.. -*- encoding: utf-8 -*- .. meta:: :PG.Id: 42052 :PG.Title: The Golden Helm :PG.Released: 2013-02-08 :PG.Rights: Public Domain :PG.Producer: Al Haines :DC.Creator: Wilfrid Wilson Gibson :DC.Title: The Golden Helm and Other Verse :DC.Language: en :DC.Created: 1903 :coverpage: images/img-cover.jpg =============== THE GOLDEN HELM =============== .. clearpage:: .. pgheader:: .. container:: coverpage .. vspace:: 3 .. _`Cover`: .. figure:: images/img-cover.jpg :align: center :alt: Cover Cover .. vspace:: 4 .. container:: titlepage center white-space-pre-line .. class:: x-large THE GOLDEN HELM AND OTHER VERSE .. vspace:: 2 .. class:: medium BY WILFRID WILSON GIBSON .. vspace:: 3 .. class:: center medium LONDON ELKIN MATHEWS, VIGO STREET 1903 .. vspace:: 4 .. container:: dedication center white-space-pre-line .. class:: center medium TO HOWARD PEASE .. vspace:: 4 .. class:: center medium *BY THE SAME WRITER* .. vspace:: 1 .. class:: center medium white-space-pre-line *URLYN THE HARPER AND OTHER SONG* *THE QUEEN'S VIGIL AND OTHER SONG* .. vspace:: 4 Thanks are due to Messrs. Smith, Elder, & Co., for permission to reprint "The King's Death," "The Three Kings," and the first part of "Averlaine and Arkeld," from *The Cornhill Magazine*; to the editor of *Macmillan's Magazine* for leave to reprint "In the Valley"; to the editor of *The Saturday Review* for leave to reprint "Notre Dame de la Belle-Verrière"; and to the editors of *The Pilot, The Outlook, The Pall Mall Gazette, Country Life, The Week's Survey*, and *The Broadsheet*, for like courtesy with regard to a number of "The Songs of Queen Averlaine." .. vspace:: 4 .. class:: center large Contents .. vspace:: 1 .. class:: noindent white-space-pre-line `The Torch`_ `The Unknown Knight`_ `The King's Death`_ `The Knight of the Wood`_ `Notre Dame de la Belle-Verrière`_ `In the Valley`_ `The Vision: a Christmas Mystery`_ `The Three Kings`_ `The Songs of Queen Averlaine`_ `The Golden Helm`_ .. vspace:: 4 .. _`The Torch`: .. class:: center large The Torch .. vspace:: 2 | Through skies blown clear by storm, o'er storm-spent seas, | Day kindled pale with promise of full noon | Of blue unclouded; no night-weary wind | Ruffled the slumberous, heaving deeps to white, | Though round the Farne Isles the waves never sink | In foamless sleep--about the pillared crags | For ever circling with unresting spray. | At dawn's first glimmer, from his island-cell-- | Rock-hewn, secure from tempest--Oswald came | With slow and weary step, white-faced and worn | With night-long vigil for storm-perilled souls. | His anxious eye with sharp foreboding bright-- | He scanned the treacherous flood; the long froth-trail | That marks the lurking reefs; the jag-toothed chasms | Which, foaming, gape at night beneath the keel-- | The mouth of hell to storm-bewildered ships: | But no scar-stranded vessel met his glance. | Relieved, he drank the glistering calm of morn, | With nostril keen and warm lips parted wide; | While, gradually, the sun-enkindled air | Quickened his pallid cheek with youthful flame, | Though lonely years had silvered his dark head, | And round his eyes had woven shadow-meshes. | Clearly he caught the ever-clamorous cries | Of guillemot and puffin from afar, | Where, canopied by hovering, white wings, | They crowded naked pinnacles of rock. | He watched, with eyes of glistening tenderness, | The brooding eider--Cuthbert's sacred bird, | That bears among the isles his saintly name-- | Breast the calm waves; a black, wet-gleaming fin | Cleft the blue waters with a foaming jag, | Where, close behind the restless herring-herd, | With ravening maw of death, the porpoise sped. | Oswald, light-tranced, dreamed in the sun awhile; | Till, suddenly, as some old sorrow starts, | Though years have glided by with soothing lull, | The gust of ancient longing rent his bliss: | His narrow isle, as by some darkling spell, | More narrow shrank; the gulls' unceasing cries | Grew still more fretful; and his hermit-life | A sea-scourged desolation to him seemed. | The holy tree of peace--which he had dreamt | Would flourish in the wilderness afresh, | Upspringing ever in new ecstasy | Of branching beauty and white blooms of truth, | Till its star-tangling crest should cleave the sky, | And angels rustle through its topmost boughs-- | Seemed sapless, rootless. Through his quivering limbs | His famine-wasted youth to life upleapt | With passionate yearning for humanity: | The stir of towns; the jostling of glad throngs; | Welcoming faces and warm-clasping hands; | Yea, even for the lips and eyes of Love | He hungered with keen pangs of old desire: | And, if for him these might not be, he craved | At least the exultation of swift peril-- | The red-foamed riot of delirious strife | That rears a bloody crest o'er peaceful shires, | And, slaying, in a swirl of slaughter dies. | With brow uplifted and strained, pulsing throat, | And salt-parched lips out-thrust, unto the sun | He stretched beseeching hands, as though he sought | To snatch some glittering disaster thence. | One moment radiant thus; and then once more | His arms dropped listless, and he slowly shrank | Within his sea-stained habit, cowering dark | Amid the azure blaze of sea and sky. | Then, stirring, with impatient step he moved | Across the isle to where the rocky shore, | Forming a little, crag-encircled bay, | Sloped steeply to the level of the sea; | But, as he neared the edges of the tide, | Startled, he paused, as, marvelling, he saw | A woman on the shelving, wet, black rock, | Lying, forlorn, among the storm-wrack, white | And motionless; still wet, her raiment clung | About her limbs, and with her wet, gold hair | Green sea-weed tangled. Oswald on her looked | Amazed, as one who, in a sea-born trance, | Discovers the lone spirit of the storm, | Self-spent at last, and sunk in dreamless slumber | Within some caverned gloom. Coldly he watched | The little waves creep up the glistening rock, | And, faltering, slide once more into the deep, | As though they feared to waken her: at length, | When one, more venturous, about her stole, | And moved her heavy hair as if with life, | He shuddered; and a lightning-knowledge struck | His heart with fear; and in a flash he knew | That no sea-phantom couched before him lay, | But some frail fellow-creature, tempest-tost, | Hung yet in peril on the edge of death, | Her weak life slipping from the saving grasp | While he delayed. He sprang through plashy weed, | O'er slippery ridges, to the rock whereon | She lay with upturned face and close-shut eyes-- | One hand across her breast, the other dipped | Within a shallow pool of emerald water, | With blue-veined fingers clutching the red fronds | Of frail sea-weed. Then Oswald, bending, felt | Upon his cheek the feeble breath that still | Fluttered between the pallid, parted lips. | In trembling haste, he loosed the sodden cords | That bound her to a spar; and with hot hands | He chafed her icy limbs, until the glow | Of life returned. With fitful quivering | The white lids opened; and she looked on him | With dull, unwondering eyes whose deep-sea blue | The gloom of death's late passing shadowed yet; | When suddenly light thrilled them, and bright fear | Flashed from their depths, and, with a little gasp, | She strove to rise; but Oswald with quick words | Calmed her weak terror, and she sank once more, | Closing her eyes; and, gently lifting her | Within his arms--her gold hair hanging straight | And heavy with sea-water, as he plunged | Knee-deep through pools of crackling bladder-weed-- | He bore her, unresisting, o'er the isle | Unto the rock-built shelter he had reared, | Some little way apart from his own cell, | For storm-stayed fishers or wrecked mariners. | He laid her on a bed of withered bents, | And ministered to her with gentle hands | And ceaseless care; till, wrapped in warm, deep sleep, | She sank oblivious. Silently he placed | His island-fare beside her on the board, | Lest she should wake in need; then, with hushed step, | He turned to go; but, ere he reached the door, | He paused, and looked again towards the bed, | As though he feared his strange sea-guest might flee | Like some wild spirit, born of wondering foam, | That wins from man the shelter of his breast, | Then, on a night of moon-enchanted tides, | Leaps with shrill laughter to its native seas, | Bearing his soul within its glistening arms, | To drown his peace on earth and hope of heaven | In cold eternities of lightless deeps. | But still in dreamless sleep the stranger lay, | With parted lips and breathing soft and calm; | About her head unloosed, her hair outshone, | Among the grey-green bents, like fine, red gold. | So beautiful she was that Oswald, pierced | With quivering rapture, dared no longer bide, | But, with quick fingers, softly raised the latch, | And stumbled o'er the threshold. As he went, | A flock of sea-gulls from the bent-thatched roof | Rose, querulous, and round him, wheeling, swept, | With creaking wings and cold, black eyes agleam; | Yet Oswald saw them not, nor heard their cries; | Nor saw he, as he paced the eastern crags, | How, round the Farnes, the dreaming ocean lay | In broad, unshadowed, sapphire ecstasy, | That glowed to noon through slow, uncounted hours. | His early gloom had vanished; time and space | And earth and sea no longer compassed him; | One thought alone consumed him--beauty slept | Within the shelter of his hermitage, | Upon grey, rustling bents, with golden hair. | He roamed, unresting, till the copper sun | Sank in a steel-grey sea, and earth and sky | Were strewn with shadows--wavering and dim-- | To weave a pathway for the dawning moon, | That she, from night's oblivion, might create | With the cold spell of her enchantments old | A phantom earth with magical, bright seas, | A vaster heaven of unrevealed stars. | Unmoving, on a headland of swart crag | That jutted gaunt and sharp against the night, | Stood Oswald, cowled and silent. Hour by hour | He gazed across the sea, which nothing shadowed, | Save where--now dim, now white--a lonely sail | Hung, restless, o'er a fisher's barren toil. | Yet Oswald saw nor sail nor moon nor sea: | His heart kept vigil by the little house | Wherein the stranger slumbered; and it seemed | His life, by some strange power within him stayed, | Awaited the unlatching of the door. | But now, within the hut, the sleeper dreamt | Of foaming caverns and o'erwhelming waters; | Then, shuddering awake, awhile she lay, | And watched the moonlight, cold and white, which poured | Through the warm dusk, from the high window-slit; | When, all at once, the strangeness of the room | Closed in upon her with bewildering dread. | She stirred; the bents, beneath her, rustled strange; | She started in affright, and, swaying, stood | Within the streaming moonlight, till, at last, | In memory, once more disaster swept | Over her life, and left her, desolate, | Upon bleak crags of alien seas unknown. | Yet, through the tumult of tempestuous dark, | Above the echo of despairing cries, | A calm voice sounded; and beyond the whirl | Of foaming death, wherein she caught the gleam | Of well-loved faces drowning in cold seas, | A living face shone out--a beacon clear: | Then numbing fear fell from her, and she moved, | Unlatched the door, and stole into the night. | One moment, dazzled by the full-moon glare, | She paused, a shivering form within the wide | And glittering desolation--lone and frail. | But Oswald, watchful on the eastern scars, | Seeing her, forward came with eager pace | To meet her; and, as he drew swiftly near, | His cowl fell backward; and she knew again | The face that calmed the terrors of her dreams. | Yet, with the knowledge, through her being stole, | Vague fear more strange, more impotent than the blind | Unquestioning dread when death had round her stormed; | No peril of the body could arouse | Such ecstasy of terror in her soul, | Which seemed upborne upon the shivering crest | Of some great wave, just curving, ere it crash | Upon the crags of time. Yet, though she feared | When Oswald paused, uncertain, quick she spake, | As though she sought to parry doom with words. | She questioned him--scarce heeding his replies-- | How she had hither come; when, suddenly, | Sped by her fluttering words, the last, dim cloud | Rolled from her memory, and she saw revealed | Within a pitiless glare of naked light | The utmost horror of her desolation. | Mute with despair, she stood with parted lips, | And then cried fiercely: "Hath the sea upcast | None other on this shore? Am I, alone, | Of all my kin who sailed in that doomed ship, | Flung back to life?" And as, with piteous glance, | He answered her: "Ah God, that I, with them, | Had died! O traitor cords that held too sure | My body to the broken spar of life! | O feeble seas, that fumed in such wild wrath, | Yet could not quench so frail a thing as I!" | With passionate step, across the isle she ran, | And leapt from crag to crag, until she stood | Upon a dizzy scar that jutted sheer | Above low-lapping waves. Then once again | Her moaning cry was heard among the Isles: | "O bitter waters, give them back to me! | You shall not keep them; all your waves of woe | Cannot withhold from me those dauntless lives | That were my life. Surely they cannot rest | Without me; even from your unfathomed graves | Surely my love will draw them to my arms!" | As though in tremulous expectation tranced, | She yearned, with arms outstretched; as dawn arose | Exultant from the sea, and with clear rays | Kindled her wind-tost hair to streaming flame. | Awhile she stood, then, moaning, slowly sank | Upon the crag; and Oswald came to her | With words of comfort which unloosed her pent | And aching woe in swift, tumultuous tears. | Oswald, in silent anguish, drew apart, | Gazing, unseeing, o'er the dawning waves; | Until at last the tempest of her grief, | In low and fitful sobbing, spent itself; | When, turning to him, once again she spake, | And, shuddering, with faltering voice, outpoured | The tale of her despair: and Oswald heard | How she, who sat thus strangely by his side, | Marna, a sea-earl's daughter, had besought | Her father, when the old sea-hunger lit | His eyes--as waves shot through with stormy fight-- | For leave to bear him company but once, | When, with his sons, he rode the adventurous seas; | How he had yielded with reluctant love; | And how, from out the firth of some far strand, | Their galley rode, beneath a flaming dawn; | How her young heart had leapt to see the sails | Unfurled to take the wind, as, one by one, | Toil-glistening rowers shipped the dripping oars, | And loosened every sheet before the breeze; | How, as the ship with timbers all astrain, | Leapt to mid-sea, through Marna's body thrilled | A kindred rapture, and there came to her | The sheer, delirious joy of them true-born | To wander with the foam--each creaking cord | That tugged the quivering mast unto her singing | Of unknown shores and far, enchanted lands, | Beyond the blue horizon; how, all day, | They rode, undaunted, through the spinning surf; | But, as the sun dipped, in the cold, grey tide, | The wind, that since the dawn with steady speed | Had filled the sails, now came in fitful gusts, | Fierce and yet fiercer, till the sullen waves | Were lashed to anger, and the waters leapt | To tussle with the furies of the air; | And how the ship, in the encounter caught, | Was tossed on crests of swirling dark, or dropped | Between o'er-toppling walls of whelming night; | How in those hours--too dread for thought or speech-- | Her father's hand had bound her to a spar; | And, even as--the cord between his teeth-- | He tugged the last knot sure, the vessel crashed | Upon a cleaving scar; and she but saw | The strong, pale faces looking upon death, | Before the fierce, exultant waters closed | With cold oblivion o'er them; and no more | She knew, until she waked within the hut, | To find her world, in one disastrous night, | In one swift surge of roaring darkness, swept | From her young feet; her kindred, home and friends, | And all familiar hopes and joys and fears | Dropt like a garment from her life, which now | Stood naked on the edge of some new world | Of unknown terrors. | Oswald heard her tale | With pitying glance; yet in his eyes arose | A strange, new light, which as each gust of grief | Shook out the fluttering words, more brightly burned; | So that, when Marna ceased, it seemed to her | That he, in holy contemplation rapt, | Had heeded not her woe; and from her heart | Burst out a cry: "Ah God, I am alone!" | But, stung by her shrill anguish, Oswald waked | From his bright reverie, and his shining eyes | Darkened with swift compassion, as he turned | And, trembling, spake: "Nay, not alone..." | Then mute | He stood--his pale lips clenched--as though within | There surged a torrent which he dared not loose. | Marna looked wondering up; but, when her eyes | Saw the white passion of his face, her soul | Was tossed once more on crests of unknown fears; | Yet rapture warred with terror in her heart; | She trembled, and her breath came short and quick. | She dared not raise her eyes again to his, | Till, on her straining ears, his words, once more, | Fell, slow and cold and clear as water dripping | Between locked sluice-gates: "Nothing need you fear. | Beyond the sea of unknown terrors lie | White havens of an undiscovered peace. | For even this bleak, scar-embattled coast | May yield safe harbour to the storm-spent soul. | Your world has fallen from you that you may | Enter another world, more beautiful, | Built 'neath the shadow of the throne of God. | There shall you find new friends, who yet will seem | Familiar to your eyes, because their souls | Have passed through kindred perils and despairs." | He ceased; and silence, trembling, 'twixt them hung; | Till Marna, gazing yet across the sea, | Rent it with words: "Where may I find this peace?" | And Oswald answered: "In an inland dale | The Sisters of the Cross await your coming, | With ever-open gate. Within seven days, | My brethren from the mainland will put out, | Bringing me food; on their return with them | You may embark. Till then, this barren rock | Must be your home." Exultant light once more | Leapt, flashing, in the depths of his dark eyes. | Yet Marna looked not up, but, slowly, spake: | "Yea, I must go.... But you...." | Then in dismay | She stopped, as though the thought had slipped unknown | From her full heart; but Oswald caught the words, | And spake with hard, quick speech, as if to baffle | Some doubt that strove within him: "On this Isle | I bide, till God shall kindle my weak soul | To burn, a beacon o'er His lonely seas." | Once more he paused; and perilous silence swayed | Between them, until Oswald, quaking, rose, | As one who dared no longer rest beneath | O'er-toppling doom. Yet, with calm voice, he spake: | "Even within this wilderness abides | Such beauty that, in your brief sojourn here, | Your soul shall starve not; all about you sweeps | The ever-changing wonder of the sea; | But if, too full of bitter memories, | The bright waves darken, you may lift your eyes | To watch the swooping gull; the flashing tern; | The stately cormorant and the kittiwake-- | Most beautiful of all the island-birds; | Or, if your woman's heart should crave some grace | More exquisite, see, frail bell-campions blow, | As foam-flowers on the shallow, sandy turf." | As thus he spake, a light in Marna's eyes | Arose, and sorrow left her for awhile: | And she with bright glance questioned him, and watched | The hovering gulls, and plucked the snowy blooms, | With little cries at each discovered beauty. | Yet Oswald by her side walked silently, | And watched, as one struck mute with anguished fear, | Her eager eyes, and heard her chattering words. | Then, suddenly, he left her, but returned | Within the hour, with faltering step, and spake | With tremulous voice: "We two must part awhile; | For I must keep lone vigil in my cell | Six days and nights, with fasting and with prayer; | Meanwhile, within the little hut for you | Are food and shelter till the brethren come. | When I must give you over to their care." | Marna, with wondering heart, looked up at him; | But such a wild light flickered in his eyes | She dared not speak; and, shuddering, he turned, | And strode back swiftly to the hermitage. | Marna looked after him with yearning gaze, | As though her heart would have her call him back, | Yet her lips moved not; motionless, she watched | Until he passed from sight; then, sinking low | Among the flowers, she wept, she knew not why. | And, as the door closed on him, Oswald fell | Prone on the cold, black, vigil-furrowed rock | That paved his narrow cell; and long he lay | As in the clutch of some dread waking-trance, | Nor stirred until the shadows into night | Were woven. Then unto his feet he leapt | With this wild cry: "O God, why hast Thou sent | This scourge most bitter for my naked soul? | I feared not storm nor solitude, O God; | I shrank not from the tempest of Thy wrath; | Though oft my weak soul wavered, trampled o'er | By deedless hours, and yearned unto the world, | Ever afresh Thy love hath bound me fast | Unto this island of Thy lonely seas; | And I, who deemed that I at last might reach-- | I who had come through all--Thy golden haven, | Knew not Thy hand withheld this last despair, | This scourge most bitter, being most beautiful." | Then on his knees he sank, and tried to pray | Before the Virgin's shrine, where ever burned | His votive taper with unfailing light. | But when his lips would breathe the holy name, | His heart cried: "Marna! Marna!" Every pulse | Throbbed "Marna!" And his body shook and swayed, | As though it strove to utter that one word, | And cry it once unto eternal stars, | Though it should perish crying. Through the cell | The silence murmured: "Marna!" And without | A lone gull wailed it to the windy night. | He lifted his wild eyes, and in the shrine | He saw the face of Marna, which outburned | The flickering taper; on the gloom up-surged, | Foam-white, the face of Marna; till the dark | Flowed pitiful o'er him, and on the stone | He sank unconscious. Night went slowly by, | And pale dawn stole in silence through his cell; | And, in the light of morn, the taper died, | With feeble guttering; yet he never stirred, | Though noonday waxed and waned. | But Marna roamed | All night beneath the stars. To her it seemed | That not until the closing of the door | Had all hope perished: now death tore, afresh, | Her father and her brothers from her arms. | By day and night and under sun and moon | She roamed unresting--seeing, heeding naught-- | Till weariness o'ercame her, and she slept; | And, as she slumbered, snowy-plumed peace | Nestled within her heart; and, when she waked, | She only yearned for that dim, cloistral calm, | Embosomed deep in some bough-sheltered vale, | Whither the boat must bear her. | In his cell, | As night paled slowly to the seventh morn, | Oswald arose--the fire within his eyes | Yet more intense, more fierce. With eager hand | He clutched the latch, and, flinging wide the door, | He strode into the dawn. One moment, dazed, | As though bewildered by the light, he paused; | But, when his glance in restless roving fell | On Marna, standing on the western crag | Against the setting moon, beneath the dawn, | His passion surged upon him, and he shook; | Then, springing madly forth, he, stumbling, ran, | And, falling at her feet upon the rock, | His voice rang out in fearful exultation: | "You shall not go! I cannot let you go! | Has not the tumult tossed you to my breast? | Yea, and not all the storms of all the seas | Shall drag you from me! Nay, you shall not go! | For we will live together on this isle | Which time has builded in the deeps for us-- | We two together, one in ecstasy, | Throughout eternity; for time shall fall | From off us; and the world shall be no more: | And God, if God should stand between us now..." | Faltering, he paused; and Marna stood, afraid, | Quaking before him; but she spake no word. | Across the waters came the plash of oars; | But Oswald heard them not, and once more cried: | "You will not go--thrusting me back to death? | For now I know the strange, new thing you brought | For me from out the storm was life--yea, life; | And I am one arisen from the grave. | You will not thrust me back and take again | That which you came through storm to bring to me? | You will not go? I cannot let you go!" | He ceased; and now the even plash of oars | Came clearer. One dread moment Marna stood | Swaying; then, stretching forth her arms, she cried: | "Ah God! Ah God! Why hath Thy cold hand set | This doom upon me? Must I ever bear | Death and disaster unto whom I love? | Oh, is it not enough that, 'neath the wave, | Because I sought to bear them company, | My father and my brothers lie in death? | But this--ah God--that it should come to this! | Must I bear ever death within my hands?" | She paused one moment, with wild-heaving breast; | Then, turning unto Oswald, spake again, | With softer voice: "But you--have you no pity? | You who are but God's servant--surely you | Have pity on my weakness. From this doom | Which overhangs me you must set me free. | You say I brought you life; but in me lies | For you--the priest of God--a death more deep | Than all the drowning fathoms of the sea. | I go, that you may live. If life indeed | I brought you, I was but the torch of God | To kindle the clear flame of your strong soul | To burn, a beacon o'er His lonely seas." | She ceased, with arms outstretched and lighted eyes. | As on some holy vision Oswald gazed | In rapt, adoring fear; nor spake, nor stirred. | Near, and yet nearer, drew the plash of oars; | And, turning in the boat, the brethren looked | With wondering eyes upon them, whispering: "Lo, | Some seraph-messenger of God most high | Tarries with Oswald. See the strange new peace | That burns his face like a white altar-flame. | Not yet must we draw near, lest our weak sight | Be blinded by that glory of gold hair | That gleams so strangely in the light of dawn." .. vspace:: 4 .. _`The Unknown Knight`: .. class:: center large The Unknown Knight .. vspace:: 2 | When purple gloomed the wintry ridge | Against the sunset's windy flame, | From pine-browed hills, along the bridge, | An unknown rider came. | I watched him idly from the tower. | Though he nor looked nor raised his head; | I felt my life before him cower | In dumb, foreboding dread. | I saw him to the portal win | Unchallenged, and no lackey stirred | To take his bridle when within | He strode without a word. | Through all the house he passed unstayed, | Until he reached my father's door; | The hinge shrieked out like one afraid; | Then silence fell once more. | All night I hear the chafing ice | Float, griding, down the swollen stream; | I lie fast-held in terror's vice, | Nor dare to think or dream. | I only know the unknown knight | Keeps vigil by my father's bed: | Oh, who shall wake to see the light | Flame all the east with red? .. vspace:: 4 .. _`The King's Death`: .. class:: center large The King's Death .. vspace:: 2 *The sleeping-chamber of the King: a candle burns dimly by the curtained bed. The arras parts, and two slaves enter with daggers. A storm of wind rages without.* | FIRST SLAVE: He sleeps. | SECOND SLAVE: He sleeps, whom only death shall rouse | To dread unsleeping in another world. | FIRST SLAVE: How long the careful night has kept him wakeful, | As if sleep loathed to snare him for our knives! | SECOND SLAVE: Yea, we have crouched so close in quaking dark | I scarce can lift my sword-arm: strike you first. | FIRST SLAVE: The heavy waiting hours have crushed my strength; | The hate that burst to such an eager flame | Within my heart has smouldered to dull ash, | Which pity breathes to scatter. | SECOND SLAVE: Knows he pity? | FIRST SLAVE: Nay, he is throned above his slaughtered kin, | A reeking sword his sceptre. He has broken, | As one across the knee a faggot snaps, | Strong lives to feed the blaze of his ambition; | Yet shall a slave's hand strike cold death in him | For whom kings sweat like slaves? | SECOND SLAVE: Yea, at the stroke | One slave lies dead--a hundred kings are born; | For every man that breathes will be a king; | Vast empires, beaten-dust beneath his feet, | Will rise again and teem with kingly men, | When he, their death, is dead | FIRST SLAVE: How still he sleeps! | The tempest shrieks to wake him, yet he slumbers. | As seas that foam against unyielding scars, | The mad wind storms the castle, wall and tower, | And is not spent. Hark, it has found a breach-- | Some latch unloosed--the house is full of wind; | It rushes, wailing, down the corridor; | It seeks the King; it cries on him to waken; | Now 'tis without, and shakes the rattling bolt; | Lo, it has broken in, in little gusts, | I feel it in my hair; 'twill lay cold fingers | Upon his lips, and start him from his sleep. | See, it has whipt the yellow flame to smoke. | SECOND SLAVE: And now it fails; the heavy, hanging gold | That shelters him from night is all unstirred. | FIRST SLAVE: Even the wind must pause. | SECOND SLAVE: 'Twas but a breeze | To blow our sinking courage to clear fire. | Too long we loiter; soon the approaching day | Will take us, slaves who grasp the arms of men | Yet dare not plunge them save in our own breasts. | Come, let us strike! | (*They approach the bed and draw aside the curtain.*) | FIRST SLAVE: The King--how still he sleeps! | Can majesty in such calm slumber lie? | SECOND SLAVE: Come, falter not, strike home! | FIRST SLAVE: Hold, hold your hand, | For death has stolen a march upon our hate; | He does not breathe. | SECOND SLAVE: The stars have wrought for us, | And we are conquerors with unbloodied hands. | FIRST SLAVE: Nay, nay, for in our thoughts his life was spilt; | While yet our bodies lagged in fettered fear, | Our shafted breath sped on and stabbed his sleep. | Oh, red for all the world, across our brows, | Our murderous thoughts have burned the brand of Cain. | See, through the window stares the pitiless day! .. vspace:: 4 .. _`The Knight of the Wood`: .. class:: center large The Knight of the Wood .. vspace:: 2 | "I fear the Knight of the Wood," she said | "For him may no man overthrow. | Where boughs are matted thick o'erhead, | There gleams, amid the shadows dread, | The terror of his armour red; | And all men fear him, high and low; | Yet all must through the forest go." | She paused awhile where larches flame | About the borders of the wood; | Then, crying loud on Love's high name | To keep her maiden-heart from shame, | She entered, and full-swiftly came | Where, hooded with a scarlet hood, | A rider in her pathway stood. | She saw the gleam of armour red; | She saw the fiery pennon wave | Its flaming terror overhead | 'Mid writhing boughs and shadows dread. | "Ah God," she cried: "that I were dead, | And laid for ever in my grave!" | Then, swooning, called on Love to save. | Among the springing fern she fell, | And very nigh to death she lay; | Till, like the fading of a spell | At ringing of the matin-bell, | The darkness left her; by a well | She waked beneath the open day, | And rose to go upon her way; | When, once again, the ruddy light | Of arms she saw, and turned to flee; | But clutching brambles stayed her flight; | While, marvelling, she saw the Knight | Unhooded; and his eyes were bright | With April colours of the sea; | And crowned as a King was he. | She knelt before him in the ferns, | And sang: "O Lord of Love, I bow | Before thy shield, where blazoned burns | The flaming heart with light that turns | The night to day. O heart that yearns | For love, lo, Love before thee now-- | The wild-wood knight with crownèd brow!" .. vspace:: 4 .. _`Notre Dame de la Belle-Verrière`: .. class:: center large Notre Dame de la Belle-Verrière .. vspace:: 2 | Above Thy halo's burning blue | For ever hovers the White Dove; | Thy heart enshrines, for ever new, | The Cross--the Crown of all Thy love; | While, sapphire wing on sapphire wing, | About Thee choiring angels swing | Gold censers, and bright candles bear. | Because I have no heart to sing, | I come to Thee with all my care, | *Notre Dame de la Belle-Verrière.* | Because the sword hath pierced Thy side, | Thy brows are crowned with circling gold. | The woe of all the world doth hide | Within Thy mantle's azure fold. | Because Thou, too, hast dwelt with fears, | Through lingering days and endless years, | I find no comfort otherwhere, | Our Lady beautiful with tears, | Our Lady sorrowfully fair, | *Notre Dame de la Belle-Verrière.* | My feet have travelled the hot road | Between the poppies' barren fires; | But now I cast aside the load | Of burning hopes and wild desires | That ever fierce and fiercer grew. | Thy peace falls like a falling dew | Upon me as I kneel in prayer, | Because Thou hast known sorrow, too, | Because Thou, too, hast known despair, | *Notre Dame de la Belle-Verrière.* .. vspace:: 4 .. _`In the Valley`: .. class:: center large In the Valley .. vspace:: 2 | Love, take my hand, and look not with sad eyes | Through the valley-shades: for us, the mountains rise; | Beneath the cold, blue-cleaving peaks of snow | Like flame the April-blossomed almonds blow-- | Spring-grace and winter-glory intertwined | Within the glittering web that colour weaves. | *Yet who are they who troop so close behind* | *With raiment rustling like frost-withered leaves* | *That burden winter-winds with ever-restless sighs?* | Love, look not back, nor ever hearken more | To murmuring shades; for us, the river-shore | Is lit with dew-hung daffodils that gleam | On either side the tawny, foaming stream | That bears through April with triumphal song | Dissolving winter to the brimming sea. | *Yet who are they who, ever-whispering, throng,* | *With lean, grey lips that shudder piteously,* | *As if from some bright fruit of bitter-tasting core?* | Nay, look not back, for, lo, in trancèd light | Love stays awhile his world-encircling flight | To wait our coming from the valley-ways; | See where, a hovering fire amid the blaze, | He pants aflame with irised plumes unfurled | Above the utmost pinnacle of noon. | *Yet who are they who wander through the world* | *Like weary clouds about a wintry moon,* | *With wan, bewildered brows that bear eternal night?* | Love, look not back, nor fill thy heart with woe | Of old, sad loves that perished long ago; | For ever after living lovers tread | Pale, yearning ghosts of all earth's lovers dead. | A little while with life we lead the train | Ere we, too, follow, cold, some breathing love. | *I fear their fevered eyes and hands that strain* | *To snatch our joy that flutters bright above,* | *To shadow with grey death its ruddy, pulsing glow.* | Love, look not back in this life-crowning hour | When all our love breaks into perfect flower | Beneath the kindling heights of frozen time. | Come, Love, that we with happy haste may climb | Beyond the valley, and may chance to see | Some unknown peak that cleaves unfading skies. | *Old sorrow saps my strength; I may not flee* | *The flame of passionate hunger in their eyes;* | *Beseeching shade on shade--they hold me in their power.* | Love, look not back, for, all too brief, our day, | In wilder glories flameth fast away. | Lo, even now, the northern snow-ridge glows-- | With purple shadowed--from pale gold to rose | That shivers white beneath stars dawning cold. | Lift up thine eyes ere all the colour fades. | *Ah, rainbow-plumèd Love in airs of gold,* | *Too late I turn, a shade among the shades.* | *To follow, death-enthralled, thy flight through ages grey.* .. vspace:: 4 .. _`The Vision: a Christmas Mystery`: .. class:: center large The Vision. .. vspace:: 2 .. class:: center medium A CHRISTMAS MYSTERY. | PERSONS: A YOUNG HERD. HIS MOTHER. | SCENE: THE QUEEN'S CRAGS. | TIME: CHRISTMAS EVE. *The herd stands at the foot of the Crags, gazing across the dark fells. His mother enters.* | MOTHER: Son, come home, nor tarry here | In this peril-haunted place. | My old heart is filled with fear | By the white flame of thy face, | And thine eyes whose restless fire | Burneth ever wild and clear | As red peats between the bars. | Son, come home; the night is cold; | Dropping from the wintry stars, | Tingling frost falls through the air; | See, the bents are white with rime; | All the sheep are in the fold; | All the cattle in the byre; | Only we, of live things, roam | O'er the fells so far from home; | E'en the red fox in his lair | Snuggles close to keep him warm; | And the lonely, wandering hare | Crouches, shivering, in her form; | While by Greenlea's frozen edge | Hides the mallard in the sedge. | Son, come home; the ingle-seat | Waits thee by the glowing peat, | And the door is off the latch. | Come, and we will feast and sing, | As of old at Christmas time, | Until thou wilt drowse and nod | And with slumber-drooping head | Gladly seek thy bracken-bed | Underneath the heather-thatch; | Where the healing sleep will bring | Unto thee the peace of God. | Son, come home! Whom seekest thou there? | HERD: Guenevere! O Guenevere! | MOTHER: Cry no more on Guenevere. | Some wild warlock of the fells, | Born beneath the Devil's Scars, | Lures thee forth to drown thy soul | Deep in Broomlea-water cold. | Guenevere no longer dwells | Anywhere beneath the stars; | Though she walked these Crags of old, | Many hundred years ago, | Into earth she sank like snow; | As a sunset-cloud in rain | Breaks, and showers the thirsty plain, | All the glory of her hair | Fell to earth, we know not where. | Leave thy foolish quest forlorn. | Lo, to-night a King is born, | Who, when earthly kings at last | Into wildering night are passed, | Yet shall wear the crown of morn. | Mary, Thou whose love may turn | Eyes that after evil burn, | Draw his soul, that strays so far, | To Thy Son's white throning-star. | Queen of Heaven, hear my prayer! | HERD: Guenevere! O Guenevere! | MOTHER: Low she lies, and may not hear. | The white lily, Guenevere, | Ruthless time has trodden down; | Arthur is a tarnished crown, | High Gawain a broken spear, | Percival a riven shield; | They, who taught the world to yield, | Closed with death and lost the field, | Stricken by the last despair: | Launcelot is but a name | Blown about the winds of shame; | Surely God has quenched the flame | That burned men's souls for Guenevere. | Mary, heed a mother's woe; | Mary, heed a mother's tears! | Thou, whose heart so long ago | Knew the pangs and hopes and fears | We poor mortal mothers know; | Thou, to whom, on Christmas-morn, | Christ, the Son of God, was born; | Thou whose mother-love hath pressed | The sweet Babe against thy breast; | And with wondering joy hath felt | The warm clutch of little hands, | When the Kings from far-off lands-- | Crowned with gold, in gold attire-- | With the simple shepherds knelt | 'Mid the beasts within the byre; | Mary, if Thy heart, afraid, | When beyond Thy care he strayed, | Sometimes grieved that he must grow | Unlike other boys and men-- | Filled with dreams beyond Thy ken, | Anguished with diviner woe, | Pangs more fiery than Thy pain, | Deeper than Thy dark despair-- | From the perils of the night | Give me back my son again. | Thou, whose love may never fail, | Heed a lonely mother's prayer! | Come in all Thy healing might! *A sudden glory sweeps across the Fells. The vision appears in a cleft of the Crags. The herd and his mother kneel before it.* | MOTHER: Mary, Queen of Heaven, hail! | HERD (*falling forward*): Guenevere! Guenevere! .. vspace:: 4 .. _`THE THREE KINGS`: .. class:: center large THE THREE KINGS. .. vspace:: 2 .. class:: center medium To C. J. S. .. vspace:: 3 .. class:: center large The Three Kings | PERSONS: KING GARLAND, KING ARLO, KING ASHALORN. | SEA-VOICES, WAVE-VOICES, AND WIND-VOICES. | SCENE: *A rock in the midst of the North Sea,* | *whereon the three kings, bound naked by conquering* | *sea-rovers, have been left to perish.* | VOICE OF THE DAWN-WIND: Awaken, O sea, from thy starry dream; | Awaken, awaken! | For delight of thy slumber not one pale gleam | From dim star-clusters remaineth unshaken. | All night I have haunted the valleys and rivers; | Now hither I come-- | Ere, quickened with sunlight, the drowsy east quivers-- | To waken thy song, night-bewildered and dumb; | To stir thy grey waters, of starlight forsaken, | To loosen white foam in the red of the dawn. | WAVE-VOICES: The sound of thy voice | Has broken our sleep; | All night we have waited thee, herald of light. | We arise, we rejoice | At thy bidding to leap, | And spray with our laughter the trail of the night. | All night we have waited thee, weary of stars-- | The little star-dreams, and the sleep without song; | The deep-brooding slumber of silence that holds | Our melody mute in the uttermost deep. | O Wind of the Dawn, we have waited thee long; | The sound of thy voice | Has broken our sleep; | We arise, we rejoice | At thy bidding to leap, | With a tumult of singing, a rapture of spray, | To scatter our joy in the path of the day. | GARLAND: Day comes at last, beyond the sea's grey rim; | The young sun leaps in sudden might of gold. | ASHALORN: Before his fire our lives will smoulder dim; | Like stars we shine, we fade; the tale is told, | And all our empty splendour put to scorn; | Fate leaves us, who were clothed in pride, forlorn, | To perish, naked, in this lonely sea. | But yesterday we ruled as kings of earth; | Frail men to-day; to-morrow, who shall be? | ARLO: But yesterday my cup of life was filled | To overflowing with the wine of mirth-- | The plashing joy from fruitful years distilled. | GARLAND: But yesterday my kinghood sprang to birth; | My fingers scarce had grasped the might new-born, | When from my clutch the glittering pomp was torn. | SEA-VOICES: They slumber, they slumber, the kings in their pride. | The beak of the Rover is dipt in the tide; | The sails of the Rover are red in the wind; | And white is the trail of the foam flung behind. | They have fallen, have fallen, the kings in their pride; | Their sea-gates are forced by the rush of the tide; | Their splendour is scattered as surf on the wind; | And red is the trail of the terror behind. | Forsaken, forlorn, | On a rock of the sea, | In anguish they bow, | And wait for the night and the darkness to be; | Oh, bright was the gold in their hair; | The sea-weed, in scorn, | Is twined in it now; | Oh, rich was their raiment and rare, | Blue, purple, and gold, | In fold upon fold; | Of glory and majesty shorn, | They are clothed with the wind of despair. | GARLAND: Lo, the live waters run to greet the day: | Even so I laughed to see the soaring light; | My life was poised like yonder curving wave | To break in such bright revel of keen spray. | ARLO: I counted not the years that took their flight, | Gold-crowned and singing; every hour I stood, | As one enchanted in an April wood, | In some new paradise of scent and flowers. | I counted not the countless, careless hours, | The days of rapture and the nights of peace. | How should I dream that such delight could pass, | Such colour fade, such flowing numbers cease, | My glory perish where was none to save, | And all my strength be trodden in the grass? | ASHALORN: Oh, blest art thou who diest in thy youth; | Oh, blest art thou who failest in thy prime; | While yet thine eyes are full of wondering truth; | Ere yet thy feet have found the ways of thorn. | Too long I wandered down the vale of time, | A lonely wind, all songless and forlorn; | For I have found the empty heart of things, | The secret sorrow of the summer rose, | And all the sadness of the April green; | I know that every happy stream that springs | Into a sea of bitter memories flows; | I know the curse that God has set on kings-- | The solitary splendour and the crown | Of desolation, and the prisoning state; | The heart that yearns beneath the robe of gold, | The soul that starves behind the golden gate. | I know how chance has reared our earthly thrones | Upon a shifting wrack of whitened bones, | Of heroes fallen in the wars of old-- | By wind upbuilded and by wind cast down. | SEA-VOICES: As foam on the edge of the waters of night, | They flicker and fall; | More brief than delight, | More frail than their tears, | They flicker and fall | In the tide of the years; | Awhile they may triumph, as lords of the earth, | With feasting and mirth, | Yet the winds and the waters shall sweep over all. | VOICE OF THE WEST WIND: O wide-shifting wonder of sapphire and gold, | O wandering glory of emerald and white, | From the purple and green of the moorlands I come, | To sweep o'er thy waters with turbulent flight, | To sway thee, and swing thee abroad in my might; | I lean to thy lips, to their white, curling foam, | With laughter and kisses, to smite it to spray; | To thine uttermost deep, unlitten and cold, | I thrill thee with rapture, then wander away. | I have drunk the red wine of the heather, and swept | Over moorland and fell, for mile upon mile. | The little blue loughs were merry, and leapt, | With a shaking of laughter, in dim, dreaming hollows; | The little blue loughs were merry, and flung | Their spray on my wings as above them I swung; | I laughed to their laughter, and dallied awhile; | Then left them to sink in the silence that follows. | In the forest I stirred, like the chant of thy tides, | The song of the boughs and the branches a-swinging; | The ashes and beeches and oak-trees were singing, | Like the noise of thy waters when dark tempest rides. | I swung on the crest of the pine-trees a-swaying, | As now on thy green, flowing surges, O sea; | I piped in my triumph, they danced to my playing; | I left them a-murmur, to hasten to thee. | The white clouds were driven like ships through the air, | And grey flowed the shadows o'er sea-coloured bent, | And dark on the heathland, and dark on the wold: | But here on thy waters, where all things grow fair, | They shadow with purple thine emerald and gold. | My revel unbroken, my rapture unspent, | To thy far-shining wonder, O sea, I have come, | To sweep o'er thy splendour with turbulent flight; | To sway thee, and swing thee abroad in my might; | I lean to thy lips, to their white, curling foam, | With laughter and kisses, to smite it to spray; | To thine uttermost deep, unlitten and cold, | I thrill thee with rapture, then wander away. | GARLAND: There is no sadness in the world but death. | The years that whitened o'er thy head have taken | The colour from thy life, but still in me | The blood beats young and red; yea, still my breath | Is full of freshness as the wind that blows | Across the morning-fells when night has shaken | His cooling dews among the wakening heath. | Yea, now the wind that lashes o'er the sea | Stings all my quivering body to keen life | And whips the blood into my straining limbs; | And all the youth within me springs to fire; | I am consumed with ravening desire | For one brief, wild, delirious hour of strife; | I yearn for every joy that flies or swims, | Rides on the wind or with the water flows. | Yet I must die by patient, slow degrees, | With hourly wasting flesh and parching blood; | Ah God, that I might leap into the flood, | And perish struggling in the adventurous seas! | ARLO: My mouth is filled with saltness, and I thirst | For forest-pools that bubble in the shade, | When loud the hot chase pants through every glade, | And fleeing fawns from every thicket burst; | Or clear wine vintaged when the world was young, | Gurgling from deep-mouthed jars of coloured stone. | ASHALORN: The noonday burns my body to the bone, | And sets a coal of fire upon my tongue, | Between my lips, and stifles all my breath. | Oh come, thou only joy undying, death! | WAVE-VOICES: O wind, that failing, failing, failing, dies, | Beneath the heat of August-laden skies, | Sinking in sleep, sinking in quiet sleep-- | Thy blue wings folded o'er our dreaming deep | We too are weary, weary in the noon; | We too will fall in shining slumber soon-- | Foamless and still, foamless and very still, | Unstirred, unshaken by thy restless will. | Yet there are eyes that cannot, cannot close, | And strong souls racked by fiery, rending woes-- | Never to rest, never to gather rest | By any stream of murmuring waters blest. | But slumber falling, falling, on us lies, | Silent and deep, beneath noon-laden skies, | Silent and deep, silent and very deep, | With blue wings folded o'er our dreaming sleep. .. vspace:: 1 .. class:: center white-space-pre-line \*      \*      \*      \*      \* .. vspace:: 1 | VOICE OF THE EVENING WIND: I have shaken the noon | from my wings, I arise | To quicken the flame in the western skies-- | To blow the clouds to a streaming flame, | Where the red sun sinks in the opal sea, | And red as the heart of the opal glows | His last wild gleam in the waters grey. | O grey-green waters, curling to rose, | The kings are glad of the dying day; | The kings are weary; the white mists close-- | The white mists gather to cover their shame. | ASHALORN: The evening mist is dank upon my brow, | And cold upon my lips--yea, cold as death; | Yet, through the gloom, she gazes on me now, | As in our early-wedded days; her breath | Is warm once more upon my withered cheek. | O gaunt, grey lips, that strive but may not speak; | O cold, grey eyes, that flicker in the gloam-- | Long have we strayed; come, let us wander home! | ARLO: Like lit September woodlands, streameth down | Her hair, beneath the circle of her crown; | Of rarer, redder glory than the cold | Dead metal that for ever strives to hold | The ever-straying wonder of live gold! | Like woodland pools, her eyes, a dreaming brown-- | Like woodland pools where autumn-splendours drown! | O red-gold tresses, shaking in the gloam, | Unto your light, unto your shade I come! | GARLAND: Her eyes are azure as the wind-blown sea, | With deep sea-shadowings of grey and green; | And like an April storm her shining hair-- | Yea, all the glittering Aprils that have been, | And all the wondering Aprils yet to be, | Have stored their wealth of shower and sunshine there; | Yea, all the thousand, thousand springs of earth | New-lit and re-awakened at her birth, | In her sweet body glow and glimmer fair. | O wonder of sea-colours and white foam | And April glories, to thine arms I come! | VOICE OF THE EVENING WIND: The sun is gone, | and the last, red flame | Has faded away in a shimmer of rose-- | A shimmer of rose that shivers to grey. | The kings are glad of the dying day-- | The kings are weary; the white mists close, | The white mists gather to cover their shame. .. vspace:: 4 .. _`THE SONGS OF QUEEN AVERLAINE`: .. class:: center large THE SONGS OF QUEEN AVERLAINE. .. vspace:: 2 .. class:: center medium To M. B. .. vspace:: 3 | PERSONS: THE KING, | QUEEN AVERLAINE, | THE KNIGHT ARKELD. .. vspace:: 2 .. class:: center large white-space-pre-line I\. KING AND QUEEN. .. vspace:: 2 .. class:: center medium 1\. | The day has come; at last my dream unfolds | White, wondering petals with the rising sun. | No other glade in Love's world-garden holds | So fair a bloom from vanquished winter won. | Long, oh, so long I watched through budding hours, | And, trembling, feared my dream would never wake; | As, one by one, I saw star-tranced flowers | Out on the night their dewy splendour shake. | But with the earliest gleam of dawn it stirred, | Knowing that Love had put the dark to flight; | And I must sing more glad than any bird | Because the sun has filled my dream with light. .. vspace:: 2 .. class:: center medium 2\. | Is it high noon, already, in the land? | O Love, I dreamed that morn could never pass; | That we might ever wander, hand in hand, | As children in June-meadows plucking flowers, | Through ever-waking, fresh-unfolding hours: | Yet now we sink love-wearied in the grass; | Yea, it is noon, high noon in all the land. | The young wind slumbers; all the little birds | That sang about us in the fields of morn | Are songless now; no happy flight of words | On Love's lip hovers--Love has waxed to noon. | Ah, God, if Love should wane to evening soon | To perish in a sunless world, forlorn, | And cease with the last song of weary birds! .. vspace:: 2 .. class:: center medium 3\. | At dawn I gathered flowers of white, | To garland them for your delight. | At noon I gathered flowers of blue, | To weave them into joy for you. | At eve I gather purple flowers, | To strew above the withered hours. .. vspace:: 2 .. class:: center medium 4\. | She knelt at eve beside the stream, | And, sighing, sang: "O waters clear, | Forsaken now of joy and fear, | I come to drown a withered dream. | "Unseen of day, I let it fall | Within the shadow of my hair. | O little dream, that bloomed so fair, | The waters hide you after all!" .. vspace:: 2 .. class:: center medium 5\. | "Is it not dawn?" she cried, and raised her head, | "Or hath the sun, grey-shrouded, yesternight, | Gone down with Love for ever to the dead? | When Love has perished, can there yet be light?" | "Yea, it is dawn," one answered: "see the dew | Quivers agleam, and all the east is white; | While in the willow song begins anew." | "When Love has perished, can there yet be light?" .. vspace:: 3 .. class:: center medium white-space-pre-line II\. AVERLAINE AND ARKELD. .. vspace:: 2 .. class:: center medium 1\. | ARKELD: Oh, why did you lift your eyes to mine? | Oh, why did you lift your drooping head? | AVERLAINE: The tangled threads of the fates entwine | Our hearts that follow as children led. | ARKELD: From the utmost ends of the earth we came, | As star moves starward through wildering night. | AVERLAINE: Our souls have mingled as flame with flame, | Yea, they have mingled as light with light. | ARKELD: Ah God, ah God, that it never had been! | AVERLAINE: The Shadow, the Shadow that falls between! | ARKELD: The stars in their courses move through the sky | Unswerving, unheeding, cold and blind. | AVERLAINE: Why did you linger nor pass me by | Where the cross-roads meet in the ways that wind? | ARKELD: I saw your eyes from the dusk of your hair | Flame out with sorrow and yearning love. | AVERLAINE: And I, who wandered with grey despair, | Looking up, saw heaven in blossom above. | ARKELD: Ah God, ah God, that it never had been! | AVERLAINE: The Shadow, the Shadow that falls between! | ARKELD: May we not go as we came, alone, | Unto the ends of the earth anew? | AVERLAINE: May we draw afresh from the rose new-blown | The golden sunlight, the crystal dew? | ARKELD: Yea, love between us has bloomed as a rose | Out of the desert under our feet. | AVERLAINE: May we forget how the red heart glows, | Forget that the dew on the petals is sweet? | ARKELD: Ah God, ah God, that it never had been! | AVERLAINE: The Shadow, the Shadow that falls between! | ARKELD: Have the ages brought us together that we | Might tremble, start at shadows, and cry? | AVERLAINE: Yea, it has been, and ever will be | Till Sorrow be slain or Love's self die. | ARKELD: Stronger than Sorrow is Love; and Hate, | The brother of Love, shall end our Sorrow. | AVERLAINE: The Shadow is strong with the strength of Fate, | And, slain, would rise from the grave to-morrow. | ARKELD: Ah God, ah God, that it never had been! | AVERLAINE: The Shadow, the Shadow for ever between! .. vspace:: 2 .. class:: center medium 2\. | AVERLAINE: Yea, we must part, and tear with ruthless hands | The golden web wherein, too late, Love strove | To weave us joy and bind us heart to heart. | ARKELD: Yea, we must part, and strew on desert-sands | Petal by petal all the rose of Love, | And part for ever where the cross-ways part. | AVERLAINE: Yea, we must part, and never turn our eyes | From strange horizons, desolate and far, | Though Love cry ever: "Turn but once, sad heart!" | ARKELD: Yea, we must part, and under alien skies | Must follow after some cold, gleaming star, | And roam, as north and south winds roam, apart. | AVERLAINE: Yea, we must part, ere Love be grown too strong | And we too helpless to resist his might; | While each may go with pure, unshamed heart. | ARKELD: Yea, we must part; and though we do Love wrong, | He will the more subdue us in our flight, | And hold us each more surely his, apart. .. vspace:: 3 .. class:: center large III\. QUEEN AVERLAINE. .. vspace:: 2 .. class:: center medium 1\. | O love, I bade you go; and you have borne | The summer with you from the valley-lands; | The poppy-flame has perished from the corn; | And in the chill, wan light of early morn | The reapers come in doleful, starveling bands, | To bind the blackened sheaves with listless hands; | For rain has put their sowing-toil to scorn. | O Love, I bade you go; and autumn brings | Bleak desolation; yet within my heart | Unquenched and fierce the flame you kindled springs; | For, echoing all day long, the courtyard rings | As loud it rang when, rending Love apart, | Your white horse cantered--swift and keen to start-- | Into a world of other queens and kings. .. vspace:: 2 .. class:: center medium 2\. | I bade you go; ah, wherefore are you gone? | How could you leave me dark and desolate, | O Sun of Love, that for brief summer shone? | Mine eyes are ever on the western gate, | Half-wishing, half-foredreading your return. | Return, O Love, return! | I cannot live without you; through the dark | I stretch blind hands to you across the world; | All day on unknown battle-fields I mark | Your sword's red course, your banner blue unfurled; | Yet never, in my day-dreams, you return. | Return, O Love, return! | Nay, you are gone: O Love, I bade you go. | I would not have you come again to be | A stranger in this house of silent woe, | Where, being all, you would be naught to me. | Mine, mine in dreams, but lost if you return; | Oh, nevermore return! .. vspace:: 2 .. class:: center medium 3\. | "To-day a wandering harper came | With outland tales of deeds of fame; | I hearkened from the noonday bright | Until the failing of the light, | The while he sang of joust and fight; | Yet never once I caught your name. | Oh, whither, whither are you gone, | Whose name victorious ever shone | Above all knights of other lands? | Across what wilderness of sands? | By what dead sea-deserted strands? | On what far quest of Love forlorn? | I loved you when men called you Lord | Arkeld, the never-sleeping sword; | Yet now, when all your might is furled, | And you no longer crest the world, | More are you mine than when you hurled | Destruction on the embattled horde. .. vspace:: 2 .. class:: center medium 4\. | Oh, deeper in the silent house | The silence falls; | Only the stir of bat or mouse | About the walls. | No cry, no voice in any room, | No gust of breath; | As if, within the clutch of doom, | We waited death. .. vspace:: 2 .. class:: center medium 5\. | The King is dead; | No longer now | The cold eyes gleam | Beneath his brow. | O cold, grey eyes, | Wherein the light | Of Love at dawn | Seemed clear and bright, | No true Love burned | Your cold desire, | Which mirrored but | My own heart's fire. .. vspace:: 2 .. class:: center medium 6\. | The King died yesterday.... Ah, no, he died | When young Love perished long, so long ago; | And on his throne, as marble at my side, | Has reigned a carven image, cold as snow, | Though all men bowed before it, crying: "King!" | Too late, too late the chains which held me fall; | Rock-bound, I bade the victor-knight go by; | And now, when time has loosed me from the thrall, | I know not where he tarries, 'neath what sky | He waits the winter's end, the dawn of spring. .. vspace:: 2 .. class:: center medium 7\. | Spring comes no more for me: though young March blow | To flame the larches, and from tree to tree | The green fire leap, till all the woodlands glow-- | Though every runnel, filled to overflow, | Bear sea-ward, loud and brown with melted snow, | Spring comes no more for me! | Spring comes no more for me: though April light | The flame of gorse above the peacock sea; | Though in an interweaving mesh of white | The seagulls hover 'neath the cliff's sheer height; | Though, hour by hour, new joys are winged for flight, | Spring comes no more for me! | Spring comes no more for me: though May will shake | White flame of hawthorn over all the lea, | Till every thick-set hedge and tangled brake | Puts on fresh flower of beauty for her sake; | Though all the world from winter-sleep awake, | Spring comes no more for me! .. vspace:: 2 .. class:: center medium 8\. | I wandered through the city till I came | Within the vast cathedral, cool and dim; | I looked upon the windows all aflame | With blazoned knights and saints and seraphim. | I looked on kings in purple, gold and blue, | On martyrs high before whom all men bow; | Until a gleam of light my footsteps drew | Before a shining seraph, on whose brow | A little flame, for ever pure and white, | Unwavering burns--the symbol of our love; | And as I knelt before him in the night, | He looked, compassionate, on me from above. .. vspace:: 2 .. class:: center medium 9\. | I heard a harper 'neath the castle walls | Sing, for night-shelter in the house of thralls, | A song of hapless lovers; in the shade | I paused awhile, unseen of man or maid. | Taking his harp, he touched the moaning strings, | And sang of queens unloved and loveless kings; | His song shot through my fluttering heart like flame | Till, wondering, I heard him breathe your name. | Oh, then I knew how all the deathless wrong | Time wrought of old is but a harper's song; | And all the hopeless sorrow of long years | An idle tale to win a stranger's tears. | Yea, in the song of Love's immortal dead | Our love was told; with shuddering heart I fled, | And strove to pass upon my way unseen, | But song was hushed with whispers: "Lo, the Queen!" .. vspace:: 2 .. class:: center medium 10\. | Was it for this we loved, O Time, to be | Among Love's deathless through eternity, | Set high on lone, divided peaks above | The sheltered summer-valley, broad and green? | Was it for this our joy and grief have been, | Our barren day-dreams, dream-deserted nights-- | That valley-lovers, looking up, might see | How vain is Love among the starry heights, | And, loving, sigh: "How vain a thing is Love!"? | O Love, that we had found thee in the shade | Where, all day long, the deep, leaf-hidden glade | Hears but the moan of some forsaken dove, | Or the clear song of happy, nameless streams; | Where, all night long, the August moonlight gleams | Through warm, green dusk, no longer cold and white! | O Love, that we had found thee, unafraid, | One summer morn, and followed thee till night, | As unknown valley-lovers follow Love! .. vspace:: 2 .. class:: center medium 11\. | I have grown old, awaiting spring's return, | And, now spring comes, I stand like winter grey | In a young world; yet warm within me burn | The morning-fires Love kindled in youth's day. | I have grown old; the young folk look on me | With sighs, and wonder that I once was fair, | And whisper one another: "Is this she? | Did summer ever light that winter hair? | "Ah, she is old; yet, she, too, once was young: | Yea, loved as we love even, for men tell | How bright her beauty burned on every tongue, | And how a knightly stranger loved her well. | "Yet Love grows old that beats so young and warm; | His leaping fires in dust and ashes fail; | Shall we, too, wither in the winter-storm, | And wander thus one April, old and frail?" | Love grows not old, O lovers, though youth die, | And bodily beauty perish as the flower; | Though all things fail, though spring and summer fly, | Love's fire burns quenchless till the last dark hour. .. vspace:: 2 .. class:: center medium 12\. | O valley-lovers, think you love, | Being all of joy, knows naught of sorrow? | A day, a night | Of swift delight | That fears no dread, grey-dawning morrow? | O valley-lovers, think you love | Knows only laughter, naught of weeping? | A rose-red fire | Of warm desire | For ever burning, never sleeping? | O lovers, little know ye Love. | Love is a flame that feeds on sorrow-- | A lone star bright | Through endless night | That waits a never-dawning morrow. .. vspace:: 2 .. class:: center medium 13\. | "Thus would I sing of life, | Ere I must yield my breath: | Though broken in the strife, | I sought not after death. | Though ruthless years have scourged | My soul with sorrow's brands, | And, day by day, have urged | My feet o'er desert-sands; | Yet would I rather tread | Again the bitter trail, | Than lie, calm-browed and pale, | Among the loveless dead. | No pang would I forego, | No stab of suffering, | No agony of woe, | If I to life might cling; | If I might follow still, | For evermore, afar, | O'er barren dale and hill, | My Love's unfading star. | Yea, now, with failing breath, | Thus would I sing of life: | Though broken in the strife, | I sought not after death. .. vspace:: 2 .. class:: center medium 14\. | Darkness has come upon me in the end; | Darkness has come upon me like a friend, | Yet undesired; why comest thou, O night, | To seal mine eyes for ever from the light? | Darkness has come upon me; yet a star | Burns through the night and beckons me from far. | Look up, O eyes, unfaltering, without fear; | O morning-star of Love, the dawn is near! .. vspace:: 4 .. _`THE GOLDEN HELM`: .. class:: center large THE GOLDEN HELM. .. vspace:: 3 .. class:: center medium The Golden Helm .. vspace:: 2 .. class:: center medium I\. | Across his stripling shoulders Geoffrey felt | The knighting-sword fall lightly, and he heard | The King's voice bid him rise; and at the word | He rose, new-flushed with knighthood, swiftly grown | To sudden manhood, though, but now, he knelt | A vigil-wearied squire before the throne. | He paused one moment while the people turned | To look on him with eyes that kindled bright, | Seeing his face aglow with strange, new light; | Yet them he saw not where they watched amazed, | And, though like azure flames Queen Hild's eyes burned, | Beyond the shadow of the throne he gazed | To where, in kindred rapture, young Christine | Stood, tremulous and white, in wind-flower grace-- | Beneath her thick, dark hair, her happy face | Pale-gleaming 'midst the ruddy maiden-throng; | But, following Geoffrey's eyes, the trembling Queen | Now bade the harpers rouse the air with song: | From pulsing throat and silver-throbbing string | The music soared, light-winged, and, fluttering, fell; | When, startled as one waking from a spell, | Geoffrey stepped back among the waiting knights; | While knelt another squire before the King. | In Queen Hild's eyes yet hovered stormy lights, | Beneath her glooming brows, as waters gleam | Under snow-laden skies; the summer day | For her in that brief glance had shivered grey, | Empty of light and song. She only heard | The King and knights as people of a dream; | Yet keenly Geoffrey's lightest, laughing word | Stung to the quick, and stabbed her quivering life, | Till from each shuddering wound the red joy flowed; | And, though a ruddy fire on each cheek glowed, | She felt her drainèd heart within her cold; | Then all at once a hot thought stirred new strife | Within her breast, and suddenly grown old | And wise in treacherous imagining, | She pressed her thin lips to a bitter smile, | And strove with laughing mask to hide the guile | That, slowly welling, through her body poured | Cold-blooded life that feels no arrowy sting | Of joy or hope, nor thrust of pity's sword. | To Christine, where she yet enraptured stood, | Hild, turning, spake kind words, and coldly praised | The new-made knight. Each word Christine amazed | Drank in with joyous heart and eager ears; | To her it seemed ne'er lived a Queen so good; | And love's swift rapture filled her eyes with tears. | For her true heart, the day-long pageant moved | Round Geoffrey's shining presence; king and knight | But shone for her with pale, reflected light. | As trancèd planets circling round the sun, | About the radiant head of her beloved | The dim throngs moved until the day was done. | When lucent gold suffused the cloudless west, | And lingering thrush-notes failed in drowsy song, | She left, at last, the weary maiden-throng, | To stray alone through dew-hung garden-glades; | And all the love unsealed within her breast | Flowed out from her to light the darkest shades. | Her quivering maiden-body could not hold | The sudden welling of love's loosened flood; | Through all her limbs it gushed, and in her blood | It stormed each throbbing pulse with blissful ache; | It seemed to spray the utmost glooms with gold, | And scatter glistening dews in every brake. | While yet she moved in rapture unafraid | Among the lilies, down the Grey Nun's Walk, | She heard behind the snapping of a stalk, | And stayed transfixed, nor dared to turn her head, | But stood a solitary, trembling maid-- | Forlorn and frail, with all her courage fled. | Thus Geoffrey found her as, hot-foot, he pressed | To pour about her all the glowing tide | Day-pent within his heart; the flood-gates wide, | His love swept over her, sea after sea, | Until life almost swooned within her breast, | And she seemed like to drown in ecstasy. | Yet, as the tempest sank in calm at last, | She rose from out the foam of love, new-born-- | As Venus from the irised surf of morn-- | To such triumphant beauty, Geoffrey, thralled, | Before her stood in wonder rooted fast; | Even his love within him bowed appalled | In tongueless worship as he gazed on her; | While, lily-like, the trancèd flowers among, | She stood, love-radiant, and above her hung | The canopy of star-enkindling night; | Though, when again she moved with joyous stir, | He sprang to her in love's unchallenged might. .. vspace:: 2 .. class:: center medium II\. | All night, beside her slumbering lord, the Queen | Tossed sleepless--every aching sense astrain | With tingling wakefulness that racked like pain | Her weary limbs; all night, in wide-eyed dread, | She watched the slow hours moving dark between | The glimmering window and the curtained bed. | The fitful calling of the owl, all night, | Struck like the voice of terror on her ears; | With brushing wings, about her taloned fears | Fluttered till dawn: when, as the summer gloom, | Grey-quivering, spilt in silver-showering light, | She rose and stood within the dawning room, | Shivering and pale--her long, unbraided hair | Each moment quickening to a livelier gold | About her snowy shoulders; yet, more cold | Than the still gleam of winter-frozen meres, | Her blue eyes shone with strange, unseeing stare, | As though they sought to pierce some mist of fears; | And, when she turned, the old familiar things | Unknown and alien seemed to her sight-- | Outworn and faded in the morning light | The rose-embroidered tapestries, and frail | The painted Love that hung on irised wings | Above the sleeping King. Dark-browed and pale | She looked upon her lord, and fresh despair | With dreadful calm through all her being stole, | And froze with icy breath the flickering soul | That strove within her. Evil courage steeled | Her heart once more, as, combing back her hair, | She watched the waking world of wood and field: | Hay-harvesters with long scythes flashing white; | The dewy-browsing deer; the blue smoke-curl | Above some woodland hut; a kerchiefed girl | Driving the kine afield with loitering pace. | But, as a youthful rider came in sight, | She from the casement turned with darkening face, | And looked not out again, and fiercely pressed | Her white teeth in her quivering underlip, | To stifle the wild cry that strove to slip | From her strained throat; with clutching hands she sought | To stay the throbbing tumult of her breast | That fluttered like a bird in meshes caught. | Christine as yet in dreamless slumber lay | Within her turret-chamber; but a bird | Within the laurel singing softly stirred | Her eyes to wakeful life, and from her bed | She rose and stood within the light of day, | White-faced and wondering, with lifted head. | As April-butterflies, new-winged for flight, | That poise awhile in quivering amaze, | Ere they may dare the unknown, glittering ways | Of perilous airs--upon the brink of morn | She paused one moment in the showering light, | In radiant ecstasy of youth forlorn. | Then swift remembrance flushed her virgin snow, | And wakened in her eyes the living fire; | With joyous haste she drew her bright attire | About her trembling limbs, with eager hands, | Veiling her maiden beauty's morning glow, | Before she looked abroad on meadowlands, | Where Geoffrey rode at dawn. Across the blaze | Of dandelions silvering to seed, | She saw his white horse swing with easy speed; | He rode with head exultant in the breeze | That lifted his brown hair. With lingering gaze | She watched him vanish down an aisle of trees; | Then, swiftly gathering her dark hair in braids | Above her slender neck, she crossed the floor | With noiseless step, unlatched the creaking door, | And stole in trembling silence down the stair, | Intent to reach the garden ere the maids | Should come with chattering tongues and laughter there; | When by her side she heard a rustling stir: | The arras parted, and before her stood | Queen Hild in proud, imperious womanhood, | Looking upon her with cold, smiling eyes. | In startled wonder Christine glanced at her. | Then spake the Queen: "Do maids thus early rise | To tend their household duties, or to feed | The doves, relinquishing sleep's precious hours | To see the morning dew upon the flowers | And what frail blooms have perished 'neath the moon? | To reach the Grey Nun's Walk, mayhap you speed-- | To count the stricken buds of lilies strewn | O'ernight upon the soil by careless feet | That wandered there so late? Yea, now I know, | Christine, because you flush and tremble so. | Yet look you not on me with eyes that burn; | I would not stay you when you go to greet | The rider of the dawn on his return. | Think you I leave my bed at break of day-- | I, Hild the Queen--to thwart a lover's kiss? | Think you my love of you could stoop to this, | Though you would wed a fledgling, deedless Knight? | Nay, shrink you not from me, turn not away; | Because my heart has never known love's light, | I fain would hear your happy tale of love, | That I may prosper you and your fair youth. | Will you not trust me?" Blind with love's glad truth, | Christine sank down within Hild's outstretched arms. | Speechless, awhile, with sobbing breath she strove; | Then poured out all the tale of love's alarms, | Raptures, despairs, and deathless ecstasies, | In one quick torrent from her brimming heart; | Then, quaking, ceased, and drew herself apart, | Dismayed that she so easily had revealed | To this white, cold-eyed Queen love's sanctities. | Yet Hild moved not, but stood, with hard lips sealed, | Until, the chiming of the turret-bell | Recalling her, she spake with far-off voice: | "I, loveless, in your innocent love rejoice. | May nothing stem its eager raptured course! | Oh, that my barren heart could love so well, | And feel the surge of love's subduing force! | Yet even I from out my dearth may give | To you, Christine. Would you that Geoffrey's name | Shall shine, unchallenged, on the lists of fame? | If you would have him win for you the crown | Of knightly immortality, and live | Triumphant on men's tongues in high renown, | Follow me now." With cold, exulting eyes | She raised the arras, opening to the light | An unknown stair-way clambering into night. | Within the caverned wall she swiftly passed. | Christine for one brief moment in surprise | Uncertain paused; then, wondering, followed fast. | The falling arras shutting out the day, | She stumbled blindly through the soaring gloom-- | Enclosing dank and chilly as the tomb | Her panting life; and unto her it seemed | That ever, as she climbed, more sheer the way | Before her rose, and ever fainter gleamed | The wan, white star of light that overhead | Hovered remote. Far up the stair she heard | A silken rustling as, without a word, | Relentlessly Queen Hild before her sped | For ever up the ever-soaring steep. | But when it almost seemed that she must fall-- | So loudly in her ears the pulses beat, | And each step seemed to sink beneath her feet-- | She heard the shrilly grating of a key, | And saw, above her, in the unseen wall, | A dazzling square of day break suddenly. | Within the lighted doorway Queen Hild turned | To reach a helping hand, and, as she bent | To clutch the swooning maiden, well-nigh spent, | And drew her to the chamber, weak and faint, | Through her gold hair so rare a lustre burned, | It seemed to Christine that an aureoled saint | Leaned out from heaven to snatch her from the deep. | Then, dizzily, she sank upon the floor, | Dreaming that toil was over evermore, | And she secure in Love's celestial fold; | Till, waking gradually as from a sleep, | Her dark eyes opened on a blaze of gold. | She sat within a chamber hung around | With glistering tapestry, whereon a knight, | Who bore a golden helm above the fight, | For ever triumphed o'er assailing swords, | Or led the greenwood chase with horse and hound, | While far behind him lagged the dames and lords | And all the hunting train; till he, at length, | Brought low the antlered quarry on the brink | Of some deep, craggy cleft, wherefrom did shrink | The quailing hounds with lathered flanks aquake. | As Christine looked on them, her maiden-strength | Returned to her; and now, more broad awake, | She saw, within the centre of the room, | A golden table whereon glittered bright | A casket of wrought gold, and, in the light, | Queen Hild, awaiting her, with smiling lips, | And laughing words: "Is this then love's sad doom, | To perish, fainting, in light's brief eclipse | Between a curtain and a closed door? | Shall this bright casket ever hold, unsought, | The golden helm--in elfin-ages wrought | For some star-destined knight--because love's heart | Grows faint within her? Shall the world no more | Acclaim its helmèd lord?" But, with a start, | Christine arose, and swiftly forward came | With eager eyes, and stooped with fluttering breast-- | Her slender, shapely hands together pressed | In tense expectancy, and all her face | With quivering light of wondering love aflame. | The Queen bent down, and in a breathing space | Unlocked the casket with a golden key, | And deftly loosed a little golden pin; | The heavy lid swung open and, within, | To Christine's eyes revealed the golden helm. | Then spake Queen Hild, once more: "Your love-gift see! | Think you that any smith in all the realm | Can beat dull metal to so fair a casque? | In jewelled caverns of enchantment old | This helm was wrought of magic-tempered gold | To yieldless strength, by elfin-hammers chased, | That toiled unwearied at their age-long task, | And over it an unknown legend traced | In letters of some world-forgotten tongue. | At noon, with careful footing, down the stair | Unto the hall the casket you must bear, | When King and knight are gathered round the board, | And, ere the tales be told or songs be sung, | Acclaim your love the golden-helmed lord." | Christine, awhile, in speechless wonderment, | Hung o'er the glistering helm, and silence fell | Within the arrased chamber like a spell; | While softly, on some distant, sunlit roof, | The basking pigeons cooed with deep content; | Till, far below, a sudden-clanging hoof | Startled the morn. The women's lifted eyes | One moment met in kindred ecstasy; | Then Hild, with hopeless shudder, shaking free, | With strained voice spake: "Why do you longer wait? | Your love returns; shall he, in sad surprise, | Find no glad face to greet him at the gate?" .. vspace:: 2 .. class:: center medium III\. | As some new jest was tossed from tongue to tongue, | Light laughter rippled round the midday board, | Beneath the bannered rafters: dame and lord | And maid and squire with merry chattering | Sat feasting; though no motley humour wrung | A smile from Hild, where she, beside the King, | Watched pale and still. She saw on Geoffrey's face | Grave wonder that he caught not anywhere | Among the maids the dusk of Christine's hair, | Or sunlight of her glance. His eyes, between | The curtained doorway and her empty place, | Kept eager, anxious vigil for Christine. | But when, at last, the lingering meal nigh o'er, | The waking harp-notes trembled through the hush, | Like the light, fitful prelude of the thrush | Ere his full song enchant the domèd elm; | The arras parting, through the open door | She came. Before her borne, the golden helm | Within the dim-lit hall shone out so bright, | That lord and dame in rustling wonder rose, | And squire and maiden sought to gather close, | With questioning lips, about the love-bright maid. | Christine, unheeding, turned nor left nor right; | With lifted head and eager step unstayed, | She strode to Geoffrey, while he stood alone, | Radiant with wondering love--as one who sees | The light of high, eternal mysteries | Illume awhile the mortal shade that moves | From out oblivion unto night unknown, | Hugging a little grace of joys and loves. | Before him now she came and, kneeling, spake, | With slow, clear-welling voice: "In ages old | This helm was wrought from elfin-hammered gold, | For one who, in the after-days, should be | Supreme above his kind, as, in the brake | Of branching fern, the solitary tree | That crests the fell-top. Unto you I bring | The gift of destiny, that, as the sun | New-risen of your knighthood, newly-won, | The wondering world may see its glory shine." | As Christine spake, with questioning glance the King | Turned to the Queen, who gave no answering sign. | Then, stretching forth his arm, he cried: "Sir knight, | I know not by what evil chance this maid | Has climbed the secret newell-stair unstayed | And reached the casket-chamber, and has borne | From thence the Helm of Strife, whereon the light | Of day has never fallen, night or morn, | For seven hundred years; but, ere you take | The doomful gift, know this: he who shall dare | To don the golden helm must ever fare | Upon the edge of peril, ever ride | Between dark-ambushed dangers, ever wake | Unto the thunderous crash of battle-tide. | Oh, pause before you take the fateful helm. | Will you, so young, forego, for evermore, | The sheltered haven-raptures of the shore, | To strive in ceaseless tempest, till, at last, | The fury-crested wave shall overwhelm | Your broken life on death's dark crag upcast?" | He ceased, and stood with eyes of hot appeal; | An aching silence shuddered through the hall; | None stirred nor spake, though, swaying like to fall, | Christine, in mute, imploring agony, | Wavered nigh death. As glittering points of steel | Queen Hild's eyes gleamed in bitter victory. | But all were turned to Geoffrey, where he stood | In pillared might of manhood, very fair; | His face a little paled beneath his hair, | Though bright his eyes with all the light of day. | At length he spake: "For evil or for good, | I take the Helm of Strife; let come what may." .. vspace:: 2 .. class:: center medium IV\. | Dawn shivered coldly through the meadowlands; | The ever-trembling aspens by the stream | Quivered with chilly light and fitful gleam; | Ruffling the heavy foliage of the plane, | Until the leaves turned, like pale, lifted hands, | A cold gust stirred with presage of near rain. | Coldly the light on Geoffrey's hauberk fell; | But yet more cold on Christine's heart there lay | The winter-clutch of grief, as, far away, | She saw him ride, and in the stirrup rise | And, turning, wave to her a last farewell. | Beyond the ridge he vanished, and her eyes | Caught the far flashing of the helm of gold | One moment as it glanced with mocking light; | Then naught but tossing pine-trees filled her sight. | Yet darker gloomed the woodlands 'neath the drench | Of pillared showers; colder and yet more cold | Her heart had shuddered since the last, hot wrench | Of parting overnight. Though still her mouth | Felt the mute impress of love's sacred seal; | Though still through all her senses seemed to steal | The heavy fume of wound-wort that had hung | All night about the hedgerows--parched with drouth; | Though the first notes the missel-cock had sung, | Ere darkness fled, resounded in her ears; | Yet no hot tempest of tumultuous woe | Shook her young body. As night-fallen snow | Burdens with numb despair young April's green, | Her sorrow lay upon her; hopes and fears | Within her slept. As something vaguely seen | Nor realised--since yesterday's dread noon | Had shattered all love's triumph--life had passed | About her like a dream by doom o'ercast. | Long hours she sat, with silent, folded hands, | And face that glimmered like a winter moon | In cloudy hair. Across the rain-grey lands | She gazed with eyes unseeing; till she heard | A step within her chamber, and her name | Fell dully on her ear; then like a flame | Sharp anguish shot through every aching limb | With keen remembrance. Suddenly she stirred, | And, turning, looked on Hild. "Grieve you for him..." | The Queen began; then, with a little gasp, | Her voice failed, and she shrank before the gaze | Of Christine's eyes, and, shrivelled by the blaze | Of fires her hand had kindled, all her pride | Fell shredded, and not even the gold clasp | Of queenhood held, her naked deed to hide. | She quailed, and, turning, fled from out the room. | Soon Christine's wrath was drowned in whelming grief, | And in the fall of tears she found relief-- | As brooding skies in sweet release of rain. | All day she wept, until, at length, the gloom | Of eve laid soothing hands upon her pain. | Then, once again, she rose, calm-browed, and sped | Downstairs with silent step, and reached, unstayed, | The Grey Nun's Walk, where all alone a maid | Drank in the rain-cooled air. With low-breathed words, | They whispered long together, while, o'erhead, | From rain-wet branches rang the song of birds. | The maiden often paused as in alarm; | Then, with uncertain, half-delaying pace, | She left Christine, returning in a space | With Philip, Christine's brother, a young squire, | Who strode by her with careless, swinging arm | And eager face, with keen, blue eyes afire. | Then all three stood, with whispering heads bent low, | In eager converse clustered; till, at last, | They parted, and, with high hopes beating fast, | Christine unto her turret-room returned-- | Her dark eyes bright and all her face aglow, | As if some new-lit rapture in her burned. | About her little chamber swift she moved, | Until, at length, in travelling array, | She paused to rest, and all-impatient lay | Upon her snow-white bed, and watched the light | Fail from the lilied arras that she loved | Because her hand had wrought each petal white | And slender, emerald stem. The falling night | Was lit for her with many a memory | Of little things she could no longer see, | That had been with her in old, happy hours, | Before her girlish joys had taken flight | As morning dews from noon-unfolding flowers. | For her, with laggard pace the minutes trailed, | Till night seemed to eternity outdrawn. | At last, an hour before the summer-dawn, | She rose and once again, with noiseless tread, | Crept down the stair, grey-cloaked and closely veiled, | While every shadow struck her cold with dread | Lest, drawing back the arras, Hild should stand | With mocking smile before her; but, unstayed, | She reached the stair-foot, and, no more afraid, | She sought a low and shadow-hidden door, | Slid back the silent bolts with eager hand, | And stepped into the garden dim once more. | She quickly crossed a dewy-plashing lawn, | And, passing through a little wicket-gate, | She reached the road. Not long had she to wait | Ere, with two bridled horses, Philip came. | Silent they mounted; far they fared ere dawn | Burnished the castle-weathercock to flame. .. vspace:: 2 .. class:: center medium V\. | Northward they climbed from out the valley mist; | Northward they crossed the sun-enchanted fells; | Northward they plunged down deep, fern-hidden dells; | And northward yet--until the sapphire noon | Had burned and glowed to thunderous amethyst | Of evening skies about an opal moon; | Northward they followed fast the loud-tongued fame | Of young Sir Geoffrey of the golden helm; | Until it seemed that storm must overwhelm | Their weary flight. They sought a lodging-place, | And soon upon a lonely cell they came | Wherein a hermit laboured after grace. | On beds of withered bracken, soft and warm, | He housed them, and himself, all night, alone, | Knelt in long vigil on the aching stone, | Within his little chapel, though, all night, | His prayers were drowned by thunders of the storm, | And all about him flashed blue, pulsing light. | Christine in calm, undreaming slumber lay, | Nor stirred till, clear and glittering, the morn | Sang through the forest; though, with roots uptorn, | The mightiest-limbed and highest-soaring oak | Had fallen charred, with green leaves shrivelled grey. | At tinkling of the matin-bell she woke, | And soon with Philip left the woodland boughs | For barer uplands. Over tawny bent | And purpling heath they rode till day was spent; | When, down within a broad, green-dusking dale, | They sought the shelter of the holy house | Of God's White Sisters of the Virgin's Veil. | So, day by day, they ever northward pressed, | Until they left the lands of peace behind, | And rode among the border-hills, where blind | Insatiate warfare ever rages fierce; | Where night-winds ever fan a fiery crest, | And dawn's light breaks on bright, embattled spears: | A land whose barren hills are helmed with towers; | A lone, grey land of battle-wasted shires; | A land of blackened barns and empty byres; | A land of rock-bound holds and robber-hordes, | Of slumberous noons and wakeful midnight hours, | Of ambushed dark and moonlight flashing swords. | With hand on hilt and ever-kindling eyes, | Flushed face and quivering nostril, Philip rode; | But nought assailed them; every lone abode | Forsaken seemed; all empty lay the land | Beneath the empty sky; only the cries | Of plovers pierced the blue on either hand; | Until, at sudden cresting of a hill, | The clang of battle sounded on their ears, | And, far below, they saw a surge of spears | Crash on unyielding ranks; while, from the sea | Of striving steel, with deathly singing shrill, | A spray of arrows flickered fitfully. | Amazed they stood, wide-eyed, with holden breath; | When, of a sudden, flashed upon their sight | The golden helm in midmost of the fight, | Where, with high-lifted head and undismayed, | Sir Geoffrey rode, a very lord of death, | With ever-leaping, ever-crashing blade. | Christine watched long, now cold with quaking dread, | Now hot with hope as each assailant fell; | The bright sword held her gaze as by a spell; | Because love blinded her to all but love, | Unmoved she watched the foemen shudder dead, | She whose heart erst the meanest woe could move. | Then, dazed, she saw a solitary shaft, | Unloosed with certain aim from out the bow, | Strike clean through Geoffrey's hauberk, and bring low | The golden helm, while o'er him swiftly met | The tides of fight. Christine a little laughed | With rattling throat, and stood with still eyes set. | Scarce Philip dared to raise his eyes to hers | To see the terror there. No word she spake, | But leaned a little forward through the brake | That bloomed about her in a golden blaze; | Her hands were torn to bleeding by the furze, | Yet nothing could disturb that dreadful gaze. | Then, gradually, the heaving battle swerved | To northward, faltering broken, and afar | It closed again, where, round a jutting scar, | The flashing torrent of the river curved. | With eager step Christine ran down the hill, | And sped across the late-forsaken field | To where, with shattered sword and splintered shield, | Among the mounded bodies Geoffrey lay. | She loosed his helm, but deathly pale and still | His young face gleamed within the light of day. | Christine beside him knelt, as Philip sought | A draught of water from the peat-born stream; | When, in his eyes, at last, a fitful gleam | Flickered, and bending low, with straining ears, | The laboured breathing of her name she caught; | And over his dead face fell fast her tears. | Once more towards them the tide of battle swept; | Christine moved not. Young Philip on her cried, | And strove, in vain, to draw her safe aside. | A random shaft in her unshielded breast-- | Though hot to stay its course her brother leapt-- | Struck quivering, and she slowly sank to rest. .. vspace:: 2 .. class:: center medium VI\. | Queen Hild sat weaving in her garden-close, | When on her startled ear there fell the news | Of Christine's flight before the darkling dews | Had thrilled with dawn. A strand of golden thread | Slipped from her trembling fingers as she rose | And hastened to the castle with drooped head. | All morn she paced within her blinded room, | Unresting, to and fro, her white hands clenched; | All morn within her tearless eyes, unquenched, | Blue fires of anger smouldered, yet no moan | Escaped her lips. Without, in summer bloom, | The garden murmured with bliss-burdened drone | Of hover-flies and lily-charmed bees; | Sometimes a finch lit on the window-ledge, | With shrilly pipe, or, from the rose-hung hedge, | A blackbird fluted; yet she neither heard | Nor heeded aught; until, by rich degrees, | Drowsed into noon the noise of bee and bird. | Yea, even when, without her chamber, stayed | A doubtful step, and timid fingers knocked, | She answered not, but, swiftly striding, locked | Yet more secure, with angry-clicking key, | The bolted door, and the affrighted maid | Unto the waiting hall fled, fearfully. | Wearied at last, upon her bed Queen Hild | In fitful slumber sank; but evil dreams | Of battle-stricken lands and blood-red streams | Swirled through her brain. Then, suddenly, she woke, | Wide-eyed, and sat upright, with body chilled, | Though in her throat the hot air seemed to choke. | Swiftly she rose; then, binding her loosed hair, | She bathed her throbbing brows, and, cold and calm, | Downstairs she glided, while the evening-psalm | In maiden-voices quavered, faint and sweet, | And from the chapel-tower, through quivering air, | The bell's clear silver-tinkling clove the heat. | She strode into the hall where yet the King | Sat with his knights; a weary minstrel stirred | Cool, throbbing wood-notes, throated like a bird, | From his soft-stringèd lute. With scornful eyes | Hild looked on them and spake: "Can nothing sting | Your slumberous hearts from slothful peace to rise? | Must only stripling-knights and maidens ride | To battle, where, unceasing, foemen wage | War on your marches, and your wardens rage | In impotent despair with desperate swords, | While you, O King, with sheathèd arms abide?" | She paused, and, wondering, the King and lords | Looked on her mutely; then, again, she spake: | "Shall I, then, and my maidens sally forth | With battle-brands to conquer the wild north? | Yea, I will go! Who follows after me?" | As by a blow struck suddenly awake, | The King leapt up, and, like a clamorous sea, | The knights about him. Scornfully the Queen | Looked on them: "So my woman's words have roused | The hands that slumbered and the hearts that drowsed. | Make ready then for battle; ere seven days | Have passed, the dawn must light your armour's sheen, | And in the sun your pennoned lances blaze." | Her voice ceased; and a pulsing flame of light | Flashed through the hall; in crashing thunder broke | The heavy, hanging heat; the rafters woke | In echo as the rainy torrent poured; | Bright gleamed the rapid lightning; yet more bright | The war-lust kindled hot in every lord. | To clang of armour the seventh morning stirred | From slumber; restless hoof and champing bit | Aroused the garth; and day, arising, lit | A hundred lances, as, each bolt withdrawn, | The courtyard-gate swung wide with noise far-heard, | And flickering pennons rode into the dawn-- | Before his knights, the King, and at his side, | Queen Hild, with ever-northward-gazing eyes; | But, ere they far had fared, in mute surprise | They stayed and all drew rein, as down the road | They saw a little band of warriors ride-- | Sore travel-stained--who bore a heavy load | Upon a branch-hung litter; while before | Came Philip, bearing a war-broken lance. | Though King and lords looked, wondering, in a glance | Queen Hild had read the sorrow of his face | And pierced the leaf-hid secret--which e'ermore | A brand of fire upon her heart would trace. | Darkness about her swirled, but, with a fierce | Wild, conquering shudder, shaking herself free, | Unto the light she clung, though like a sea | It surged and eddied round her; yet so still | She sat, none knew her steely eyes could pierce | The leafy screen. With guilty terror chill, | She heard the king speak--sadly riding forth: | "Whence come you, Philip, battle-stained and slow? | What burden bear you with such brows of woe?" | Then Philip answered, mournfully: "I bring | Two wanderers home from out the perilous north. | Prepare to gaze on death's defeat, O King." | They lowered the litter slowly to the ground; | Back fell the branches; in the light of day, | In calm, white sleep Christine and Geoffrey lay, | And at their feet the baleful Helm of Strife | Sword-cloven. Hushed stood all the knights around, | When spake the King, alighting: "Come, O wife, | And let us twain, with humble heads low-bowed, | Even at the feet of love triumphant stand, | A little while together, hand in hand." | The Queen obeyed; but, fearfully, she shrank | Before the eyes of death, and, quaking, cowed, | With moaning cry, low in the dust she sank. .. vspace:: 3 .. class:: center small white-space-pre-line PRINTED BY R. FOLKARD AND SON, 23, DEVONSHIRE STREET, QUEEN SQUARE, BLOOMSBURY. .. vspace:: 6 .. pgfooter::