogether, I love much)
Had better be upon the right side now,
If, once for all, it wishes to bear rule
As such a house should: cousin, you're too wise
To feed your hope up fat, that this fair France
Will ever draw two ways again; this side
The French, wrong-headed, all a-jar
With envious longings; and the other side
The order'd English, orderly led on
[Pg 79] By those two Edwards through all wrong and right,
And muddling right and wrong to a thick broth
With that long stick, their strength. This is all changed,
The true French win, on either side you have
Cool-headed men, good at a tilting match,
And good at setting battles in array,
And good at squeezing taxes at due time;
Therefore by nature we French being here
Well, Peter! well!
What makes you laugh?
Sir Peter.
All this I know so well; but you have read
The siege of Troy?
Sir Lambert.
Sir Peter.
For, as I think, they found it such delight
To see fair Helen going through their town;
Yea, any little common thing she did
[Pg 80] (As stooping to pick a flower) seem'd so strange,
So new in its great beauty, that they said:
Here we will keep her living in this town,
Till all burns up together. And so, fought,
In a mad whirl of knowing they were wrong;
Yea, they fought well, and ever, like a man
That hangs legs off the ground by both his hands,
Over some great height, did they struggle sore,
Quite sure to slip at last; wherefore, take note
How almost all men, reading that sad siege,
Hold for the Trojans; as I did at least,
Thought Hector the best knight a long way:
Now
Why should I not do this thing that I think;
For even when I come to count the gains,
I have them my side: men will talk, you know
(We talk of Hector, dead so long agone,)
When I am dead, of how this Peter clung
To what he thought the right; of how he died,
Perchance, at last, doing some desperate deed
Few men would care do now, and this is gain
To me, as ease and money is to you.
Moreover, too, I like the straining game
Of striving well to hold up things that fall;
[Pg 81] So one becomes great. See you! in good times
All men live well together, and you, too,
Live dull and happy: happy? not so quick,
Suppose sharp thoughts begin to burn you up?
Why then, but just to fight as I do now,
A halter round my neck, would be great bliss.
Talk, and talk, and talk,
I know this man has come to murder me,
And yet I talk still.
Sir Lambert.
You might be, though you lost; but if I said,
'You are a traitor, being, as you are,
Born Frenchman.' What are Edwards unto you,
Or Richards?
Sir Peter.
For fear your zeal should bring you to some harm,
Don't call me traitor.
Sir Lambert.
Men call you slippery on your losing side,
When at Bordeaux I was ambassador,
[Pg 82] I heard them say so, and could scarce say: Nay.
[He takes hold of something in
his sleeve, and rises.
Sir Peter, rising.
What have you got there, fumbling up your sleeve,
A stolen purse?
Sir Lambert.
Dead liar too; St. Denis and St. Lambert!
[Strikes at Sir Peter with a dagger.
Sir Peter, striking him flatlings with his axe.
St. George Guienne! glaives for the castellan!
You French, you are but dead, unless you lay
Your spears upon the earth. St. George Guienne!
[Pg 83]
In the Castle.
John Curzon.
Sir Peter.
Pay anything, but not too light though, John,
Seeing we have them on the hip: for those
That have no money, that being certified,
Why, turn them out of doors before they spy;
But bring Sir Lambert guarded unto me.
John Curzon.
Sir Peter.
Although I think I ought; he shall go mark'd,
By all the saints, though!
Enter Lambert guarded.
Now, Sir Lambert, now!
What sort of death do you expect to get,
Being taken this way?
[Pg 84]
Sir Lambert.
I am your own blood; may God pardon me!
I am not fit to die; if you knew all,
All I have done since I was young and good.
O! you would give me yet another chance,
As God would, that I might wash all clear out,
By serving you and Him. Let me go now!
And I will pay you down more golden crowns
Of ransom than the king would!
Sir Peter.
And do not touch me! No, you shall not die,
Nor yet pay ransom. You, John Curzon, cause
Some carpenters to build a scaffold, high,
Outside the gate; when it is built, sound out
To all good folks, 'Come, see a traitor punish'd!'
Take me my knight, and set him up thereon,
And let the hangman shave his head quite clean,
And cut his ears off close up to the head;
And cause the minstrels all the while to play
Soft music, and good singing; for this day
Is my high day of triumph; is it not,
Sir Lambert?
[Pg 85]
Sir Lambert.
Own name, you heap this foul disgrace? you dare,
With hands and fame thus sullied, to go back
And take the lady Alice?
Sir Peter.
Again, and you are dead, slain here by me.
Why should I talk with you? I'm master here,
And do not want your schooling; is it not
My mercy that you are not dangling dead
There in the gateway with a broken neck?
Sir Lambert.
To die is nothing; but to live that all
May point their fingers! yea, I'd rather die.
John Curzon.
To lose your ears? they're much too big for you,
You ugly Judas!
Sir Peter.
That's your choice,
To die, mind! Then you shall die: Lambert mine,
[Pg 86] I thank you now for choosing this so well,
It saves me much perplexity and doubt;
Perchance an ill deed too, for half I count
This sparing traitors is an ill deed.
Well,
Lambert, die bravely, and we're almost friends.
Sir Lambert, grovelling.
Will some one save me from him? help, help, help!
I will not die.
Sir Peter.
A man who is a knight, and bandied words
So well just now with me, is lying down,
Gone mad for fear like this! So, so, you thought
You knew the worst, and might say what you pleased.
I should have guess'd this from a man like you.
Eh! righteous Job would give up skin for skin,
Yea, all a man can have for simple life,
And we talk fine, yea, even a hound like this,
Who needs must know that when he dies, deep hell
Will hold him fast for ever, so fine we talk,
'Would rather die,' all that. Now sir, get up!
[Pg 87] And choose again: shall it be head sans ears,
Or trunk sans head?
John Curzon, pull him up!
What, life then? go and build the scaffold, John.
Lambert, I hope that never on this earth
We meet again; that you'll turn out a monk,
And mend the life I give you, so farewell,
I'm sorry you're a rascal. John, despatch.
[Pg 88]
In the French camp before the Castle.
Sir Peter prisoner, Guesclin, Clisson, Sir Lambert.
Sir Peter.
If I could clear this sickening lump away
That sticks in my dry throat, and say a word,
Guesclin might listen.
Guesclin.
If you have been clean liver before God,
And then you need not fear much; as for me,
I cannot say I hate you, yet my oath,
And cousin Lambert's ears here clench the thing.
Sir Peter.
Am bold to pray for life; 'twill harm your cause
To hang knights of good name, harms here in France
I have small doubt, at any rate hereafter
Men will remember you another way
Than I should care to be remember'd, ah!
[Pg 89] Although hot lead runs through me for my blood,
All this falls cold as though I said, Sweet lords,
Give back my falcon!
See how young I am,
Do you care altogether more for France,
Say rather one French faction, than for all
The state of Christendom? a gallant knight,
As (yea, by God!) I have been, is more worth
Than many castles; will you bring this death,
For a mere act of justice, on my head?
Can somehow be retrieved, yea, send me forth
Naked and maimed, rather than slay me here;
Then somehow will I get me other clothes,
And somehow will I get me some poor horse,
And, somehow clad in poor old rusty arms,
Will ride and smite among the serried glaives,
Fear not death so; for I can tilt right well,
Let me not say I could; I know all tricks,
That sway the sharp sword cunningly; ah you,
You, my Lord Clisson, in the other days
Have seen me learning these, yea, call to mind,
How in the trodden corn by Chartres town,
[Pg 90] When you were nearly swooning from the back
Of your black horse, those three blades slid at once
From off my sword's edge; pray for me, my lord!
Clisson.
My Lord the Constable, I pray you note
That you are losing some few thousand crowns
By slaying this man; also think: his lands
Along the Garonne river lie for leagues,
And are right rich, a many mills he has,
Three abbeys of grey monks do hold of him:
Though wishing well for Clement, as we do,
I know the next heir, his old uncle, well,
Who does not care two deniers for the knight
As things go now, but slay him, and then see,
How he will bristle up like any perch,
With curves of spears. What! do not doubt, my lord,
You'll get the money, this man saved my life,
And I will buy him for two thousand crowns;
Well, five then: eh! what! No again? well then,
Ten thousand crowns?
Guesclin.
[Pg 91] I cannot please you, yea, good sooth, I grieve
This knight must die, as verily he must;
For I have sworn it, so men take him out,
Use him not roughly.
Sir Lambert, coming forward.
Music will suit you well, I think, because
You look so mild, like Laurence being grill'd;
Or perhaps music soft and slow, because
This is high day of triumph unto me,
Is it not, Peter?
You are frighten'd, though,
Eh! you are pale, because this hurts you much,
Whose life was pleasant to you, not like mine,
You ruin'd wretch! Men mock me in the streets,
Only in whispers loud, because I am
Friend of the constable; will this please you,
Unhappy Peter? once a-going home,
Without my servants, and a little drunk,
At midnight through the lone dim lamp-lit streets.
A whore came up and spat into my eyes,
Rather to blind me than to make me see,
But she was very drunk, and tottering back,
Even in the middle of her laughter fell
[Pg 92] And cut her head against the pointed stones,
While I lean'd on my staff, and look'd at her,
And cried, being drunk.
Girls would not spit at you.
You are so handsome, I think verily
Most ladies would be glad to kiss your eyes,
And yet you will be hung like a cur dog
Five minutes hence, and grow black in the face,
And curl your toes up. Therefore I am glad.
With Guesclin getting ready to play chess,
And Clisson doing something with his sword,
I can't see what, talking to Guesclin though,
I don't know what about, perhaps of you.
But, cousin Peter, while I stroke your beard,
Let me say this, I'd like to tell you now
That your life hung upon a game of chess,
That if, say, my squire Robert here should beat,
Why you should live, but hang if I beat him;
Then guess, clever Peter, what I should do then:
Well, give it up? why, Peter, I should let
My squire Robert beat me, then you would think
That you were safe, you know; Eh? not at all,
[Pg 93] But I should keep you three days in some hold,
Giving you salt to eat, which would be kind,
Considering the tax there is on salt;
And afterwards should let you go, perhaps?
No I should not, but I should hang you, sir,
With a red rope in lieu of mere grey rope.
If you can guess why I talk nonsense thus,
Instead of drinking wine while you are hang'd?
You are not quick at guessing, give it up.
This is the reason; here I hold your hand,
And watch you growing paler, see you writhe
And this, my Peter, is a joy so dear,
I cannot by all striving tell you how
I love it, nor I think, good man, would you
Quite understand my great delight therein;
You, when you had me underneath you once,
Spat as it were, and said, 'Go take him out,'
That they might do that thing to me whereat,
E'en now this long time off I could well shriek,
And then you tried forget I ever lived,
And sunk your hating into other things;
While I: St. Denis! though, I think you'll faint,
[Pg 94] Your lips are grey so; yes, you will, unless
You let it out and weep like a hurt child;
Hurrah! you do now. Do not go just yet,
For I am Alice, am right like her now,
Will you not kiss me on the lips, my love?
Clisson.
Or by God's eyes I'll choke you!
[Kneeling to Sir Peter.
Fair sir knight
I kneel upon my knees and pray to you
That you would pardon me for this your death;
God knows how much I wish you still alive,
Also how heartily I strove to save
Your life at this time; yea, he knows quite well,
(I swear it, so forgive me!) how I would,
If it were possible, give up my life
Upon this grass for yours; fair knight, although,
He knowing all things knows this thing too, well,
Yet when you see his face some short time hence,
Tell him I tried to save you.
Sir Peter.
I cannot say this is as good as life,
[Pg 95] But yet it makes me feel far happier now,
And if at all, after a thousand years,
I see God's face, I will speak loud and bold,
And tell Him you were kind, and like Himself;
Sir, may God bless you!
Did you note how I
Fell weeping just now? pray you, do not think
That Lambert's taunts did this, I hardly heard
The base things that he said, being deep in thought
Of all things that have happen'd since I was
A little child; and so at last I thought
Of my true lady: truly, sir, it seem'd
No longer gone than yesterday, that this
Was the sole reason God let me be born
Twenty-five years ago, that I might love
Her, my sweet lady, and be loved by her;
This seem'd so yesterday, to-day death comes,
And is so bitter strong, I cannot see
Why I was born.
But as a last request,
I pray you, O kind Clisson, send some man,
Some good man, mind you, to say how I died,
And take my last love to her: fare-you-well,
And may God keep you; I must go now, lest
[Pg 96] I grow too sick with thinking on these things;
Likewise my feet are wearied of the earth,
From whence I shall be lifted upright soon.
[As he goes.
Ah me! shamed too, I wept at fear of death;
And yet not so, I only wept because
There was no beautiful lady to kiss me
Before I died, and sweetly wish good speed
From her dear lips. O for some lady, though
I saw her ne'er before; Alice, my love,
I do not ask for; Clisson was right kind,
If he had been a woman, I should die
Without this sickness: but I am all wrong,
So wrong, and hopelessly afraid to die.
There, I will go.
My God! how sick I am,
If only she could come and kiss me now.
[Pg 97]
The Hotel de la Barde, Bordeaux.
The Lady Alice de la Barde looking out of a
window into the street.
That garde stands well; I mind me passing it
Some months ago; God grant the walls are strong!
I heard some knights say something yestereve,
I tried hard to forget: words far apart
Struck on my heart something like this; one said:
What eh! a Gascon with an English name,
Harpdon? then nought, but afterwards: Poictou.
As one who answers to a question ask'd,
Then carelessly regretful came: No, no.
Whereto in answer loud and eagerly,
One said: Impossible? Christ, what foul play!
And went off angrily; and while thenceforth
I hurried gaspingly afraid, I heard:
Guesclin; Five thousand men-at-arms; Clisson.
My heart misgives me it is all in vain
[Pg 98] I send these succours; and in good time there
Their trumpet sounds: ah! here they are; good knights,
God up in Heaven keep you.
If they come
And find him prisoner, for I can't believe
Guesclin will slay him, even though they storm.
The last horse turns the corner.
God in Heaven!
What have I got to thinking of at last!
That thief I will not name is with Guesclin,
Who loves him for his lands. My love! my love!
O, if I lose you after all the past,
What shall I do?
I cannot bear the noise
And light street out there, with this thought alive,
Like any curling snake within my brain;
Let me just hide my head within these soft
Deep cushions, there to try and think it out.
[Lying in the window-seat.
I cannot hear much noise now, and I think
That I shall go to sleep: it all sounds dim
And faint, and I shall soon forget most things;
Yea, almost that I am alive and here;
[Pg 99] It goes slow, comes slow, like a big mill-wheel
On some broad stream, with long green weeds a-sway,
And soft and slow it rises and it falls,
Still going onward.
Lying so, one kiss,
And I should be in Avalon asleep,
Among the poppies, and the yellow flowers;
And they should brush my cheek, my hair being spread
Far out among the stems; soft mice and small
Eating and creeping all about my feet,
Red shod and tired; and the flies should come
Creeping o'er my broad eyelids unafraid;
And there should be a noise of water going,
Clear blue fresh water breaking on the slates,
Likewise the flies should creep: God's eyes! God help!
A trumpet? I will run fast, leap adown
The slippery sea-stairs, where the crabs fight.
Ah!
I was half dreaming, but the trumpet's true;
He stops here at our house. The Clisson arms?
Ah, now for news. But I must hold my heart,
[Pg 100] And be quite gentle till he is gone out;
And afterwards: but he is still alive,
He must be still alive.
I give you welcome, knowing whence you come.
Squire.
From Oliver Clisson, knight and mighty lord,
Bringing you tidings: I make bold to hope
You will not count me villain, even if
They wring your heart, nor hold me still in hate;
For I am but a mouthpiece after all,
A mouthpiece, too, of one who wishes well
To you and your's.
Alice.
Get over all this quicker? fix your eyes
On mine, I pray you, and whate'er you see,
Still go on talking fast, unless I fall,
Or bid you stop.
Squire.
[Pg 101] And, looking in your eyes, fair lady, say
I am unhappy that your knight is dead.
Take heart, and listen! let me tell you all.
We were five thousand goodly men-at-arms,
And scant five hundred had he in that hold:
His rotten sand-stone walls were wet with rain,
And fell in lumps wherever a stone hit;
Yet for three days about the barrier there
The deadly glaives were gather'd, laid across,
And push'd and pull'd; the fourth our engines came;
But still amid the crash of falling walls,
And roar of lombards, rattle of hard bolts,
The steady bow-strings flash'd, and still stream'd out
St. George's banner, and the seven swords,
And still they cried: St. George Guienne! until
Their walls were flat as Jericho's of old,
And our rush came, and cut them from the keep.
Alice.
And where he died, if you can really mean
That Peter Harpdon, the good knight, is dead?
Squire.
[Pg 102]
Alice.
What do you talk of? Nay, go on, go on;
'Twas only something gone within my head:
Do you not know, one turns one's head round quick,
And something cracks there with sore pain? go on,
And still look at my eyes.
Squire.
There in the base-court fought he with his sword,
Using his left hand much, more than the wont
Of most knights now-a-days; our men gave back,
For wheresoever he hit a downright blow,
Some one fell bleeding, for no plate could hold
Against the sway of body and great arm;
Till he grew tired, and some man (no! not I,
I swear not I, fair lady, as I live!)
Thrust at him with a glaive between the knees,
And threw him; down he fell, sword undermost;
Many fell on him, crying out their cries,
Tore his sword from him, tore his helm off, and:
Alice.
Fair God, so let me die!
[Pg 103] You have done well,
Done all your message gently, pray you go,
Our knights will make you cheer; moreover, take
This bag of franks for your expenses.
[The Squire kneels.
But
You do not go; still looking at my face,
You kneel! what, squire, do you mock me then?
You need not tell me who has set you on,
But tell me only, 'tis a made-up tale.
You are some lover may-be or his friend;
Sir, if you loved me once, or your friend loved,
Think, is it not enough that I kneel down
And kiss your feet? your jest will be right good
If you give in now; carry it too far,
And 'twill be cruel: not yet? but you weep
Almost, as though you loved me; love me then,
And go to Heaven by telling all your sport,
And I will kiss you then with all my heart,
Upon the mouth: O! what can I do then
To move you?
Squire.
You know I am so sorry, but my tale
[Pg 104] Is not yet finish'd:
So they bound his hands,
And brought him tall and pale to Guesclin's tent,
Who, seeing him, leant his head upon his hand,
And ponder'd somewhile, afterwards, looking up:
Fair dame, what shall I say?
Alice.
Good squire, you may go now with my thanks.
Squire.
Yea, for my own sake, too, and Clisson's sake.
When Guesclin told him he must be hanged soon,
Within a while he lifted up his head
And spoke for his own life; not crouching, though,
As abjectly afraid to die, nor yet
Sullenly brave as many a thief will die,
Nor yet as one that plays at japes with God:
Few words he spoke; not so much what he said
Moved us, I think, as, saying it, there played
Strange tenderness from that big soldier there
About his pleading; eagerness to live
Because folk loved him, and he loved them back,
And many gallant plans unfinish'd now
[Pg 105] For ever. Clisson's heart, which may God bless!
Was moved to pray for him, but all in vain;
Wherefore I bring this message:
That he waits,
Still loving you, within the little church
Whose windows, with the one eye of the light
Over the altar, every night behold
The great dim broken walls he strove to keep!
Now, lady, I will go: God give you rest!
Alice.
And now to keep myself from going mad.
Christ! I have been a many times to church,
And, ever since my mother taught me prayers,
Have used them daily, but to-day I wish
To pray another way; come face to face,
O Christ, that I may clasp your knees and pray
I know not what; at any rate come now
From one of many places where you are,
Either in Heaven amid thick angel wings,
Or sitting on the altar strange with gems,
Or high up in the duskness of the apse;
[Pg 106] Let us go, You and I, a long way off,
To the little damp, dark, Poitevin church.
While you sit on the coffin in the dark,
Will I lie down, my face on the bare stone
Between your feet, and chatter anything
I have heard long ago. What matters it
So I may keep you there, your solemn face
And long hair even-flowing on each side,
Until you love me well enough to speak,
And give me comfort? yea, till o'er your chin,
And cloven red beard the great tears roll down
In pity for my misery, and I die,
Kissed over by you.
Eh Guesclin! if I were
Like Countess Mountfort now, that kiss'd the knight,
Across the salt sea come to fight for her:
Ah! just to go about with many knights,
Wherever you went, and somehow on one day,
In a thick wood to catch you off your guard,
Let you find, you and your some fifty friends,
Nothing but arrows wheresoe'er you turn'd,
Yea, and red crosses, great spears over them;
And so, between a lane of my true men,
[Pg 107] To walk up pale and stern and tall, and with
My arms on my surcoat, and his therewith,
And then to make you kneel, O knight Guesclin;
And then: alas! alas! when all is said,
What could I do but let you go again,
Being pitiful woman? I get no revenge,
Whatever happens; and I get no comfort:
I am but weak, and cannot move my feet,
But as men bid me.
Strange I do not die.
Suppose this has not happen'd after all?
I will lean out again and watch for news.
As though I watch'd for news, feel as I did
Just half-an-hour ago, before this news.
How all the street is humming, some men sing,
And some men talk; some look up at the house,
Then lay their heads together and look grave:
Their laughter pains me sorely in the heart;
Their thoughtful talking makes my head turn round:
Yea, some men sing, what is it then they sing?
Eh? Launcelot, and love and fate and death:
They ought to sing of him who was as wight
[Pg 108] As Launcelot or Wade, and yet avail'd
Just nothing, but to fail and fail and fail,
And so at last to die and leave me here,
Alone and wretched; yea, perhaps they will,
When many years are past, make songs of us:
God help me, though, truly I never thought
That I should make a story in this way,
A story that his eyes can never see.
Whatsoever he grieved,
When his horse was relieved,
This Launcelot,
Right valiant was he
God's body to see,
Though he saw it not.
That his son, Lord Galahad,
That high joyaunce had
All his life-days.
Launcelot's praise again,
For he wan crownés ten,
If he wan not twelve.
He was mickle of worth,
Lay him in the cold earth,
A long grave ye may delve.
This last fitte ye may see,
All men pray for me
Who made this history
Cunning and fairly.
RAPUNZEL
RAPUNZEL
The Prince, being in the wood near the tower, in the evening.
What made me weep that day,
When out of the council-hall
The courtiers pass'd away,—
The Witch.
Let down your hair!
Rapunzel.
She climbeth up the same strange way,
Her scarlet cloak spread broad and gay,
Over my golden hair?
[Pg 114]
The Prince.
To think on what they said:
'Thou art a king's own son,
'Tis fit that thou should'st wed.'
The Witch.
Let down your hair!
Rapunzel.
Fathoms below the shadows pass
Over my hair along the grass.
O my golden hair!
The Prince.
Thinking on what they said:
'Thou art a king's own son,
'Tis fit that thou should'st wed.'
The Witch.
Rapunzel.
I lean my brow, strive to forget
That fathoms below my hair grows wet
With the dew, my golden hair.
The Prince.
Men did not bow the head,
Though I was the king's own son:
He rides to dream, they said.
The Witch.
Wind up your hair!
Rapunzel.
The faint red stains with tears are wet;
The long years pass, no help comes yet
To free my golden hair.
The Prince.
Till hot my armour grew,
[Pg 116] Till underneath the leaves
I felt the evening dew.
The Witch.
Weep through your hair!
Rapunzel.
For want of love my heart is cold;
Years pass, the while I loose and fold
The fathoms of my hair.
The Prince, in the morning.[Pg 117]
Saw paths of stars let down to earth from heaven,
Who followed them until they reach'd the light
Wherein they dwell, whose sins are all forgiven;
Of diamond, nor dared to enter in;
All their life long they were content to wait,
Purging them patiently of every sin.
And now am just awaking from that dream;
For even in grey dawn those strange words ring
Through heart and brain, and still I see that gleam.
Beneath these beeches, mail and helmet off,
[Pg 118] Right full of joy that I had come away
From court; for I was patient of the scoff
From any knave or coward of them all:
I was content to live that wretched way;
For truly till I left the council-hall,
My gleams of happiness were faint and few,
But then I saw my real life had begun,
And that I should be strong quite well I knew.
Therefore the birds within the thickets sung,
Even in hot noontide; as I pass'd, above
The elms o'ersway'd with longing towards me hung.
Lay in the beech-wood, was a tower fair,
The marble corners faint against the sky;
And dreamily I wonder'd what lived there:
[Pg 119]
No belfry for the swinging of great bells.
No bolt or stone had ever crush'd the green
Shafts, amber and rose walls, no soot that tells
On the flower-carven marble could I see;
But rather on all sides I saw the proofs
Of a great loneliness that sicken'd me;
Whether my whole life long had been a dream,
And I should wake up soon in some place, where
The piled-up arms of the fighting angels gleam;
No naked baby as I was at first,
But an armed knight, whom fire, hate and scorn
Could turn from nothing: my heart almost burst
I tried so hard to read this riddle through,
To catch some golden cord that I saw gleaming
Like gossamer against the autumn blue.
[Pg 120]
There came a black-hair'd woman, tall and bold,
Who strode straight up to where the tower stood,
And cried out shrilly words, whereon behold—
The Witch, from the tower.
Let down your hair!
The Prince.
(She comes again) a maiden passing fair,
Against the roof, with face turn'd to the wood,
Bearing within her arms waves of her yellow hair.
Poor love! her face quite pale against her hair,
Praying to all the leagues of empty land
To save her from the woe she suffer'd there.
In the witches' sabbaths; it was a delight
For these foul things, while she, with thin feet bare,
Stood on the roof upon the winter night,
[Pg 121]
And then, while God's eye look'd upon the thing,
In the very likenesses of Devil's bats,
Upon the ends of her long hair to swing.
And, spreading out her arms, let her hair flow,
Beneath that veil her smooth white forehead set
Upon the marble, more I do not know;
Floated, as now it floats. O unknown love,
Would that I could thy yellow stair behold,
If still thou standest the lead roof above!
The Witch, as she passes.
To climb up the yellow stair,
Glorious Rapunzel's golden hair?
The Prince.
I think that I might very sweetly die,
My soul somehow reach heaven in joyous pain,
My heavy body on the beech-nuts lie.
[Pg 122]
Most strange and awful, in the beechen wood
I have pass'd now; I still have a faint fear
It is a kind of dream not understood.
The witch and her; have heard no human tones,
But when the witches' revelry has crept
Between the very jointing of my bones.
But needs must stop to hear her sing that song
She always sings at dawning of the day.
I am not happy here, for I am strong,
Yet Rapunzel still weeps within the tower,
And still God ties me down to the green sward,
Because I cannot see the gold stair floating lower.
Rapunzel sings from the tower.
To say when I had need;
I have so many cares,
That I can take no heed
[Pg 123] Of many words in them;
But I remember this:
Christ, bring me to thy bliss.
Mary, maid withouten wem,
Keep me! I am lone, I wis,
Yet besides I have made this
By myself: Give me a kiss,
Dear God dwelling up in heaven!
Also: Send me a true knight,
Lord Christ, with a steel sword, bright,
Broad, and trenchant; yea, and seven
Spans from hilt to point, O Lord!
And let the handle of his sword
Be gold on silver, Lord in heaven!
Such a sword as I see gleam
Sometimes, when they let me dream.
Lord, give Mary a dear kiss,
And let gold Michael, who looked down,
When I was there, on Rouen town
From the spire, bring me that kiss
On a lily! Lord do this!
[Pg 124] When the witches plait my hair,
And the fearfullest of sights
On the earth and in the air,
Will not let me close my eyes,
I murmur often, mix'd with sighs,
That my weak heart will not hold
At some things that I behold.
Nay, not sighs, but quiet groans,
That swell out the little bones
Of my bosom; till a trance
God sends in middle of that dance,
And I behold the countenance
Of Michael, and can feel no more
The bitter east wind biting sore
My naked feet; can see no more
The crayfish on the leaden floor,
That mock with feeler and grim claw.
Beside the blessed countenance
Of golden Michael, on the spire
Glowing all crimson in the fire
Of sunset, I behold a face,
Which sometime, if God give me grace,
May kiss me in this very place.
[Pg 125]
Evening in the tower.
Rapunzel.
Love, we have been six hours here alone:
I fear that she will come before the night,
And if she finds us thus we are undone.
The Prince.
May touch my lips, let my cheek feel your arm;
Now tell me, did you ever see a death,
Or ever see a man take mortal harm?
Rapunzel.
And while they fought I scarce could look at all,
My head swam so; after, a moaning low
Drew my eyes down; I saw against the wall
[Pg 126]
Yet seem'd it like a line of poppies red
In the golden twilight, as he took his rest,
In the dusky time he scarcely seemed dead.
Lay moaning, and the old familiar name
He mutter'd through the grass, seem'd like a scoff
Of some lost soul remembering his past fame.
The visor-bars were twisted towards the face,
The crest, which was a lady very fair,
Wrought wonderfully, was shifted from its place.
Perhaps my eyes were dazzled with the light
That blazed in the west, yet surely on that day
Some crimson thing had changed the grass from bright
Lay there for days after the other went;
Until one day I heard a voice that cried:
Fair knight, I see Sir Robert we were sent
[Pg 127]
So the knights came and bore him straight away
On their lance truncheons, such a batter'd thing,
His mother had not known him on that day,
Wrought wonderfully.
The Prince.
And often rode together, doubtless where
The swords were thickest, and were loyal men,
Rapunzel.
The white moon groweth golden fast, and gleams
Between the aspens stems; I fear, and yet a sense
That will not let me fear aright; my heart,
Feel how it beats, love, strives to get to thee;
I breathe so fast that my lips needs must part;
[Pg 128]
The Prince.
The crimson banner; let it lie below,
Above it in the wind let grasses laugh.
With fingers intertwined: ay, feel my sword!
I wrought it long ago, with golden hair
Flowing about the hilts, because a word,
Of a sweet bow'd down face with yellow hair;
Betwixt green leaves I used to see it gleaming,
A half smile on the lips, though lines of care
What other work in all the world had I,
But through all turns of fate that face to follow?
But wars and business kept me there to die.
My brother, Love, lain moaning in the grass,
[Pg 129] Had I not ridden out to look for you,
When I had watch'd the gilded courtiers pass
Is not the same the minstrel sung of yore;
You call'd it Rapunzel, 'tis not the name.
See, love, the stems shine through the open door.
[Pg 130]
Morning in the woods.
Rapunzel.
The witch's name was Rapunzel: eh! not so sweet?
No! but is this real grass, love, that I tread upon?
What call they these blue flowers that lean across my feet?
The Prince.
And ever let the sweet slim harebells, tenderly hung,
Kiss both your parted lips; and I will hang above,
And try to sing that song the dreamy harper sung.
He sings.
But her yellow rippled hair,
Like a veil, hid Guendolen!
My rough hands so strangely made,
Folded Golden Guendolen.
Framed her face, while on the sward
Tears fell down from Guendolen.
Hands fold round about the sword:
Now no more of Guendolen.
Floating memories of my maid
Make me pray for Guendolen.
Guendolen.
Your hands need never grip the hammer'd sword again,
But all my golden hair shall ever round you flow,
Between the light and shade from Golden Guendolen.
[Pg 132]
Afterwards, in the Palace.
King Sebald.
Put on king's robes of gold;
Over the kirtle green
The gold fell fold on fold.
The Witch, out of hell.
One lock of hair!
Guendolen.
He kisses me much the same way
As in the tower: under the sway
Of all my golden hair.
King Sebald.
A gold crown on my head;
[Pg 133] Through all the gold-hung streets,
Praise God! the people said.
The Witch.
Lend me your hair!
Guendolen.
Who, when day is almost done,
Through a thick wood meets the sun
That blazes in her hair.
King Sebald.
Praise God! the great knights said,
For Sebald the high king,
And the lady's golden head.
The Witch.
Guendolen.
I was unhappy once in dreams,
And even now a harsh voice seems
To hang about my hair.
The Witch.
To climb up the yellow stair,
Glorious Guendolen's golden hair.
CONCERNING GEFFRAY TESTE NOIRE
CONCERNING GEFFRAY TESTE NOIRE
As going to Ortaise you well may do,
Greet him from John of Castel Neuf, and say
All that I tell you, for all this is true.
Who, under shadow of the English name,
Pilled all such towns and countries as were lief
To King Charles and St. Denis; thought it blame
The Duke of Berry, sent Sir John Bonne Lance,
[Pg 138] And other knights, good players with the sword,
To check this thief, and give the land a chance.
That Geffray held, the strong thief! like a king,
High perch'd upon the rock of Ventadour,
Hopelessly strong by Christ! It was mid spring,
With ten good spears; Auvergne is hot, each day
We sweated armed before the barrier;
Good feats of arms were done there often. Eh?
A right good man-at-arms, God pardon him!
I think 'twas Geffray smote him on the brow
With some spiked axe, and while he totter'd, dim
Slipped through his camaille and his throat; well, well!
Alleyne is paid now; your name Alleyne too?
Mary! how strange! but this tale I would tell:
[Pg 139]
Would ride abroad whene'er he chose to ride,
We could not stop him; many a burgher bled
Dear gold all round his girdle; far and wide
'Twixt us and thief Sir Geffray; hauled this way
By Sir Bonne Lance at one time; he gone by,
Down comes this Teste Noire on another day.
Hew wood, draw water, yea, they lived, in short,
As I said just now, utterly forlorn,
Till this our knave and blackhead was out-fought.
Day after day, till on a time he said:
John of Newcastle, if we have good hap,
We catch our thief in two days. How? I said.
Hoping to take well certain sumpter mules
From Carcassonne, going with little train,
Because, forsooth, he thinketh us mere fools;
[Pg 140]
He is but dead: so, Sir, take thirty spears
To Verville forest, if it seem you good.
Then felt I like the horse in Job, who hears
And my red lion on the spear-head flapped,
As faster than the cool wind we rode north,
Towards the wood of Verville; thus it happed.
Got news about Sir Geffray: the red wine
Under the road-side bush was clear; the flies,
The dragon-flies I mind me most, did shine
So: Geffray, said our spies, would pass that way
Next day at sundown: then he must be won;
And so we enter'd Verville wood next day,
'Twixt copses of green hazel, very thick,
And underneath, with glimmering of suns,
The primroses are happy; the dews lick
[Pg 141]
Lest they should glitter; surely they will go
In a long thin line, watchful for alarms,
With all their carriages of booty; so,
What have we lying here? will they be cold,
I wonder, being so bare, above the sod,
Instead of under? This was a knight too, fold
No plate at all, gold rowels to the spurs,
And see the quiet gleam of turquoise pale
Along the ceinture; but the long time blurs
Except these scraps of leather; see how white
The skull is, loose within the coif! He fought
A good fight, maybe, ere he was slain quite.
A little skeleton for a knight, though: ah!
This one is bigger, truly without scathe
His enemies escaped not! ribs driven out far;
[Pg 142]
What say you, Aldovrand, a woman? why?'
Under the coif a gold wreath on the brow,
Yea, see the hair not gone to powder, lie,
This for a knight; but for a dame, my lord,
These loose-hung bones seem shapely still, and tall.
Didst ever see a woman's bones, my Lord?
I was a simple boy, fifteen years old,
The Jacquerie froze up the blood of men
With their fell deeds, not fit now to be told.
Slaying them fast, whereto I help'd, mere boy
As I was then; we gentles cut them down,
These burners and defilers, with great joy.
These fiends had lit a fire, that soon went out,
[Pg 143] The church at Beauvais being so great and fair:
My father, who was by me, gave a shout
Then, panting, chuckled to me: 'John, look! look!
Count the dames' skeletons!' From some bad dream
Like a man just awaked, my father shook;
And very hot with fighting down the street,
And sick of such a life, fell down, with groans
My head went weakly nodding to my feet.
And her right wrist was broken; then I saw
The reason why she had on that war-coat,
Their story came out clear without a flaw;
He threw it over her, yea, hood and all;
Whereby he was much hack'd, while they were stay'd
By those their murderers; many an one did fall
[Pg 144]
Their circle, bore his death-wound out of it;
But as they rode, some archer least afear'd
Drew a strong bow, and thereby she was hit.
Thought her but fainted from her broken wrist,
He bound with his great leathern belt: she bled?
Who knows! he bled too, neither was there miss'd
For both of them, till here, within this wood,
He died scarce sorry; easy this to tell;
After these years the flowers forget their blood.
However much a soldier I might be,
Could I look on a skeleton and say
I care not for it, shudder not: now see,
And thought, and dream'd, and still I scarce could see
[Pg 145] The small white bones that lay upon the flowers,
But evermore I saw the lady; she
By a chain of silver twined about her wrists,
Her loving knight, mounted and arm'd to win
Great honour for her, fighting in the lists.
Into men's hearts (yea, too, so piercing sharp
That joy is, that it marcheth nigh to sorrow
For ever, like an overwinded harp).
Doth it not hurt you too? seemeth some pain
To hold you always, pain to hold your brow
So smooth, unwrinkled ever; yea again,
Would you not, lady, were they shut fast, feel
Far merrier? there so high they will not stop,
They are most sly to glide forth and to steal
And in green gardens scarce can stop my lips
[Pg 146] From wandering on your face, but that your hair
Falls down and tangles me, back my face slips.
Once at a feast; how slowly it sank in,
As though you fear'd that some wild fate might twine
Within that cup, and slay you for a sin.
In such wise that a language new I know
Besides their sound; they quiver, too, with love
When you are standing silent; know this, too,
That bites with all its edge, did your lips lie,
Curled gently, slowly, long time could afford
For caught-up breathings: like a dying sigh
And still kept twitching with a sort of smile,
As likely to be weeping presently;
Your hands too, how I watch'd them all the while!
[Pg 147]
I cried, St. Peter! broke out from the wood
With all my spears; we met them hand to hand,
And shortly slew them; natheless, by the rood,
Months after that he died at last in bed,
From a wound pick'd up at a barrier-fray;
That same year's end a steel bolt in the head,
John Froissart knoweth he is dead by now,
No doubt, but knoweth not this tale just past;
Perchance then you can tell him what I show.
There is a little chapel of squared stone,
Painted inside and out; in green nook pure
There did I lay them, every wearied bone;
Clasped fast together, hair made bright with gold;
This Jaques Picard, known through many lands,
Wrought cunningly; he's dead now: I am old.
A GOOD KNIGHT IN PRISON
Sir Guy, being in the court of a Pagan castle.
A long way off from Christian lands,
A long way off my lady's hands,
A long way off the aspen trees,
And murmur of the lime-tree bees.
My lady often hawking goes,
Heavy of cheer; oft turns behind,
Leaning towards the western wind,
Because it bringeth to her mind
Sad whisperings of happy times,
The face of him who sings these rhymes.
[Pg 149]
Bends low and calls her very fair,
And strives, by pulling down his hair,
To hide from my dear lady's ken
The grisly gash I gave him, when
I cut him down at Camelot;
However he strives, he hides it not,
That tourney will not be forgot,
Besides, it is King Guilbert's lot,
Whatever he says she answers not.
From the king's son to the wood-dove,
Which is the better, he or I?
In this lone Pagan castle, where
The flowers droop in the bad air
On the September evening.
Counting as but a little thing
The foolish spite of a bad king.
[Pg 150]
These Pagan beasts who live in sin,
The sickly flowers pale and wan,
The grim blue-bearded castellan,
The stanchions half worn-out with rust,
Whereto their banner vile they trust:
Why, all these things I hold them just
As dragons in a missal book,
Wherein, whenever we may look,
We see no horror, yea delight
We have, the colours are so bright;
Likewise we note the specks of white,
And the great plates of burnish'd gold.
And everything I can see there,
Sick-pining in the marshland air,
I note: I will go over now,
Like one who paints with knitted brow,
The flowers and all things one by one,
From the snail on the wall to the setting sun.
That leads down to the barbican,
[Pg 151] Which walls with many spears they man,
When news comes to the castellan
Of Launcelot being in the land.
Four spikes of sad sick sunflowers stand;
The castellan with a long wand
Cuts down their leaves as he goes by,
Ponderingly, with screw'd-up eye,
And fingers twisted in his beard.
Nay, was it a knight's shout I heard?
I have a hope makes me afeard:
It cannot be, but if some dream
Just for a minute made me deem
I saw among the flowers there
My lady's face with long red hair,
Pale, ivory-colour'd dear face come,
As I was wont to see her some
Fading September afternoon,
And kiss me, saying nothing, soon
To leave me by myself again;
Could I get this by longing? vain!
[Pg 152] On one broad yellow flower a bee
Drunk with much honey.
Christ! again,
Some distant knight's voice brings me pain,
I thought I had forgot to feel,
I never heard the blissful steel
These ten years past; year after year,
Through all my hopeless sojourn here,
No Christian pennon has been near.
Laus Deo! the dragging wind draws on
Over the marshes, battle won,
Knights' shouts, and axes hammering;
Yea, quicker now the dint and ring
Of flying hoofs; ah, castellan,
When they come back count man for man,
Say whom you miss.
The Pagans, from the battlements.
Why flee ye so like men dismay'd?
The Pagans, from without.
Who follows quick upon us, hot
And shouting with his men-at-arms.
[Pg 153]
Sir Guy.
And ring the bells for fear; at last
My prison walls will be well past.
Sir Launcelot, from outside.
Let down the drawbridge quick to me,
And open doors, that I may see
Guy the good knight!
The Pagans, from the battlements.
With mere big words ye win us not.
Sir Launcelot.
And archers clear the vile walls there.
Bring back the notches to the ear,
Shoot well together! God to aid!
These miscreants will be well paid.
Is good to win my lady's smiles
For his good shooting: Launcelot!
On knights apace! this game is hot!
[Pg 154]
Sir Guy sayeth afterwards.
And saying so, I felt a blow
From some clench'd hand across my brow,
And fell down on the sunflowers
Just as a hammering smote my ears;
After which this I felt in sooth,
My bare hands throttling without ruth
The hairy-throated castellan;
Then a grim fight with those that ran
To slay me, while I shouted: God
For the Lady Mary! deep I trod
That evening in my own red blood;
Nevertheless so stiff I stood,
That when the knights burst the old wood
Of the castle-doors, I was not dead.
Her lips, and her hair golden red,
Because to-day we have been wed.
OLD LOVE
I said; he said: Yea, very old!
Whereat the mournfullest of smiles
Creased his dry skin with many a fold.
Into a round salade, he said,
The basnet being quite out of joint,
Natheless the salade rasps my head.
And you are getting old, Sir John;
(He said this with that cunning smile
That was most sad) we both wear on;
[Pg 156]
With eyebrows up; except my lord,
And my dear lady, none I see
That know the ways of my old sword.
Stopp'd all my blood). But tell me, John,
Is it quite true that Pagans hang
So thick about the east, that on
Can fly unpaid for? True, I said,
And in such way the miscreants drag
Christ's cross upon the ground, I dread
Within my heart, these things are small;
This is not small, that things outwear
I thought were made for ever, yea, all,
I saw the duke in court next day;
Just as before, his grand great head
Above his gold robes dreaming lay,
[Pg 157]
I saw his duchess sit by him;
And she, she was changed more; her hair
Before my eyes that used to swim,
Once, when I used to watch her sit,
Her hair is bright still, yet it is
As though some dust were thrown on it.
Some grey glass were behind; her brow
And cheeks the straining bones show through,
Are not so good for kissing now.
A great duke's wife these many years,
They will not shudder with a kiss
As once they did, being moist with tears.
Of clinging that they used to have;
They look'd quite easy, as they lay
Upon the silken cushions brave
[Pg 158]
My Lord Duke bears upon his shield.
Her face, alas! that I have seen
Look fresher than an April field,
Her tender walking; when she walks
She is most queenly I well know,
And she is fair still. As the stalks
So is she grown now unto me
This spring-time, when the flowers star
The meadows, birds sing wonderfully.
About his neck, and kiss'd him so,
And then his coming step would ring
Joy-bells for her; some time ago.
That hinders true life overmuch,
Sometimes like a lost heaven, these seem.
This love is not so hard to smutch.
THE GILLIFLOWER OF GOLD
I wore upon my helm alway,
And won the prize of this tourney.
Hah! hah! la belle jaune giroflée.
His sun was weak to wither it,
Lord Miles's blood was dew on it:
Hah! hah! la belle jaune giroflée.
From John's steel-coat, my eye was true;
I wheel'd about, and cried for you,
Hah! hah! la belle jaune giroflée.
[Pg 160]
Though my sword flew like rotten wood,
To shout, although I scarcely stood,
Hah! hah! la belle jaune giroflée.
My axe from round my neck, and break
John's steel-coat up for my love's sake.
Hah! hah! la belle jaune giroflée.
Arming afresh, I felt a pain
Take hold of me, I was so fain,
Hah! hah! la belle jaune giroflée.
Right in my ears again, and shew
The gilliflower blossom'd new.
Hah! hah! la belle jaune giroflée.
His tabard bore three points of flame
From a red heart: with little blame,
Hah! hah! la belle jaune giroflée.
[Pg 161]
He was the first to turn and draw
His sword, that had nor speck nor flaw;
Hah! hah! la belle jaune giroflée.
And my brain, dizzied and afraid,
Within my helm a fierce tune play'd,
Hah! hah! la belle jaune giroflée.
Bow'd to the gilliflower bed,
The yellow flowers stain'd with red;
Hah! hah! la belle jaune giroflée.
The fierce tune in my helm would play,
La belle! la belle! jaune giroflée!
Hah! hah! la belle jaune giroflée.
"La belle! la belle!" but who fell then?
Le Sieur Guillaume, who struck down ten;
Hah! hah! la belle jaune giroflée.
[Pg 162]
Toward my own crown and the Queen's place,
They led me at a gentle pace.
Hah! hah! la belle jaune giroflée.
Bow'd o'er the gilliflower bed,
The yellow flowers stain'd with red.
Hah! hah! la belle jaune giroflée.
SHAMEFUL DEATH
The mass-priest knelt at the side,
I and his mother stood at the head,
Over his feet lay the bride;
We were quite sure that he was dead,
Though his eyes were open wide.
He did not die in the day,
But in the morning twilight
His spirit pass'd away,
When neither sun nor moon was bright,
And the trees were merely grey.
Knight's axe, or the knightly spear,
[Pg 164] Yet spoke he never a word
After he came in here;
I cut away the cord
From the neck of my brother dear.
For the recreants came behind,
In a place where the hornbeams grow,
A path right hard to find,
For the hornbeam boughs swing so,
That the twilight makes it blind.
When his arms were pinion'd fast,
Sir John the knight of the Fen,
Sir Guy of the Dolorous Blast,
With knights threescore and ten,
Hung brave Lord Hugh at last.
And my hair is all turn'd grey,
But I met Sir John of the Fen
Long ago on a summer day,
[Pg 165] And am glad to think of the moment when
I took his life away.
And my strength is mostly pass'd,
But long ago I and my men,
When the sky was overcast,
And the smoke roll'd over the reeds of the fen,
Slew Guy of the Dolorous Blast.
I pray you pray for Sir Hugh,
A good knight and a true,
And for Alice, his wife, pray too.
THE EVE OF CRECY
And gold where the hems of her kirtle meet,
And a golden girdle round my sweet;
Ah! qu'elle est belle La Marguerite.
Freshly dress'd and pleasantly;
Margaret's hair falls down to her knee;
Ah! qu'elle est belle La Marguerite.
I would kiss the place where the gold hems meet,
And the golden girdle round my sweet:
Ah! qu'elle est belle La Marguerite.
[Pg 167]
When the arriere-ban goes through the land,
Six basnets under my pennon stand;
Ah! qu'elle est belle La Marguerite.
Sir Lambert du Bois, with all his men good,
Has neither food nor firewood;
Ah! qu'elle est belle La Marguerite.
And the golden girdle of my sweet,
And thereabouts where the gold hems meet;
Ah! qu'elle est belle La Marguerite.
While my few poor varlets grumble and drink
In my desolate hall, where the fires sink,
Ah! qu'elle est belle La Marguerite.
In glory of gold and glory of hair,
And glory of glorious face most fair;
Ah! qu'elle est belle La Marguerite.
[Pg 168]
Because this battle draweth near:
For what have I to lose or fear?
Ah! qu'elle est belle La Marguerite.
A right fair measure in this war-dance,
Before the eyes of Philip of France;
Ah! qu'elle est belle La Marguerite.
While my new towers stand up three and three,
And my hall gets painted fair to see,
Ah! qu'elle est belle La Marguerite.
For Lambert, banneret of the wood,
Has heaps of food and firewood;
Ah! qu'elle est belle La Marguerite;
Of a damsel of right noble blood.
St. Ives, for Lambert of the Wood!
Ah! qu'elle est belle La Marguerite.
THE JUDGMENT OF GOD
When you catch his eyes through the helmet-slit,
Swerve to the left, then out at his head,
And the Lord God give you joy of it!
Were a little dimm'd as I turn'd away;
This giving up of blood for blood
Will finish here somehow to-day.
Their howling almost blinded me;
Yet for all that I was not bent
By any shame. Hard by, the sea
[Pg 170]
We did that wrong, but now the place
Is very pleasant, and the air
Blows cool on any passer's face.
Into the circle of these lists:
Yea, howl out, butchers! tell me how
His hands were cut off at the wrists;
A league above his spear-point, high
Above the owls, to that strong place
Among the waters; yea, yea, cry:
Sir Oliver, the flower of all
The Hainault knights! The day being hot,
He sat beneath a broad white pall,
What a good knight he look'd! his sword
Laid thwart his knees; he liked to feel
Its steadfast edge clear as his word.
[Pg 171]
Smiled whitely on him, sick with fear!
How all the ladies up above
Twisted their pretty hands! so near
They cannot love like you can, who
Would burn your hands off, if that pain
Could win a kiss; am I not true
Do not fear death or anything;
If I should limp home wounded, why,
While I lay sick you would but sing,
If they spat on the recreant knight,
Threw stones at him, and cursed him deep,
Why then: what then? your hand would light
And you would kiss him, and in soft
Cool scented clothes would lap him, pace
The quiet room and weep oft, oft
[Pg 172]
With your sweet chin and mouth; and in
The order'd garden you would seek
The biggest roses: any sin.
Or God's knight any longer: you,
Being than they so much more white,
So much more pure and good and true,
Is not that wrong turn'd right at last
Through all these years, and I wash'd clean?
Say, yea, Ellayne; the time is past,
Up to your feet the fire crept,
And the smoke through the brown leaves sere
Blinded your dear eyes that you wept;
And kiss'd you on the saddle-bow?
Did not the blue owl mark the men
Whose spears stood like the corn a-row?
[Pg 173]
And must needs beat me, as I fear,
Unless I catch him in the fight,
My father's crafty way: John, here!
To help me if I fall or win,
For even if I beat, their hate
Will grow to more than this mere grin.
THE LITTLE TOWER
Let us ride to the Little Tower again,
Do on the hauberk, gird on the sword.
Change gilded scabbard to leather sheath:
This is joy to ride to my love again:
Who knows one field from the other field,
Till your hand strikes on the bridge parapet.
Under the water? Hard as wood,
Seven hours yet before the light.
My tabard has grown a heavy load.
Dead grey night for five hours still.
Lower, down to the poplar plain.
The Little Tower draweth in sight;
Therefore the roofs of wet slate stare.
With little but hard glaive-strokes for pay?
Three more days, and then the sword;
And above his white brows, pale and dead,
And for her the stake and the witches' fire.
Take axe and pick and spade, I pray.
God send us three more days such rain!
The Little Tower with no great ease
Much sheep and oxen, everything
Good friends, ye know me no hard liege;
Pray God to keep you frank and free.
The Little Tower will stand well here
And over it our green and red,
From mere old age when we are dead.
THE SAILING OF THE SWORD
When the Sword went out to sea,
I scarcely saw my sisters' heads
Bowed each beside a tree.
I could not see the castle leads,
When the Sword went out to sea,
When the Sword went out to sea,
But Ursula's was russet brown:
For the mist we could not see
The scarlet roofs of the good town,
When the Sword went out to sea.
When the Sword went out to sea;
[Pg 179] With sere oak-leaves did Ursula stand;
O! yet alas for me!
I did but bear a peel'd white wand,
When the Sword went out to sea.
When the Sword went out to sea,
My sisters wore; I wore but white:
Red, brown, and white, are three;
Three damozels; each had a knight,
When the Sword went out to sea.
When the Sword went out to sea,
Alicia, while I see thy head,
What shall I bring for thee?
O, my sweet Lord, a ruby red:
The Sword went out to sea.
When the Sword went out to sea,
O, Ursula! while I see the town,
What shall I bring for thee?
[Pg 180] Dear knight, bring back a falcon brown:
The Sword went out to sea.
When the Sword went out to sea,
But only turn'd away his head;
A quick shriek came from me:
Come back, dear lord, to your white maid.
The Sword went out to sea.
When the Sword came back from sea;
Beneath an apple-tree our heads
Stretched out toward the sea;
Grey gleam'd the thirsty castle-leads,
When the Sword came back from sea.
When the Sword came back from sea;
He kissed Alicia on the head:
I am come back to thee;
'Tis time, sweet love, that we were wed,
Now the Sword is back from sea!
[Pg 181]
When the Sword came back from sea;
His arms went round tall Ursula's gown:
What joy, O love, but thee?
Let us be wed in the good town,
Now the Sword is back from sea!
When the Sword came back from sea;
Upon the deck a tall white maid
Sat on Lord Roland's knee;
His chin was press'd upon her head,
When the Sword came back from sea!
SPELL-BOUND
How dismally the days go by!
I hear the tinkling of the bell,
I see the cross against the sky.
Yet comes no reaper to the corn;
The golden land is like a bride
When first she knows herself forlorn;
Laid downward over tender hands;
For stainèd silk she hath no care,
No care for broken ivory wands;
[Pg 183]
The golden stars on the blue roof
Yet glitter, though against her hand
His cold sword presses for a proof
How many hours did she wait
For me, I wonder? Till the day
Had faded wholly, and the gate
I wonder did she raise her head
And go away, fleeing the lights;
And lay the samite on her bed,
Then sit with hands laid on her knees,
Shuddering at half-heard sound of girls
That chatter outside in the breeze?
At distant tramp of coming knight?
How often did the choking sob
Raise up her head and lips? The light,
[Pg 184]
And drag her sternly down before
People who loved her not? in prayers
Did she say one name and no more?
All tales they ever told to me,
This only burden through them rung:
O golden love that waitest me!
Sometimes I have a little rest
In fairest dreams, when on thy face
My lips lie, or thy hands are prest
Draw near and nearer to mine own;
But when the vision from me slips,
In colourless dawn I lie and moan,
That makes me start at little things,
The blackbird screaming from the wood,
The sudden whirr of pheasants' wings.
[Pg 185]
But when that wild time had gone by,
And in these arms I folded thee,
Who ever thought those days could die?
For what perchance may never come;
You think I have forgotten you,
That I grew tired and went home.
Against the wall with strainèd hands,
And turn'd my face toward the wood,
Away from all the golden lands;
And pale face thin and wan with care,
And stainèd raiment no more neat,
The white dust lying on your hair:
This land was my wide prison, dear;
I could not choose but go; at home
There is a wizard whom I fear:
[Pg 186]
I could not break; he set me here
Above the golden-waving plains,
Where never reaper cometh near.
Wherewith in happy days of old
I won you well from knight and lord;
My heart upswells and I grow bold.
Half lying now, you are so weak,
Within my arms, unless your hand
Pass to and fro across my cheek.
THE WIND
Only the wild-going wind round by the garden-wall,
For the dawn just now is breaking, the wind beginning to fall.
Wind, wind, unhappy! thou art blind,
Yet still thou wanderest the lily-seed to find.
Never moving my chair for fear the dogs should cry,
Making no noise at all while the flambeau burns awry.
[Pg 188]
It is hung, and the dragons thereon grin out in the gusts of the wind;
On its folds an orange lies, with a deep gash cut in the rind.
Wind, wind, unhappy! thou art blind,
still thou wanderest the lily-seed to find.
And the faint yellow juice ooze out like blood from a wizard's jar;
And the dogs will howl for those who went last month to the war.
Wind, wind, unhappy! thou art blind,
Yet still thou wanderest the lily-seed to find.
O, so long ago! Yes, I will be quiet at last:
Whether I like it or not, a grim half-slumber is cast
[Pg 189]
And above my half-shut eyes, the blue roof 'gins to part,
And show the blue spring sky, till I am ready to start
And I fall in a dream that I walk'd with her on the side of a hill,
Dotted, for was it not spring? with tufts of the daffodil.
Wind, wind, unhappy! thou art blind,
Yet still thou wanderest the lily-seed to find.
Her finger kept the place; I caught her, we both did stand
Face to face, on the top of the highest hill in the land.
[Pg 190]
Wind, wind, unhappy! thou art blind,
Yet still thou wanderest the lily-seed to find.
While the flush went out of her face as her head fell back on a tree,
And a spasm caught her mouth, fearful for me to see;
Weeping she totter'd forward, so glad that I should prevail,
And her hair went over my robe, like a gold flag over a sail.
Wind, wind, unhappy! thou art blind,
Yet still thou wanderest the lily-seed to find.
[Pg 191] And then lay down on the grass, where the mark on the moss is now,
And spread her arms out wide while I went down below.
Wind, wind, unhappy! thou art blind,
Yet still thou wanderest the lily-seed to find.
Till I gather'd and held in my arms great sheaves of the daffodil,
And when I came again my Margaret lay there still.
How they were caught and held in her loose ungirded vest!
But one beneath her arm died, happy so to be prest!
Wind, wind, unhappy! thou art blind,
Yet still thou wanderest the lily-seed to find.
[Pg 192]
She said no word when I came again, so, flower by flower,
I counted the daffodils over, and cast them languidly lower.
Wind, wind, unhappy! thou art blind,
Yet still thou wanderest the lily-seed to find.
Clear'd from the yellow flowers, and I grew hollow with pain,
And on to us both there fell from the sun-shower drops of rain.
Wind, wind, unhappy! thou art blind,
Yet still thou wanderest the lily-seed to find.
Blood lay in the many folds of the loose ungirded vest,
Blood lay upon her arm where the flower had been prest.
[Pg 193]
The faint yellow juice oozed out like blood from a wizard's jar;
And then in march'd the ghosts of those that had gone to the war.
Upon their long thin shields; but the colours were all grown faint,
And faint upon their banner was Olaf, king and saint.
Wind, wind, unhappy! thou art blind,
Yet still thou wanderest the lily-seed to find.
THE BLUE CLOSET
The Damozels.
Between the wash of the tumbling seas
We are ready to sing, if so ye please;
So lay your long hands on the keys;
Sing, Laudate pueri.
Boom'd in the wind a knell for the dead,
Though no one toll'd it, a knell for the dead.
Lady Louise.
Not too loud; for you sing not well
If you drown the faint boom of the bell;
He is weary, so am I.
[Pg 195]
Flapped on the banner of the dead;
(Was he asleep, or was he dead?)
Lady Alice.
Two damozels wearing purple and green,
Four lone ladies dwelling here
From day to day and year to year;
And there is none to let us go;
To break the locks of the doors below,
Or shovel away the heaped-up snow;
And when we die no man will know
That we are dead; but they give us leave,
Once every year on Christmas-eve,
To sing in the Closet Blue one song;
And we should be so long, so long,
If we dared, in singing; for dream on dream,
They float on in a happy stream;
Float from the gold strings, float from the keys,
Float from the open'd lips of Louise;
But, alas! the sea-salt oozes through
The chinks of the tiles of the Closet Blue;
And ever the great bell overhead
[Pg 196] Booms in the wind a knell for the dead,
The wind plays on it a knell for the dead.
They sing all together.
He came to this tower with hands full of snow?
And sprinkled the dusty snow over my head.
Ran over my shoulders, white shoulders and bare.
For my tears are all hidden deep under the seas;
But my eyes are no longer blue, as in old years;
Left off his pealing for the dead,
Perchance, because the wind was dead.
O! is he sleeping, my scarf round his head?
With the long scarlet scarf I used to wear?
Both his soul and his body to me are most dear.
Either body or spirit this wild Christmas-eve.
With a patch of earth from the land of the dead,
For he was strong in the land of the dead.
His kind kiss'd lips all grey?
O, love Louise, have you waited long?
O, my lord Arthur, yea.
[Pg 198]
Was stiff with frozen rime?
His eyes were grown quite blue again,
As in the happy time.
Of the happy golden land!
O, sisters, cross the bridge with me,
My eyes are full of sand.
What matter that I cannot see,
If ye take me by the hand?
And the tumbling seas mourned for the dead;
For their song ceased, and they were dead.
THE TUNE OF SEVEN TOWERS
For what is left to fetch away
From the desolate battlements all arow,
And the lead roof heavy and grey?
Therefore, said fair Yoland of the flowers,
This is the tune of Seven Towers.
Except in the white moonlight
The white ghosts walk in a row;
If one could see it, an awful sight,
Listen! said fair Yoland of the flowers,
This is the tune of Seven Towers.
Though they sit by the side of the moat,
[Pg 200] Feet half in the water, there in a row,
Long hair in the wind afloat.
Therefore, said fair Yoland of the flowers,
This is the tune of Seven Towers.
He must go to it all alone,
Its gates will not open to any row
Of glittering spears: will you go alone?
Listen! said fair Yoland of the flowers,
This is the tune of Seven Towers.
To fetch me my coif away,
My coif and my kirtle, with pearls arow,
Oliver, go to-day!
Therefore, said fair Yoland of the flowers,
This is the tune of Seven Towers.
I cannot tell you why;
If you go, the priests and I in a row
Will pray that you may not die.
Listen! said fair Yoland of the flowers,
This is the tune of Seven Towers.
[Pg 201]
I will kiss your mouth at last;
[She sayeth inwardly.]
(The graves stand grey in a row.)
Oliver, hold me fast!
Therefore, said fair Yoland of the flowers,
This is the tune of Seven Towers.
GOLDEN WINGS
In the happy poplar land,
Did an ancient castle stand,
With an old knight for a warden.
In its walls, and old grey stone;
Over which red apples shone
At the right time of the year.
Yellow lichen on the stone,
Over which red apples shone;
Little war that castle knew.
[Pg 203]
Each side had a red-brick lip,
Green and mossy with the drip
Of dew and rain; there was a boat
About the stern; it was great bliss
For lovers to sit there and kiss
In the hot summer noons, not seen.
In very little ripples went;
The way the heavy aspens bent
Towards it, was a thing to mind.
Went up and down with gilded chains,
'Twas pleasant in the summer rains
Within the bridge-house there to sit.
The water-weeds, for ladies came
Each day, and young knights did the same,
And gave them cakes and bread for meat.
[Pg 204]
A red roof gold-spiked over it,
Wherein upon their eggs to sit
Week after week; no drop of blood,
Came ever there, or any tear;
Most certainly from year to year
'Twas pleasant as a Provence rose.
That over the turret-roofs hung down;
The battlements could get no frown
From the flower-moulded cornices.
Miles and Giles and Isabeau,
Tall Jehane du Castel beau,
Alice of the golden hair,
Fair Ellayne le Violet,
Mary, Constance fille de fay,
Many dames with footfall light.
[Pg 205]
Whether it be dame or knight,
Half of scarlet, half of white
Their raiment was; of roses fair
At Ladies' Gard the way was so:
Fair Jehane du Castel beau
Wore her wreath till it was dead.
Of the raiment white and red,
Or the garland on her head,
She had none with whom to sit
None the more did Jehane weep,
She would only stand and keep
Saying: He will be here soon!
Miles and Giles and Gervaise passed,
Holding each some white hand fast,
Every time they heard her say:
[Pg 206]
Undern cometh after noon;
Golden wings will be here soon,
What if I some token send?
With open mouth and open eyes,
Like some one listening with surprise,
She sat before the sight of all.
With neck stretch'd out and chin thrown up,
One hand around a golden cup;
And strangely with her fingers fair
The minstrels in the gallery
Sung: Arthur, who will never die,
In Avallon he groweth old.
Rose and caught up her gown and ran;
None stopp'd her eager face and wan
Of all that pleasant company.
[Pg 207]
Upon her bed she sat; and drew
Her breath in quick gasps; till she knew
That no man follow'd after her.
Loosed all her hair, and let it lie
Upon the coverlet; thereby
She laid the gown of white and red;
And bared her feet; still more and more
Her sweet face redden'd; evermore
She murmur'd: He will be here soon;
My tender body waits him here;
And if he knows, I have no fear
For poor Jehane du Castel beau.
Whose hilts were silver, and she sung
Somehow like this, wild words that rung
A long way over the moonlit land:
[Pg 208]
Grey light from tree to tree,
Gold hair beside my knee,
I pray thee come to me,
Gold wings!
The red-bill'd moorhen dips.
Sweet kisses on red lips;
Alas! the red rust grips,
And the blood-red dagger rips,
Yet, O knight, come to me!
The west wind from the wheat
Blows cold across my feet;
Is it not time to meet
Gold wings across the sea?
Small feathers left afloat
By the blue-painted boat;
Swift running of the stoat,
[Pg 209] Sweet gurgling note by note
Of sweet music.
Listen how gold hair sings,
And the Ladies Castle rings,
Gold wings across the sea.
Outside, the wall is red,
Thereby the apple hangs,
And the wasp, caught by the fangs,
And the bat flits till light,
And the love-crazèd knight
The weary days pass,
Gold wings across the sea.
Moonlight from tree to tree,
Sweet hair laid on my knee,
O, sweet knight, come to me.
[Pg 210]
The white swan's long neck drips,
I pray thee kiss my lips,
Gold wings across the sea!
No answer in the cold grey dawn;
No answer when the shaven lawn
Grew green, and all the roses bright.
Her lips were twitch'd, and wretched tears,
Some, as she lay, roll'd past her ears,
Some fell from off her quivering chin.
Rose up and fell right brokenly;
As though the unhappy heart was nigh
Striving to break with all its strength.
Her cramp'd feet would not hold her; she
Sank down and crept on hand and knee,
On the window-sill she laid her head.
[Pg 211]
She look'd out, muttering dismally:
There is no sail upon the sea,
No pennon on the empty hill.
Or meet their happy faces here,
And wretchedly I have no fear;
A little while, and I am gone.
And totter'd; cold and misery
Still made the deep sobs come, till she
At last stretch'd out her fingers sweet,
And, stealing down the silent stair,
Barefooted in the morning air.
And only in her smock, did stand
And hope grew in her as she said:
I have thrown off the white and red,
And pray God it may come to pass
[Pg 212]
Before I meet him; if, indeed,
Meanwhile both soul and body bleed,
Yet there is end of misery,
But I can go to him and show
These new things I have got to know,
And make him speak, who has been dumb.
Changed her white feet to glowing gold,
Upon her smock, on crease and fold,
Changed that to gold which had been dun.
Fair Ellayne le Violet,
Mary, Constance fille de fay!
Where is Jehane du Castel beau?
Down to the hard yellow sand,
Where the water meets the land.
This is Jehane by her face.
[Pg 213]
Mary! she is slain outright;
Verily a piteous sight;
Take her up without a word!
Ladies' Gard must meet the war;
Whatsoever knights these are,
Man the walls withouten fear!
Axes to the aspens tall!
Barriers without the wall
May be lightly made of these.
Poor Ellayne le Violet,
Bent with fear! we miss to-day
Brave Jehane du Castel beau.
Wretched Constance fille de fay!
Verily we miss to-day
Fair Jehane du Castel beau.
[Pg 214]
Upon the mouldering castle-wall,
Before they ripen there they fall:
There are no banners on the tower,
The green weeds trailing in the moat;
Inside the rotting leaky boat
You see a slain man's stiffen'd feet.
THE HAYSTACK IN THE FLOODS
To part at last without a kiss?
Yea, had she borne the dirt and rain
That her own eyes might see him slain
Beside the haystack in the floods?
The stirrup touching either shoe,
She rode astride as troopers do;
With kirtle kilted to her knee,
To which the mud splash'd wretchedly;
And the wet dripp'd from every tree
Upon her head and heavy hair,
And on her eyelids broad and fair;
The tears and rain ran down her face.
[Pg 216] By fits and starts they rode apace,
And very often was his place
Far off from her; he had to ride
Ahead, to see what might betide
When the roads cross'd; and sometimes, when
There rose a murmuring from his men,
Had to turn back with promises.
Ah me! she had but little ease;
And often for pure doubt and dread
She sobb'd, made giddy in the head
By the swift riding; while, for cold,
Her slender fingers scarce could hold
The wet reins; yea, and scarcely, too,
She felt the foot within her shoe
Against the stirrup: all for this,
To part at last without a kiss
Beside the haystack in the floods.
They saw across the only way
That Judas, Godmar, and the three
Red running lions dismally
Grinn'd from his pennon, under which
In one straight line along the ditch,
[Pg 217] They counted thirty heads.
While Robert turn'd round to his men,
She saw at once the wretched end,
And, stooping down, tried hard to rend
Her coif the wrong way from her head,
And hid her eyes; while Robert said:
Nay, love, 'tis scarcely two to one,
At Poictiers where we made them run
So fast: why, sweet my love, good cheer,
The Gascon frontier is so near,
Nought after this.
My God! my God! I have to tread
The long way back without you; then
The court at Paris; those six men;
The gratings of the Chatelet;
The swift Seine on some rainy day
Like this, and people standing by,
And laughing, while my weak hands try
To recollect how strong men swim.
All this, or else a life with him,
[Pg 218] For which I should be damned at last,
Would God that this next hour were past!
St. George for Marny! cheerily;
And laid his hand upon her rein.
Alas! no man of all his train
Gave back that cheery cry again;
And, while for rage his thumb beat fast
Upon his sword-hilt, some one cast
About his neck a kerchief long,
And bound him.
To Godmar; who said: Now, Jehane,
Your lover's life is on the wane
So fast, that, if this very hour
You yield not as my paramour,
He will not see the rain leave off:
Nay, keep your tongue from gibe and scoff
Sir Robert, or I slay you now.
Then gazed upon the palm, as though
[Pg 219] She thought her forehead bled, and: No!
She said, and turn'd her head away,
As there were nothing else to say,
And everything were settled: red
Grew Godmar's face from chin to head:
Jehane, on yonder hill there stands
My castle, guarding well my lands;
What hinders me from taking you,
And doing that I list to do
To your fair wilful body, while
Your knight lies dead?
Wrinkled her face, her lips grew thin,
A long way out she thrust her chin:
You know that I should strangle you
While you were sleeping; or bite through
Your throat, by God's help: ah! she said,
Lord Jesus, pity your poor maid!
For in such wise they hem me in,
I cannot choose but sin and sin,
Whatever happens: yet I think
They could not make me eat or drink,
And so should I just reach my rest.
[Pg 220] Nay, if you do not my behest,
O Jehane! though I love you well,
Said Godmar, would I fail to tell
All that I know? Foul lies, she said.
Eh? lies, my Jehane? by God's head,
At Paris folks would deem them true!
Do you know, Jehane, they cry for you:
Jehane the brown! Jehane the brown!
Give us Jehane to burn or drown!
Eh! gag me Robert! Sweet my friend,
This were indeed a piteous end
For those long fingers, and long feet,
And long neck, and smooth shoulders sweet;
An end that few men would forget
That saw it. So, an hour yet:
Consider, Jehane, which to take
Of life or death!
Dismounting, did she leave that place,
And totter some yards: with her face
Turn'd upward to the sky she lay,
Her head on a wet heap of hay,
And fell asleep: and while she slept,
[Pg 221] And did not dream, the minutes crept
Round to the twelve again; but she,
Being waked at last, sigh'd quietly,
And strangely childlike came, and said:
I will not. Straightway Godmar's head,
As though it hung on strong wires, turn'd
Most sharply round, and his face burn'd.
He could not weep, but gloomily
He seem'd to watch the rain; yea, too,
His lips were firm; he tried once more
To touch her lips; she reached out, sore
And vain desire so tortured them,
The poor grey lips, and now the hem
Of his sleeve brush'd them.
Up Godmar rose, thrust them apart;
From Robert's throat he loosed the bands
Of silk and mail; with empty hands
Held out, she stood and gazed, and saw,
The long bright blade without a flaw
Glide out from Godmar's sheath, his hand
[Pg 222] In Robert's hair; she saw him bend
Back Robert's head; she saw him send
The thin steel down; the blow told well,
Right backward the knight Robert fell,
And moaned as dogs do, being half dead,
Unwitting, as I deem: so then
Godmar turn'd grinning to his men,
Who ran, some five or six, and beat
His head to pieces at their feet.
So, Jehane, the first fitte is read!
Take note, my lady, that your way
Lies backward to the Chatelet!
She shook her head and gazed awhile
At her cold hands with a rueful smile,
As though this thing had made her mad.
Beside the haystack in the floods.
TWO RED ROSES ACROSS THE MOON
Large of her eyes, and slim and tall;
And ever she sung from noon to noon,
Two red roses across the moon.
In early spring, when the roads were dry;
And he heard that lady sing at the noon,
Two red roses across the moon.
But he rode a-gallop past the hall;
And left that lady singing at noon,
Two red roses across the moon.
[Pg 224]
And the scarlet and blue had got to be met,
He rode on the spur till the next warm noon:
Two red roses across the moon.
From the windmill to the watermill;
And he said to himself, as it near'd the noon,
Two red roses across the moon.
A golden helm or a golden shoe:
So he cried, as the fight grew thick at the noon,
Two red roses across the moon!
The huddled spears of the scarlet and blue;
And they cried, as they cut them down at the noon,
Two red roses across the moon!
By the hall, though draggled sore with the rain;
And his lips were pinch'd to kiss at the noon
Two red roses across the moon.
[Pg 225]
All was gold, there was nothing of brown;
And the horns blew up in the hall at noon,
Two red roses across the moon.
WELLAND RIVER
Across the lily lee:
O, gentle Sir Robert, ye are not kind
To stay so long at sea.
Your scarlet pennon fair;
O, leave the Easterlings alone,
Because of my golden hair.
That dear pennon I see
Go up toward the goodly street,
'Twill be a fair day for me.
[Pg 227]
At Stamford, the good town,
And let the Easterlings go free,
And their ships go up and down.
I wax both pale and green,
From gold to gold of my girdle
There is an inch between.
Last night upon my knee,
And my heart grew sad and sore to think
Thy face I'd never see.
As I lay upon my bed:
Sorrow! the man I'll never see
That had my maidenhead.
And comb'd her yellow hair,
She saw come over Stamford bridge
The scarlet pennon fair.
[Pg 228]
The gold shoes on her feet,
She saw Sir Robert and his men
Ride up the Stamford street.
And a bascinet of steel;
Take note his goodly Collayne sword
Smote the spur upon his heel.
There rode a fair lady,
For every ruby Ellayne wore,
I count she carried three.
That fell to her middle free?
But that lady's hair down in the street,
Fell lower than her knee.
Was waxen pale and green:
That lady's face was goodly red,
She had but little tene.
[Pg 229]
He grew a little wroth:
O, why does yon pale face look at me
From out the golden cloth?
That aye rode him beside,
Has come to see your bonny face
This merry summer-tide.
Light on his cap of steel:
O, I have gotten two hounds, fair knight,
The one has served me well;
Has come from over sea,
And all his fell is sleek and fine,
But little he knows of me.
And which shall bide with me?
O, lady, have no doubt to keep
The one that best loveth thee.
[Pg 230]
Ye do not so by me.
Lie still, fair love, have ye gotten harm
While I was on the sea?
I sicken to the death,
I pray you nurse-tend me, my knight,
Whiles that I have my breath.
He left that dame to stand,
And whiles she wept, and whiles she cursed
That she ever had taken land.
And fair she fell asleep,
And long and long days after that
Sir Robert's house she did keep.
RIDING TOGETHER
The wind blew steady from the East;
For many days hot grew the weather,
About the time of our Lady's Feast.
Yet met we neither friend nor foe;
Hotter and clearer grew the weather,
Steadily did the East wind blow.
Clear-cut, with shadows very black,
As freely we rode on together
With helms unlaced and bridles slack.
[Pg 232]
We, looking down the green-bank'd stream,
Saw flowers in the sunny weather,
And saw the bubble-making bream.
And hung above our heads the rood,
Or watch'd night-long in the dewy weather,
The while the moon did watch the wood.
Straight out the banners stream'd behind,
As we gallop'd on in the sunny weather,
With faces turn'd towards the wind.
As thick we saw the pagans ride;
His eager face in the clear fresh weather,
Shone out that last time by my side.
It rock'd to the crash of the meeting spears,
Down rain'd the buds of the dear spring weather,
The elm-tree flowers fell like tears.
[Pg 233]
I threw my arms above my head,
For close by my side, in the lovely weather,
I saw him reel and fall back dead.
He waited the death-stroke there in his place,
With thoughts of death, in the lovely weather,
Gapingly mazed at my madden'd face.
In vain: the little Christian band
The pagans drown'd, as in stormy weather,
The river drowns low-lying land.
They bound his corpse to nod by my side:
Then on we rode, in the bright March weather,
With clash of cymbals did we ride.
My prison-bars are thick and strong,
I take no heed of any weather,
The sweet Saints grant I live not long.
FATHER JOHN'S WAR-SONG
The Reapers.
So many reapers and no little son,
To meet you when the day is done,
With little stiff legs to waddle and run?
Pray you beg, borrow, or steal one son.
Hurrah for the corn-sheaves of Father John!
Father John.
And go not down to the river,
Lest the kingfisher, your evil wisher,
Lure you down to the river,
Lest your white feet grow muddy,
Your red hair too ruddy
[Pg 235] With the river-mud so red;
But when you are wed
Go down to the river.
O maiden Mary, be very wary,
And dwell among the corn!
See, this dame Alice, maiden Mary,
Her hair is thin and white,
But she is a housewife good and wary,
And a great steel key hangs bright
From her gown, as red as the flowers in corn;
She is good and old like the autumn corn.
Maiden Mary.
Stark in his arms from a field half-won;
Ask him if he has seen your son:
Roland, lay your sword on the corn,
The piled-up sheaves of the golden corn.
Knight Roland.
She is my true love truly won!
Under my helm is room for one,
But the molten lead-streams trickle and run
[Pg 236] From my roof-tree, burning under the sun;
No corn to burn, we had eaten the corn,
There was no waste of the golden corn.
Father John.
To march with the banner of Father John!
The Reapers.
And for maiden Mary with hair like corn,
As red as the reddest of golden corn.
Omnes.
Seven feet high when his helm is on
Pennon of Roland, banner of John,
Star of Mary, march well on.
SIR GILES' WAR-SONG
Sir Giles, le bon des barrières?
The flap of pennons fair to see;
Ho! is there any will ride with me,
Sir Giles, le bon des barrières?
St. George Guienne! right good to hear:
Ho! is there any will ride with me,
Sir Giles, le bon des barrières?
My coat being blazon'd fair to see;
Ho! is there any will ride with me,
Sir Giles, le bon des barrières?
[Pg 238]
And lifted his basnet up to hear;
I pull'd him through the bars to me,
Sir Giles; le bon des barrières.
NEAR AVALON
Six maidens round the mast,
A red-gold crown on every one,
A green gown on the last.
Are wrought with ladies' heads most fair,
And a portraiture of Guenevere
The middle of each sail doth bear.
And round the helm six knights,
Their heaumes are on, whereby, half blind,
They pass by many sights.
[Pg 240]
Right soon will leave the spear-heads bare.
Those six knights sorrowfully bear,
In all their heaumes some yellow hair.
PRAISE OF MY LADY
Forehead, straight nose, and cheeks that be
Hollow'd a little mournfully.
Beata mea Domina!
By bows of hair, has a wave such
As God was good to make for me.
Beata mea Domina!
Nor yet with yellow colour fair,
But thick and crispèd wonderfully:
Beata mea Domina!
[Pg 242]
And dark, but dead as though it had
Been forged by God most wonderfully
Beata mea Domina!
To stand out from my lady's head,
Not moving much to tangle me.
Beata mea Domina!
The lashes a clear shadow throw
Where I would wish my lips to be.
Beata mea Domina!
Draw up some memory from her heart,
And gaze out very mournfully;
Beata mea Domina!
But most times looking out afar,
Waiting for something, not for me.
Beata mea Domina!
[Pg 243]
Are those that do her bright eyes wrong,
For always half tears seem to be
Beata mea Domina!
Darkening the place where they lie hid:
If they should rise and flow for me!
Beata mea Domina!
Curl'd up and pensive each one is;
This makes me faint to stand and see.
Beata mea Domina!
Because the hours pass so slow
Towards a sweet time: (pray for me),
Beata mea Domina!
But this at least I know full well,
Her lips are parted longingly,
Beata mea Domina!
[Pg 244]
To pluck at any flying love,
That I grow faint to stand and see.
Beata mea Domina!
So fine and round, it were a sin
To feel no weaker when I see
Beata mea Domina!
And troublous, faint lines wrought in there,
He finishes her face for me.
Beata mea Domina!
What things about her body's sway,
Like a knight's pennon or slim tree
Beata mea Domina!
Or her long hands that I may find
On some day sweet to move o'er me?
Beata mea Domina!
[Pg 245]
The telling, how along her wrist
The veins creep, dying languidly
Beata mea Domina!
Now give me pardon, dear, wherein
My voice is weak and vexes thee.
Beata mea Domina!
I charge you straightly in this rhyme,
What, and wherever you may be,
Beata mea Domina!
I choke and grow quite faint to see
My lady moving graciously.
Beata mea Domina!
SUMMER DAWN
Think but one thought of me up in the stars.
The summer night waneth, the morning light slips,
Faint and grey 'twixt the leaves of the aspen, betwixt the cloud-bars,
That are patiently waiting there for the dawn:
Patient and colourless, though Heaven's gold
Waits to float through them along with the sun.
Far out in the meadows, above the young corn,
The heavy elms wait, and restless and cold
The uneasy wind rises; the roses are dun;
They pray the long gloom through for daylight new born,
Round the lone house in the midst of the corn.
Speak but one word to me over the corn,
Over the tender, bow'd locks of the corn.
IN PRISON
Half the day long,
Flap the great banners
High over the stone;
Strangely and eerily
Sounds the wind's song,
Bending the banner-poles.
Watching the loophole's spark,
Lie I, with life all dark,
Feet tether'd, hands fetter'd
Fast to the stone,
The grim walls, square letter'd
With prison'd men's groan.
[Pg 248]
Through the wind's song,
Westward the banner rolls
Over my wrong.
THE END
Printed by Ballantyne, Hanson & Co.
Edinburgh & London
Transcriber's Note:
Minor spelling and typographical errors have been corrected without note, whilst archaic spellings have been retained.
Many single- and double-quotation marks were omitted in the original publication. Logical corrections, made from this text alone, would only compound any discrepancies and therefore such punctuation remains as printed.