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+ PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
+<html>
+<head>
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=US-ASCII" />
+<title>The Visions of England</title>
+ <style type="text/css">
+/*<![CDATA[ XML blockout */
+<!--
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+ .blkquot {margin-left: 4em; margin-right: 4em;} /* block indent */
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+<h2>
+<a href="#startoftext">The Visions of England, by Francis T. Palgrave</a>
+</h2>
+<pre>
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Visions of England, by Francis T.
+Palgrave, Edited by Henry Morley
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Visions of England
+ Lyrics on leading men and events in English History
+
+
+Author: Francis T. Palgrave
+
+Editor: Henry Morley
+
+Release Date: March 5, 2006 [eBook #17923]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE VISIONS OF ENGLAND***
+</pre>
+<p><a name="startoftext"></a></p>
+<p>Transcribed from the 1889 Cassell and Company edition by David Price,
+ccx074@coventry.ac.uk</p>
+<h1><!-- page 3--><a name="page3"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 3</span>THE
+VISIONS OF ENGLAND: LYRICS OF LEADING MEN AND EVENTS IN ENGLISH HISTORY</h1>
+<p><span class="smcap">by<br />
+</span>FRANCIS T. PALGRAVE<br />
+<i>Professor of Poetry in the University of Oxford</i><br />
+<i>Late Fellow of Exeter College</i></p>
+<p>TANTA RES EST, UT PAENE VITIO MENTIS TANTUM OPUS INGRESSUS MIHI VIDEAR</p>
+<p>CASSELL &amp; COMPANY, <span class="smcap">limited</span>:<br />
+<i>LONDON, PARIS, NEW YORK &amp; MELBOURNE</i><br />
+1889</p>
+<h2><!-- page 4--><a name="page4"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 4</span>By
+the same Author</h2>
+<p>THE VISIONS OF ENGLAND: Seventy Lyrics on leading Men and Events
+in English History: 8vo.&nbsp; 7/6</p>
+<p>LYRICAL POEMS, Four Books: Extra Fcap.&nbsp; 8vo.&nbsp; 6/-</p>
+<p>ORIGINAL HYMNS: 18mo.&nbsp; 1/6</p>
+<p>* * * * *</p>
+<p><i>Poetry edited by the same</i></p>
+<p>THE GOLDEN TREASURY OF ENGLISH LYRICAL POETRY: 18mo.&nbsp; 4/6</p>
+<p>THE CHILDREN&rsquo;S TREASURY OF ENGLISH LYRICAL POETRY, with Notes
+and Glossary: 18mo.&nbsp; 2/6.&nbsp; Or in two parts, 1/- each</p>
+<p>SHAKESPEARE&rsquo;S LYRICS.&nbsp; SONGS FROM THE PLAYS AND SONNETS,
+with Notes: 18mo.&nbsp; 4/6</p>
+<p>SELECTION FROM R. HERRICK&rsquo;S LYRICAL POETRY, with Essay and
+Notes: 18mo.&nbsp; 4/6</p>
+<p>THE POETICAL WORKS OF J. KEATS, reprinted; <i>literatim</i> from
+the original editions, with Notes: 18mo.&nbsp; 4/6</p>
+<p>LYRICAL POEMS BY LORD TENNYSON, selected and arranged, with Notes:
+18mo.&nbsp; 4/6</p>
+<p>GLEN DESSERAY AND OTHER POEMS, by J. C. Shairp, late Principal of
+the United College, S. Andrews, and Professor of Poetry in the University
+of Oxford.&nbsp; With Essay and Notes.&nbsp; 8vo.</p>
+<p>Messrs. <span class="smcap">Macmillan, </span>Bedford St., Covent
+Garden</p>
+<p>* * * * *</p>
+<p><i>To be published presently</i></p>
+<p>THE TREASURY OF SACRED SONG, selected from the English Lyrical Poetry
+of Four Centuries, with Notes Explanatory and Biographical</p>
+<p><span class="smcap">Clarendon Press, Oxford</span><br />
+<i>Aug</i>. 1889</p>
+<h2><!-- page 5--><a name="page5"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 5</span>INTRODUCTION.</h2>
+<p>Again<span class="smcap">, </span>on behalf of readers of this <span class="smcap">National
+Library, </span>I have to thank a poet of our day&mdash;in this case
+the Oxford Professor of Poetry&mdash;for joining his voice to the voices
+of the past through which our better life is quickened for the duties
+of to-day.&nbsp; Not for his own verse only, but for his fine sense
+also of what is truest in the poets who have gone before, the name of
+Francis Turner Palgrave is familiar to us all.&nbsp; Many a home has
+been made the richer for his gathering of voices of the past into a
+dainty &ldquo;Golden Treasury of English Songs.&rdquo;&nbsp; Of this
+work of his own I may cite what was said of it in <i>Macmillan&rsquo;s
+Magazine</i> for October, 1882, by a writer of high authority in English
+Literature, Professor A. W. Ward, of Owens College.&nbsp; &ldquo;A very
+eminent authority,&rdquo; said Professor Ward, &ldquo;has accorded to
+Mr. Palgrave&rsquo;s historical insight, praise by the side of which
+all words of mine must be valueless,&rdquo; Canon [now Bishop] Stubbs
+writes:&mdash;&ldquo;I do not think that there is one of the <i>Visions</i>
+which does not carry my thorough consent and sympathy all through.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Here, then, Mr. Palgrave re-issues, for the help of many thousands
+more, his own songs of the memories of the Nation, addressed to a Nation
+that has not yet forfeited the praise of Milton.&nbsp; Milton said of
+the Englishman, &ldquo;If we look at his native towardliness in the
+roughcast, without breeding, some nation or <!-- page 6--><a name="page6"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 6</span>other
+may haply be better composed to a natural civility and right judgment
+than he.&nbsp; But if he get the benefit once of a wise and well-rectified
+nurture, I suppose that wherever mention is made of countries, manners,
+or men, the English people, among the first that shall be praised, may
+deserve to be accounted a right pious, right honest, and right hardy
+nation.&rdquo;&nbsp; So much is shown by the various utterances in this
+<span class="smcap">National Library.&nbsp; S</span>o much is shown,
+in the present volume of it, by a poet&rsquo;s vision of the England
+that has been till now, and is what she has been.</p>
+<p>H. M.</p>
+<p><!-- page 7--><a name="page7"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 7</span><span class="smcap">to
+the names of</span><br />
+HENRY HALLAM <span class="smcap">and </span>FRANCIS PALGRAVE<br />
+<span class="smcap">friends and fellow-labourers in english history<br />
+for forty years</span>,<br />
+<span class="smcap">who, differing often in judgment</span>,<br />
+<span class="smcap">were at one throughout life in devoted love of<br />
+justice, truth, and england</span>,<br />
+<span class="smcap"><i>in affectionate and reverent remembrance</i></span><span class="smcap"><br />
+this book is inscribed and dedicated</span></p>
+<h2><!-- page 9--><a name="page9"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 9</span>PREFACE</h2>
+<p>As the scheme which the Author has here endeavoured to execute has
+not, so far as he knows, the advantage of any near precedent in any
+literature, he hopes that a few explanatory words may be offered without
+incurring censure for egotism.</p>
+<p>Our history is so eminently rich and varied, and at the same time,
+by the fact of our insular position, so stamped with unity, that from
+days very remote it has supplied matter for song.&nbsp; This, among
+Celts and Angles, at first was lyrical.&nbsp; But poetry, for many centuries
+after the Conquest, mainly took the annalistic form, and, despite the
+ability often shown, was hence predoomed to failure.&nbsp; For a nation&rsquo;s
+history cannot but present many dull or confused periods, many men and
+things intractable by poetry, though, perhaps, politically effective
+and important, which cannot be excluded from any narrative aiming at
+consecutiveness; and, by the natural laws of art, these passages, when
+rendered in verse, in their effect become more prosaic than they would
+be in a prose rendering.</p>
+<p>My attempt has therefore been to revert to the earlier and more natural
+conditions of poetry, and to offer,&mdash;not a continuous narrative;
+not poems on every critical moment or conspicuous man in our long annals,&mdash;but
+single lyrical pictures of such leading or typical characters and scenes
+in English history, and only such, as have seemed amenable to a strictly
+poetical treatment.&nbsp; Poetry, not History, has, hence, been my first
+and last aim; or, perhaps I might define it, History for Poetry&rsquo;s
+sake.&nbsp; At the same time, I have striven to keep throughout as closely
+to absolute <!-- page 10--><a name="page10"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 10</span>historical
+truth in the design and colouring of the pieces as the exigencies of
+poetry permit:&mdash;the result aimed at being to unite the actual tone
+and spirit of the time concerned, with the best estimate which has been
+reached by the research and genius of modern investigators.&nbsp; Our
+island story, freed from the &lsquo;falsehood of extremes,&rsquo;&mdash;exorcised,
+above all, from the seducing demon of party-spirit, I have thus here
+done my best to set forth.&nbsp; And as this line of endeavour has conducted
+and constrained me, especially when the seventeenth century is concerned,
+to judgments&mdash;supported indeed by historians conspicuous for research,
+ability, and fairness, but often remote from the views popularized by
+the writers of our own day,&mdash;upon these points a few justificatory
+notes have been added.</p>
+<p>A double aim has hence governed and limited both the selection and
+the treatment of my subjects.&nbsp; The choice has necessarily fallen,
+often, not on simply picturesque incident or unfamiliar character, but
+on the men and things that we think of first, when thinking of the long
+chronicle of England,&mdash;or upon such as represent and symbolize
+the main current of it.&nbsp; Themes, however, on which able or popular
+song is already extant,&mdash;notably in case of Scotland,&mdash;I have
+in general avoided.&nbsp; In the rendering, my desire has been always
+to rest the poetry of each Vision on its own intrinsic interest; to
+write with a straightforward eye to the object alone; not studious of
+ornament for ornament&rsquo;s sake; allowing the least possible overt
+intrusion of the writer&rsquo;s personality; and, in accordance with
+lyrical law, seeking, as a rule, to fix upon some factual picture for
+each poem.</p>
+<p>* * * * *</p>
+<p>To define, thus, the scope of what this book attempts, is, in itself,
+a confession of presumptuousness,&mdash;the writer&rsquo;s own sense
+of which is but feebly and imperfectly expressed in the words from Vergil&rsquo;s
+letter to Augustus prefixed as my motto.&nbsp; In truth, so rich and
+so wide are the materials, <!-- page 11--><a name="page11"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 11</span>that
+to scheme a lyrical series which should really paint the <i>Gesta Anglorum</i>
+in their fulness might almost argue &lsquo;lack of wit,&rsquo; <i>vitium
+mentis</i>, in much greater powers than mine.&nbsp; No criticism, however
+severe, can add to my own consciousness how far the execution of the
+work, in regard to each of its aims, falls below the plan.&nbsp; Yet
+I would allow myself the hope, great as the deficiencies may be, that
+the love of truth and the love of England are mine by inheritance in
+a degree sufficient to exempt this book, (the labour of several years),
+from infidelity to either:&mdash;that the intrinsic worth and weight
+of my subject may commend these songs, both at home, and in the many
+Englands beyond sea, to those who, (despite the inevitably more engrossing
+attractions of the Present, and the emphatic bias of modern culture
+towards the immediate and the tangible), maintain that high and soul-inspiring
+interest which, identifying us with our magnificent Past, and all its
+varied lessons of defeat and victory, offers at the same time,&mdash;under
+the guidance from above,&mdash;our sole secure guarantee for prosperous
+and healthy progress in the Future.</p>
+<blockquote><p>The world has cycles in its course, when all<br />
+That once has been, is acted o&rsquo;er again;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>and only the nation which, at each moment of political or social
+evolution, looks lovingly backward to its own painfully-earned experience&mdash;<i>Respiciens</i>,
+<i>Prospiciens</i>, as Tennyson&rsquo;s own chosen device expresses
+it&mdash;has solid reason to hope, that its movement is true Advance&mdash;that
+its course is Upward.</p>
+<p>* * * * *</p>
+<p>It remains only to add, that the book has been carefully revised
+and corrected, and that nineteen pieces published in the original volume
+of 1881 are not reprinted in the present issue.</p>
+<p>F. T. P.<br />
+<i>July</i>, 1889</p>
+<h2><!-- page 15--><a name="page15"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 15</span>THE
+VISIONS OF ENGLAND</h2>
+<h3>PRELUDE</h3>
+<p><i>CAESAR TO EGBERT</i></p>
+<p>1</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;England<span class="smcap">, </span>fair England!&nbsp;
+Empress isle of isles!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;Round whom the loving-envious ocean plays,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Girdling thy feet with silver and with smiles,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Whilst all the nations crowd thy liberal bays;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With rushing wheel and heart of fire they come,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Or glide and glance like white-wing&rsquo;d doves that
+know<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And seek their proper home:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; England! not England yet! but fair as now,<br />
+When first the chalky strand was stirr&rsquo;d by Roman prow.</p>
+<p>2</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;On thy dear countenance, great mother-land,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Age after age thy sons have set their sign,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Moulding the features with successive hand<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Not always sedulous of beauty&rsquo;s line:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Yet here Man&rsquo;s art in one harmonious aim<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With Nature&rsquo;s gentle moulding, oft has work&rsquo;d<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The perfect whole to frame:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Nor does earth&rsquo;s labour&rsquo;d face elsewhere, like
+thee,<br />
+Give back her children&rsquo;s heart with such full sympathy</p>
+<p>3</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;On marshland rough and self-sprung forest
+gazed<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The imperial Roman of the eagle-eye;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Log-splinter&rsquo;d forts on green hill-summits raised,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <!-- page 16--><a name="page16"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 16</span>Earth
+huts and rings that dot the chalk-downs high:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Dark rites of hidden faith in grove and moor;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Idols of monstrous build; wheel&rsquo;d scythes of war;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Rock tombs and pillars hoar:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Strange races, Finn, Iberian, Belgae, Celt;<br />
+While in the wolds huge bulls and antler&rsquo;d giants dwelt.</p>
+<p>4</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;Another age!&mdash;The spell of Rome has
+past<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Transforming all our Britain; Ruthless plough,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Which plough&rsquo;d the world, yet o&rsquo;er the nations
+cast<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The seed of arts, and law, and all that now<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Has ripen&rsquo;d into commonwealths:&mdash;Her hand<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With network mile-paths binding plain and hill<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Arterialized the land:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The thicket yields: the soil for use is clear;<br />
+Peace with her plastic touch,&mdash;field, farm, and grange are here.</p>
+<p>5</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Lo, flintwall&rsquo;d cities, castles stark and
+square<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Bastion&rsquo;d with rocks that rival Nature&rsquo;s own;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Red-furnaced baths, trim gardens planted fair<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With tree and flower the North ne&rsquo;er yet had known;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Long temple-roofs and statues poised on high<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With golden wings outstretch&rsquo;d for tiptoe flight,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Quivering in summer sky:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The land had rest, while those stern legions lay<br />
+By northern ramparts camp&rsquo;d, and held the Pict at bay.</p>
+<p>6</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Imperious Empire!&nbsp; Thrice-majestic Rome!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; No later age, as earth&rsquo;s slow centuries glide,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Can raze the footprints stamp&rsquo;d where thou hast come,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The ne&rsquo;er-repeated grandeur of thy stride!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;Though now so dense a darkness takes the land,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Law, peace, wealth, letters, faith,&mdash;all lights are
+quench&rsquo;d<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!-- page 17--><a name="page17"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 17</span>By
+violent heathen hand:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Vague warrior kings; names writ in fire and wrong;<br />
+Aurelius, Urien, Ida;&mdash;shades of ancient song.</p>
+<p>7</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And Thou&mdash;O whether born of flame and wave,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Or Gorlois&rsquo; son, or Uther&rsquo;s, blameless lord,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; True knight, who died for those thou couldst not save<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; When the Round Table brake their plighted word,&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The lord of song hath set thee in thy grace<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And glory, rescued from the phantom world,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Before us face to face;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; No more Avilion bowers the King detain;<br />
+The mystic child returns; the Arthur reigns again!</p>
+<p>8</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;Now, as some cloud that hides a mountain
+bulk<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Thins to white smoke, and mounts in lighten&rsquo;d air,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And through the veil the gray enormous hulk<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Burns, and the summit, last, is keen and bare,&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; From wasted Britain so the gloaming clears;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Another birth of time breaks eager out,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And England fair appears:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Imperial youth sign&rsquo;d on her golden brow,<br />
+While the prophetic eyes with hope and promise glow.</p>
+<p>9</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Then from the wasted places of the land,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Charr&rsquo;d skeletons of cities, circling walls<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of Roman might, and towers that shatter&rsquo;d stand<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of that lost world survivors, forth she calls<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Her new creation:&mdash;O&rsquo;er the land is wrought<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The happy villagedom by English tribes<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; From Elbe and Baltic brought;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Red kine light up with life the ravaged plain;<br />
+The forest glooms are pierced; the plough-land laughs again.</p>
+<p><!-- page 18--><a name="page18"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 18</span>10</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Each from its little croft the homesteads peep,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Green apple-garths around, and hedgeless meads,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Smooth-shaven lawns of ever-shifting sheep,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Wolds where his dappled crew the swineherd feeds:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Pale gold round pure pale foreheads, and their eyes<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; More dewy blue than speedwell by the brook<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; When Spring&rsquo;s fresh current flies,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The free fair maids come barefoot to the fount,<br />
+Or poppy-crown&rsquo;d with fire, the car of harvest mount.</p>
+<p>11</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;On the salt stream that rings us, ness and bay,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The nation&rsquo;s old sea-soul beats blithe and strong;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The black foam-breasters taste Biscayan spray,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And where &rsquo;neath Polar dawns the narwhals throng:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Free hands, free hearts, for labour and for glee,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Or village-moot, when thane with churl unites<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Beneath the sacred tree;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; While wisdom tempers force, and bravery leads,<br />
+Till spears beat <i>Aye</i>! on shields, and words at once are deeds.</p>
+<p>12</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Again with life the ruin&rsquo;d cities smile,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Again from mother-Rome their sacred fire<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Knowledge and Faith rekindle through the isle,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Nigh quench&rsquo;d by barbarous war and heathen ire:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;No more on Balder&rsquo;s grave let Anglia weep<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; When winter storms entomb the golden year<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Sunk in Adonis-sleep;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Another God has risen, and not in vain!<br />
+The Woden-ash is low, the Cross asserts her reign.</p>
+<p>13</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;Land of the most law-loving,&mdash;the most
+free!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; My dear, dear England! sweet and green as now<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <!-- page 19--><a name="page19"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 19</span>The
+flower-illumined garden of the sea,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And Nature least impair&rsquo;d by axe and plough!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A laughing land!&mdash;Thou seest not in the north<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; How the black Dane and vulture Norseman wait<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The sign of coming forth,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The foul Landeyda flap its raven plume,<br />
+And all the realms once more eclipsed in pagan gloom!</p>
+<p>14</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;O race, of many races well compact!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; As some rich stream that runs in silver down<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; From the White Mount:&mdash;his baby steps untrack&rsquo;d<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Where clouds and emerald cliffs of crystal frown;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Now, alien founts bring tributary flood,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Or kindred waters blend their native hue,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Some darkening as with blood;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; These fraught with iron strength and freshening brine,<br />
+And these with lustral waves, to sweeten and refine.</p>
+<p>15</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Now calm as strong, and clear as summer air,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Blessing and blest of earth and sky, he glides:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Now on some rock-ridge rends his bosom fair,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And foams with cloudy wrath and hissing tides:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Then with full flood of level-gliding force,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; His discord-blended melody murmurs low<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Down the long seaward course:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; So through Time&rsquo;s mead, great River, greatly glide:<br />
+Whither, thou may&rsquo;st not know:&mdash;but He, who knows, will guide.</p>
+<p>St. 3 Sketches Prehistoric England.&nbsp; St. 4 <i>Mile-paths</i>;
+old English name for Roman roads.&nbsp; St. 5 <i>Tree and flower</i>;
+such are reported to have been naturalized in England by the Romans.&mdash;<i>Northern
+ramparts</i>; that of Agricola and Lollius Urbicus from Forth to Clyde,
+and the greater work of Hadrian and Severus between Tyne and Solway.&nbsp;
+St. 6, 7 The Arthurian legends,&mdash;now revivified for us by Tennyson&rsquo;s
+<!-- page 20--><a name="page20"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 20</span>magnificent
+<i>Idylls of the King</i>,&mdash;form the visionary links in our history
+between the decline of the Roman power and the earlier days of the Saxon
+conquest.&nbsp; St. 9 <i>Villagedom</i>; Angles and Saxons seem at first
+to have burned the larger towns of the Romanized Britons and left them
+deserted, in favour of village-life.&nbsp; St. 11 <i>Village-moot</i>:
+Held on a little hill or round a sacred tree: &lsquo;the ealdermen spoke,
+groups of freemen stood round, clashing shields in applause, settling
+matters by loud shouts of <i>Aye</i> or <i>Nay</i>.&rsquo;&nbsp; (J.
+R. Green, <i>History of the English People</i>).&nbsp; St. 12 Balder,
+the God of Light, like Adonis in the old Greek story, is a nature-myth,
+figuring the Sun, yearly dying in winter, and yearly restored to life.&nbsp;
+St. 13 <i>Landeyda</i>; Name of Danish banner: &lsquo;the desolation
+of the land.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>For further details upon points briefly noticed in this <i>Prelude</i>,
+readers are referred to Mr. J. R. Green&rsquo;s <i>History</i>, and
+to Mr. T. Wright&rsquo;s <i>The Celt</i>, <i>The Roman</i>, and <i>The
+Saxon</i>, as sources readily accessible.</p>
+<h3>THE FIRST AND LAST LAND</h3>
+<p><i>AT SENNEN</i></p>
+<p>Thrice-blest<span class="smcap">, </span>alone with Nature!&mdash;here,
+where gray<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Belerium fronts the spray<br />
+Smiting the bastion&rsquo;d crags through centuries flown,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; While, &rsquo;neath the hissing surge,<br />
+Ocean sends up a deep, deep undertone,</p>
+<p>As though his heavy chariot-wheels went round:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Nor is there other sound<br />
+Save from the abyss of air, a plaintive note,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The seabirds&rsquo; calling cry,<br />
+As &rsquo;gainst the wind with well-poised weight they float,</p>
+<p>Or on some white-fringed reef set up their post,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And sentinel the coast:&mdash;<br />
+Whilst, round each jutting cape, in pillar&rsquo;d file,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The lichen-bearded rocks<br />
+Like hoary giants guard the sacred Isle.</p>
+<p><!-- page 21--><a name="page21"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 21</span>&mdash;Happy,
+alone with Nature thus!&mdash;Yet here<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Dim, primal man is near;&mdash;<br />
+The hawk-eyed eager traders, who of yore<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Through long Biscayan waves<br />
+Star-steer&rsquo;d adventurous from the Iberic shore</p>
+<p>Or the Sidonian, with their fragrant freight<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Oil-olive, fig, and date;<br />
+Jars of dark sunburnt wine, flax-woven robes,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Or Tyrian azure glass<br />
+Wavy with gold, and agate-banded globes:&mdash;</p>
+<p>Changing for amber-knobs their Eastern ware<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Or tin-sand silvery fair,<br />
+To temper brazen swords, or rim the shield<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of heroes, arm&rsquo;d for fight:&mdash;<br />
+While the rough miners, wondering, gladly yield</p>
+<p>The treasured ore; nor Alexander&rsquo;s name<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Know, nor fair Helen&rsquo;s shame;<br />
+Or in his tent how Peleus&rsquo; wrathful son<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Looks toward the sea, nor heeds<br />
+The towers of still-unconquer&rsquo;d Ilion.</p>
+<p><i>Belerium</i>; The name given to the Land&rsquo;s End by Diodorus,
+the Greek historical compiler.&nbsp; He describes the natives as hospitable
+and civilized.&nbsp; They mined tin, which was bought by traders and
+carried through Gaul to the south-east, and may, as suggested here,
+have been used in their armour by the warriors during the Homeric Siege
+of Troy.</p>
+<h3><!-- page 22--><a name="page22"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 22</span>PAULINUS
+AND EDWIN</h3>
+<p>627</p>
+<p>The black-hair&rsquo;d gaunt Paulinus<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; By ruddy Edwin stood:&mdash;<br />
+&lsquo;Bow down, O King of Deira,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Before the holy Rood!<br />
+Cast forth thy demon idols,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And worship Christ our Lord!&rsquo;<br />
+&mdash;But Edwin look&rsquo;d and ponder&rsquo;d,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And answer&rsquo;d not a word.</p>
+<p>Again the gaunt Paulinus<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To ruddy Edwin spake:<br />
+&lsquo;God offers life immortal<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; For His dear Son&rsquo;s own sake!<br />
+Wilt thou not hear his message<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Who bears the Keys and Sword?&rsquo;<br />
+&mdash;But Edwin look&rsquo;d and ponder&rsquo;d,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And answer&rsquo;d not a word.</p>
+<p>Rose then a sage old warrior;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Was five-score winters old;<br />
+Whose beard from chin to girdle<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Like one long snow-wreath roll&rsquo;d:&mdash;<br />
+&lsquo;At Yule-time in our chamber<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; We sit in warmth and light,<br />
+While cavern-black around us<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Lies the grim mouth of Night.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Athwart the room a sparrow<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Darts from the open door:<br />
+Within the happy hearth-light<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; One red flash,&mdash;and no more!<br />
+<!-- page 23--><a name="page23"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 23</span>We
+see it born from darkness,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And into darkness go:&mdash;<br />
+So is our life, King Edwin!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Ah, that it should be so!</p>
+<p>&lsquo;But if this pale Paulinus<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Have somewhat more to tell;<br />
+Some news of whence and whither,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And where the Soul may dwell:&mdash;<br />
+If on that outer darkness<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The sun of Hope may shine;&mdash;<br />
+He makes life worth the living!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; I take his God for mine!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>So spake the wise old warrior;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And all about him cried<br />
+&lsquo;Paulinus&rsquo; God hath conquer&rsquo;d!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And he shall he our guide:&mdash;<br />
+For he makes life worth living,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Who brings this message plain,&mdash;<br />
+When our brief days are over,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That we shall live again.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Paulinus was one of the four missionaries sent form Rome by Gregory
+the Great in 601.&nbsp; The marriage of Edwin, King of Northumbria,
+with Ethelburga, sister to Eadbald of Kent, opened Paulinus&rsquo; way
+to northern England.&nbsp; Bede, born less than fifty years after, has
+given an admirable narrative of Edwin&rsquo;s conversion: which is very
+completely told in Bright&rsquo;s <i>Early English Church History</i>,
+B. IV.</p>
+<p>Deira, (from old-Welsh <i>deifr</i>, waters), then comprised Eastern
+Yorkshire from Tees to Humber.&nbsp; Goodmanham, where the meeting described
+was held, is some 23 miles from York.</p>
+<h3><!-- page 24--><a name="page24"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 24</span>ALFRED
+THE GREAT</h3>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;849-901</p>
+<p>1</p>
+<p>The fair-hair&rsquo;d boy is at his mother&rsquo;s knee,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A many-colour&rsquo;d page before them spread,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Gay summer harvest-field of gold and red,<br />
+With lines and staves of ancient minstrelsy.<br />
+But through her eyes alone the child can see,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; From her sweet lips partake the words of song,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And looks as one who feels a hidden wrong,<br />
+Or gazes on some feat of gramarye.<br />
+&lsquo;When thou canst use it, thine the book!&rsquo; she cried:<br />
+He blush&rsquo;d, and clasp&rsquo;d it to his breast with pride:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &lsquo;Unkingly task!&rsquo; his comrades cry; In vain;<br />
+All work ennobles nobleness, all art,<br />
+He sees; Head governs hand; and in his heart<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; All knowledge for his province he has ta&rsquo;en.</p>
+<p>2</p>
+<p>Few the bright days, and brief the fruitful rest,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; As summer-clouds that o&rsquo;er the valley flit:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To other tasks his genius he must fit;<br />
+The Dane is in the land, uneasy guest!<br />
+&mdash;O sacred Athelney, from pagan quest<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Secure, sole haven for the faithful boy<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Waiting God&rsquo;s issue with heroic joy<br />
+And unrelaxing purpose in the breast!<br />
+The Dragon and the Raven, inch by inch,<br />
+For England fight; nor Dane nor Saxon flinch;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Then Alfred strikes his blow; the realm is free:&mdash;<br />
+He, changing at the font his foe to friend,<br />
+Yields for the time, to gain the far-off end,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; By moderation doubling victory.</p>
+<p><!-- page 25--><a name="page25"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 25</span>O
+much-vex&rsquo;d life, for us too short, too dear!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The laggard body lame behind the soul;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Pain, that ne&rsquo;er marr&rsquo;d the mind&rsquo;s serene
+control;<br />
+Breathing on earth heaven&rsquo;s aether atmosphere,<br />
+God with thee, and the love that casts out fear!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A soul in life&rsquo;s salt ocean guarding sure<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The freshness of youth&rsquo;s fountain sweet and pure,<br />
+And to all natural impulse crystal-clear:<br />
+To service or command, to low and high<br />
+Equal at once in magnanimity,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The Great by right divine thou only art!<br />
+Fair star, that crowns the front of England&rsquo;s morn,<br />
+Royal with Nature&rsquo;s royalty inborn,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And English to the very heart of heart!</p>
+<p><i>The fair-hair&rsquo;d boy</i>: There is a singular unanimity among
+historians in regard to this &lsquo;darling of the English,&rsquo; whose
+life has been vividly sketched by Freeman (<i>Conquest</i>, ch. ii);
+by Green (<i>English People</i>, B. I: ch. iii); and, earlier, by my
+Father in his short <i>History of the Anglo-Saxons</i>, ch. vi-viii.</p>
+<p><i>Changing at the font</i>: Alfred was godfather to Guthrun the
+Dane, when baptized after his defeat at Ethandune in 878.</p>
+<h3><!-- page 26--><a name="page26"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 26</span>A
+DANISH BARROW</h3>
+<p><i>ON THE EAST DEVON COAST</i></p>
+<p>Lie still, old Dane, below thy heap!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;A sturdy-back and sturdy-limb,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Whoe&rsquo;er he was, I warrant him<br />
+Upon whose mound the single sheep<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Browses and tinkles in the sun,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Within the narrow vale alone.</p>
+<p>Lie still, old Dane!&nbsp; This restful scene<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Suits well thy centuries of sleep:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The soft brown roots above thee creep,<br />
+The lotus flaunts his ruddy sheen,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And,&mdash;vain memento of the spot,&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The turquoise-eyed forget-me-not.</p>
+<p>Lie still!&mdash;Thy mother-land herself<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Would know thee not again: no more<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The Raven from the northern shore<br />
+Hails the bold crew to push for pelf,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Through fire and blood and slaughter&rsquo;d kings,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &rsquo;Neath the black terror of his wings.</p>
+<p>And thou,&mdash;thy very name is lost!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The peasant only knows that here<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Bold Alfred scoop&rsquo;d thy flinty bier,<br />
+And pray&rsquo;d a foeman&rsquo;s prayer, and tost<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; His auburn, head, and said &lsquo;One more<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of England&rsquo;s foes guards England&rsquo;s shore,&rsquo;</p>
+<p>And turn&rsquo;d and pass&rsquo;d to other feats,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And left thee in thine iron robe,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To circle with the circling globe,<br />
+While Time&rsquo;s corrosive dewdrop eats<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <!-- page 27--><a name="page27"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 27</span>The
+giant warrior to a crust<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of earth in earth, and rust in rust.</p>
+<p>So lie: and let the children play<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And sit like flowers upon thy grave,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And crown with flowers,&mdash;that hardly have<br />
+A briefer blooming-tide than they;&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; By hurrying years borne on to rest,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; As thou, within the Mother&rsquo;s breast.</p>
+<h3>HASTINGS</h3>
+<p>October 14: 1066</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Gyrth<span class="smcap">, </span>is it dawn in the sky that
+I see? or is all the sky blood?<br />
+Heavy and sore was the fight in the North: yet we fought for the good.<br />
+O but&mdash;Brother &rsquo;gainst brother!&mdash;&rsquo;twas hard!&mdash;Now
+I come with a will<br />
+To baste the false bastard of France, the hide of the tanyard and mill!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Now on the razor-edge lies<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; England the priceless, the prize!<br />
+God aiding, the Raven at Stamford we smote;<br />
+One stroke more for the land here I strike and devote!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Red with fresh breath on her lips came the dawn; and Harold uprose;<br />
+Kneels as man before God; then takes his long pole-axe, and goes<br />
+Where round their woven wall, tough ash-palisado, they crowd;<br />
+Mightily cleaves and binds, to his comrades crying aloud<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <!-- page 28--><a name="page28"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 28</span>&lsquo;Englishmen
+stalwart and true,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But one word has Harold for you!<br />
+When from the field the false foreigners run,<br />
+Stand firm in your castle, and all will be won!</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Now, with God o&rsquo;er us, and Holy Rood, arm!&rsquo;&mdash;And
+he ran for his spear:<br />
+But Gyrth held him back, &rsquo;mong his brothers Gyrth the most honour&rsquo;d,
+most dear:<br />
+&lsquo;Go not, Harold! thine oath is against thee! the Saints look askance:<br />
+I am not king; let me lead them, me only: mine be the chance!&rsquo;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;&lsquo;No!&nbsp; The leader must lead!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Better that Harold should bleed!<br />
+To the souls I appeal, not the dust of the tomb:&mdash;<br />
+King chosen of Edward and England, I come!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Over Heathland surge banners and lances, three armies; William the
+last,<br />
+Clenching his mace; Rome&rsquo;s gonfanon round him Rome&rsquo;s majesty
+cast:<br />
+O&rsquo;er his Bretons Fergant, o&rsquo;er the hireling squadrons Montgomery
+lords,<br />
+Jerkin&rsquo;d archers, and mail-clads, and horsemen with pennons and
+swords:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;England, in threefold array,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Anchor, and hold them at bay,<br />
+Firm set in your own wooden walls! and the wave<br />
+Of high-crested Frenchmen will break on their grave.</p>
+<p>So to the palisade on!&nbsp; There, Harold and Leofwine and Gyrth<br />
+Stand like a triple Thor, true brethren in arms as in birth:<br />
+And above the fierce standards strain at their poles as they flare on
+the gale;<br />
+<!-- page 29--><a name="page29"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 29</span>One,
+the old Dragon of Wessex, and one, a Warrior in mail.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &lsquo;God Almighty!&rsquo; they cry!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &lsquo;Haro!&rsquo; the Northmen reply:&mdash;<br />
+As when eagles are gather&rsquo;d and loud o&rsquo;er the prey,<br />
+Shout! for &rsquo;tis England the prize of the fray!</p>
+<p>And as when two lightning-clouds tilt, between them an arrowy sleet<br />
+Hisses and darts; till the challenging thunders are heard, and they
+meet;<br />
+Across fly javelins and serpents of flame: green earth and blue sky<br />
+Blurr&rsquo;d in the blind tornado:&mdash;so now the battle goes high.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Shearing through helmet and limb<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Glaive-steel and battle-axe grim:<br />
+As the flash of the reaper in summer&rsquo;s high wheat,<br />
+King Harold mows horseman and horse at his feet.</p>
+<p>O vainly the whirlwind of France up the turf to the palisade swept:<br />
+Shoulder to shoulder the Englishmen stand, and the shield-wall is kept:&mdash;<br />
+As, in a summer to be, when England and she yet again<br />
+Strove for the sovranty, firm stood our squares, through the pitiless
+rain<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Death rain&rsquo;d o&rsquo;er them all day;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;Happier, not braver than they<br />
+Who on Senlac e&rsquo;en yet their still garrison keep,<br />
+Sleeping a long Marathonian sleep!</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Madmen, why turn?&rsquo; cried the Duke,&mdash;for the horsemen
+recoil from the slope;<br />
+&lsquo;Behold me!&nbsp; I live!&rsquo;&mdash;and he lifted the ventayle;
+&lsquo;before you is hope:<br />
+Death, not safety, behind!&rsquo;&mdash;and he spurs to the centre once
+more,<br />
+<!-- page 30--><a name="page30"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 30</span>Lion-like
+leaps on the standard and Harold: but Gyrth is before!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &lsquo;Down!&nbsp; He is down!&rsquo; is the shout:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &lsquo;On with the axes!&nbsp; Out, Out!&rsquo;<br />
+&mdash;He rises again; the mace circles its stroke;<br />
+Then falls as the thunderbolt falls on the oak.</p>
+<p>&mdash;Gyrth is crush&rsquo;d, and Leofwine is crush&rsquo;d; yet
+the shields hold their wall:<br />
+&lsquo;Edith alone of my dear ones is left me, and dearest of all!<br />
+Edith has said she would seek me to-day when the battle is done;<br />
+Her love more precious alone than kingdoms and victory won;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; O for the sweetness of home!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; O for the kindness to come!&rsquo;<br />
+Then around him again the wild war-dragons roar,<br />
+And he drinks the red wine-cup of battle once more.</p>
+<p>&mdash;&lsquo;Anyhow from their rampart to lure them, to shatter
+the bucklers and wall,<br />
+Acting a flight,&rsquo; in his craft thought William, and sign&rsquo;d
+to recall<br />
+His left battle:&mdash;O countrymen! slow to be roused! roused, always,
+as then,<br />
+Reckless of life or death, bent only to quit you like men!&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; As bolts from the bow-string they go,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Whirl them and hurl them below,<br />
+Where the deep foss yawns for the foe in his course,<br />
+Piled up and brimming with horseman and horse.</p>
+<p>As when October&rsquo;s sun, long caught in a curtain of gray,<br />
+With a flood of impatient crimson breaks out, at the dying of day,<br />
+And trees and green fields, the hills and the skies, are all steep&rsquo;d
+in the stain;&mdash;<br />
+<!-- page 31--><a name="page31"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 31</span>So
+o&rsquo;er the English one hope flamed forth, one moment,&mdash;in vain!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; As hail when the corn-fields are deep,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Down the fierce arrow-points sweep:<br />
+Now the basnets of France o&rsquo;er the palisade frown;<br />
+The shield-fort is shatter&rsquo;d; the Dragon is down.</p>
+<p>O then there was dashing and dinting of axe and of broad-sword and
+spear:<br />
+Blood crying out to blood: and Hatred that casteth out fear!<br />
+Loud where the fight is the loudest, the slaughter-breath hot in the
+air,<br />
+O what a cry was that!&mdash;the cry of a nation&rsquo;s despair!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;Hew down the best of the land!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Down them with mace and with brand!<br />
+The fell foreign arrow has crash&rsquo;d to the brain;<br />
+England with Harold the Englishman slain!</p>
+<p>Yet they fought on for their England! of ineffaceable fame<br />
+Worthy, and stood to the death, though the greedy sword, like a flame,<br />
+Bit and bit yet again in the solid ranks, and the dead<br />
+Heap where they die, and hills of foemen about them are spread:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;Hew down the heart of the land,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; There, to a man, where they stand!<br />
+Till night with her blackness uncrimsons the stain,<br />
+And the merciful shroud overshadows our slain.</p>
+<p>Heroes unburied, unwept!&mdash;But a wan gray thing in the night<br />
+Like a marsh-wisp flits to and fro through the blood-lake, the steam
+of the fight;<br />
+Turning the bodies, exploring the features with delicate touch;<br />
+<!-- page 32--><a name="page32"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 32</span>Stumbling
+as one that finds nothing: but now!&mdash;as one finding too much:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Love through mid-midnight will see:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Edith the fair!&nbsp; It is he!<br />
+Clasp him once more, the heroic, the dear!<br />
+Harold was England: and Harold lies here.</p>
+<p><i>The hide of the tanyard</i>; See the story of Arlette or Herleva,
+the tanner&rsquo;s daughter, mother to William &lsquo;the Bastard.&rsquo;</p>
+<p><i>At Stamford</i>; At Stamford Bridge, over the Derwent, Harold
+defeated his brother Tostig and Harold Hardrada, Sep 25, 1066.</p>
+<p><i>Your castle</i>; Harold&rsquo;s triple palisade upon the hill
+of battle is so described by the chronicler, Henry of Huntingdon.</p>
+<p><i>Rome&rsquo;s gonfanon</i>; The consecrated banner, sent to William
+from Rome.</p>
+<p><i>The fierce standards</i>; These were planted on the spot chosen
+by the Conqueror for the high-altar of the Abbey of Battle.&nbsp; The
+<i>Warrior</i> was Harold&rsquo;s &lsquo;personal ensign.&rsquo;</p>
+<p><i>In a summer to be</i>; June 18, 1815.</p>
+<p><i>The ventayle</i>; Used here for the <i>nasale</i> or nose-piece
+shown in the Bayeux Tapestry.</p>
+<h3>DEATH IN THE FOREST</h3>
+<p>August 2: 1100</p>
+<p>Where the greenwood is greenest<br />
+At gloaming of day,<br />
+Where the twelve-antler&rsquo;d stag<br />
+Faces boldest at bay;<br />
+Where the solitude deepens,<br />
+Till almost you hear<br />
+The blood-beat of the heart<br />
+As the quarry slips near;<br />
+His comrades outridden<br />
+With scorn in the race,<br />
+The Red King is hallooing<br />
+His bounds to the chase.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<!-- page 33--><a name="page33"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 33</span>What
+though the Wild Hunt<br />
+Like a whirlwind of hell<br />
+Yestereve ran the forest,<br />
+With baying and yell:&mdash;<br />
+In his cups the Red heathen<br />
+Mocks God to the face;<br />
+&mdash;&lsquo;In the devil&rsquo;s name, shoot;<br />
+Tyrrell, ho!&mdash;to the chase!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&mdash;Now with worms for his courtiers<br />
+He lies in the narrow<br />
+Cold couch of the chancel!<br />
+&mdash;But whence was the arrow?</p>
+<p>The dread vision of Serlo<br />
+That call&rsquo;d him to die,<br />
+The weird sacrilege terror<br />
+Of sleep, have gone by.<br />
+The blood of young Richard<br />
+Cries on him in vain,<br />
+In the heart of the Lindwood<br />
+By arbalest slain.<br />
+And he plunges alone<br />
+In the Serpent-glade gloom,<br />
+As one whom the Furies<br />
+Hound headlong to doom.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;His sin goes before him,<br />
+The lust and the pride;<br />
+And the curses of England<br />
+Breathe hot at his side.<br />
+And the desecrate walls<br />
+Of the Evil-wood shrine<br />
+Lo, he passes&mdash;unheeding<br />
+Dark vision and sign:&mdash;</p>
+<p><!-- page 34--><a name="page34"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 34</span>&mdash;Now
+with worms for his courtiers<br />
+He lies in the narrow<br />
+Cold couch of the chancel:<br />
+&mdash;But whence was the arrow?</p>
+<p>Then a shudder of death<br />
+Flicker&rsquo;d fast through the wood:&mdash;<br />
+And they found the Red King<br />
+Red-gilt in his blood.<br />
+What wells up in his throat?<br />
+Is it cursing, or prayer?<br />
+Was it Henry, or Tyrrell,<br />
+Or demon, who there<br />
+Has dyed the fell tyrant<br />
+Twice crimson in gore,<br />
+While the soul disincarnate<br />
+Hunts on to hell-door?</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;Ah! friendless in death!<br />
+Rude forest-hands fling<br />
+On the charcoaler&rsquo;s wain<br />
+What but now was the king!<br />
+And through the long Minster<br />
+The carcass they bear,<br />
+And huddle it down<br />
+Without priest, without prayer:&mdash;</p>
+<p>Now with worms for his courtiers<br />
+He lies in the narrow<br />
+Cold couch of the chancel:<br />
+&mdash;But whence was the arrow?</p>
+<p><i>In his cups</i>; Rufus, it is said, was &lsquo;fey,&rsquo; as
+the old phrase has it, on the day of his death.&nbsp; He feasted long
+and high, and then chose out two cross-bow shafts, presenting them to
+Tyrrell with the exclamation given above.</p>
+<p><i>Serlo</i>; He was Abbot of Gloucester, and had sent to Rufus the
+narrative of an ominous dream, reported in the Monastery.</p>
+<p><!-- page 35--><a name="page35"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 35</span><i>The
+true dreams</i>; On his last night Rufus &lsquo;laid himself down to
+sleep, but not in peace; the attendants were startled by the King&rsquo;s
+voice&mdash;a bitter cry&mdash;a cry for help&mdash;a cry for deliverance&mdash;he
+had been suddenly awakened by a dreadful dream, as of exquisite anguish
+befalling him in that ruined church, at the foot of the Malwood rampart.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Palgrave: <i>Hist. of Normandy and of England</i>, B. IV: ch. xii.</p>
+<p><i>Young Richard</i>; Son to Robert Courthose, and hunting, as his
+uncle&rsquo;s guest, in the New Forest in May 1100, was mysteriously
+slain by a heavy bolt from a Norman Arbalest.</p>
+<p><i>The Evil-wood walls</i>; &lsquo;Amongst the sixty churches which
+had been &lsquo;ruined,&rsquo; my Father remarks, in his notice of the
+New Forest, &lsquo;the sanctuary below the mystic Malwood was peculiarly
+remarkable. . . . You reach the Malwood easily from the Leafy Lodge
+in the favourite deer-walk, the Lind-hurst, the Dragon&rsquo;s wood.&rsquo;</p>
+<p><i>Through the long Minster</i>; Winchester.&nbsp; Rufus, with much
+hesitation, was buried in the chancel as a king; but no religious service
+or ceremonial was celebrated:&mdash;&lsquo;All men thought that prayers
+were hopeless.&rsquo;</p>
+<h3>EDITH OF ENGLAND</h3>
+<p>1100</p>
+<p>Through sapling shades of summer green,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; By glade and height and hollow,<br />
+Where Rufus rode the stag to bay,<br />
+King Henry spurs a jocund way,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Another chase to follow.<br />
+But when he came to Romsey gate<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The doors are open&rsquo;d free,<br />
+And through the gate like sunshine streams<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A maiden company:&mdash;<br />
+One girdled with the vervain-red,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And three in sendal gray,<br />
+And touch the trembling rebeck-strings<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To their soft roundelay;&mdash;</p>
+<p>&mdash;The bravest knight may fail in fight;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The red rust edge the sword;<br />
+<!-- page 36--><a name="page36"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 36</span>The
+king his crown in dust lay down;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But Love is always Lord!</p>
+<p>King Henry at her feet flings down,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; His helmet ringing loudly:&mdash;<br />
+His kisses worship Edith&rsquo;s hand;<br />
+&lsquo;Wilt thou be Queen of all the land?&rsquo;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;O red she blush&rsquo;d and proudly!<br />
+Red as the crimson girdle bound<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Beneath her gracious breast;<br />
+Red as the silken scarf that flames<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Above his lion-crest.<br />
+She lifts and casts the cloister-veil<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; All on the cloister-floor:&mdash;<br />
+The novice maids of Romsey smile,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And think of love once more.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Well, well, to blush!&rsquo; the Abbess cried,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &lsquo;The veil and vow deriding<br />
+That rescued thee, in baby days,<br />
+From insolence of Norman gaze,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In pure and holy hiding.<br />
+&mdash;O royal child of South and North,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Malcolm and Margaret,<br />
+The promised bride of Heaven art thou,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And Heaven will not forget!<br />
+What recks it, if an alien King<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Encoronet thy brow,<br />
+Or if the false Italian priest<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Pretend to loose the vow?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>O then to white the red rose went<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; On Edith&rsquo;s cheek abiding!<br />
+With even glance she answer&rsquo;d meek<br />
+&lsquo;I leave the life I did not seek,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In holy Church confiding&rsquo;:&mdash;<br />
+Then Love smiled true on Henry&rsquo;s face,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <!-- page 37--><a name="page37"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 37</span>And
+Anselm join&rsquo;d the hands<br />
+That in one race two races bound<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; By everlasting bands.<br />
+So Love is Lord, and Alfred&rsquo;s blood<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Returns the land to sway;<br />
+And all her joyous maidens join<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In their soft roundelay:</p>
+<p>&mdash;For though the knight may fail in fight,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The red rust edge the sword,<br />
+The king his crown in dust lay down,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Yet Love is always Lord!</p>
+<p>Edith, (who, after marriage, took the name Matilda in compliment
+to Henry&rsquo;s mother), daughter to Malcolm King of Scotland by Margaret,
+granddaughter of Edmund Ironside, had been brought up by her aunt Christina,
+and placed in Romsey Abbey for security against Norman violence.&nbsp;
+But she had always refused to take the vows, and was hence, in opposition
+to her aunt&rsquo;s wish, declared canonically free to marry by Anselm;
+called here an <i>Italian priest</i>, as born at Aosta.&nbsp; Henry
+had been long attached to the Princess, and married her shortly after
+his accession.</p>
+<h3>A CRUSADER&rsquo;S TOMB</h3>
+<p>1230</p>
+<p>Unnamed<span class="smcap">, </span>unknown:&mdash;his hands across
+his breast<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Set in sepulchral rest,<br />
+In yon low cave-like niche the warrior lies,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;A shrine within a shrine,&mdash;<br />
+Full of gray peace, while day to darkness dies.</p>
+<p>Then the forgotten dead at midnight come<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And throng their chieftain&rsquo;s tomb,<br />
+Murmuring the toils o&rsquo;er which they toil&rsquo;d, alive,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <!-- page 38--><a name="page38"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 38</span>The
+feats of sword and love;<br />
+And all the air thrills like a summer hive.</p>
+<p>&mdash;How so, thou say&rsquo;st!&mdash;This is the poet&rsquo;s
+right!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; He looks with larger sight<br />
+Than they who hedge their view by present things,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The small, parochial world<br />
+Of sight and touch: and what he sees, he sings.</p>
+<p>The steel-shell&rsquo;d host, that, gleaming as it turns,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Like autumn lightning burns,<br />
+A moment&rsquo;s azure, the fresh flags that glance<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; As cornflowers o&rsquo;er the corn,<br />
+Till war&rsquo;s stern step show like a gala dance,</p>
+<p>He also sees; and pierces to the heart,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Scanning the genuine part<br />
+Each Red-Cross pilgrim plays: Some, gold-enticed;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; By love or lust or fame<br />
+Urged; or who yearn to kiss the grave of Christ</p>
+<p>And find their own, life-wearied:&mdash;Motley band!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; O! ere they quit the Land<br />
+How maim&rsquo;d, how marr&rsquo;d, how changed from all that pride<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In which so late they left<br />
+Orwell or Thames, with sails out-swelling wide</p>
+<p>And music tuneable with the timing oar<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Clear heard from shore to shore;<br />
+All Europe streaming to the mystic East!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;Now on their sun-smit ranks<br />
+The dusky squadrons close in vulture-feast,</p>
+<p>And that fierce Day-star&rsquo;s blazing ball their sight<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Sears with excess of light;<br />
+Or through dun sand-clouds the blue scimitar&rsquo;s edge<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Slopes down like fire from heaven,<br />
+Mowing them as the thatcher mows the sedge.</p>
+<p><!-- page 39--><a name="page39"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 39</span>Then
+many a heart remember&rsquo;d, as the skies<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Grew dark on dying eyes,<br />
+Sweet England; her fresh fields and gardens trim;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Her tree-embower&rsquo;d halls;<br />
+And the one face that was the world to him.</p>
+<p>&mdash;And one who fought his fight and held his way,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Through life&rsquo;s long latter day<br />
+Moving among the green, green English meads,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Ere in this niche he took<br />
+His rest, oft &rsquo;mid his kinsfolk told the deeds</p>
+<p>Of that gay passage through the Midland sea;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Cyprus and Sicily;<br />
+And how the Lion-Heart o&rsquo;er the Moslem host<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Triumph&rsquo;d in Ascalon<br />
+Or Acre, by the tideless Tyrian coast,</p>
+<p>Yet never saw the vast Imperial dome,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Nor the thrice-holy Tomb:&mdash;<br />
+&mdash;As that great vision of the hidden Grail<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; By bravest knights of old<br />
+Unseen:&mdash;seen only of pure Parcivale.</p>
+<p>The &lsquo;Thud Crusade,&rsquo; 1189-1193, is the subject of this
+poem.&nbsp; Richard Coeur de Lion carried his followers by way of Sicily
+and Cyprus: making a transient conquest of the latter.&nbsp; In the
+Holy Land the siege of Acre consumed the time and strength of the Crusaders.&nbsp;
+They suffered terribly in the wilderness of Mount Carmel, and when at
+last preparing to march on Jerusalem (1192) were recalled to Ascalon.&nbsp;
+Richard now advanced to Bethany, but was unable to reach the Holy City.&nbsp;
+The tale is that while riding with a party of knights one of them called
+out, &lsquo;This way, my lord, and you will see Jerusalem.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+But Richard hid his face and said, &lsquo;Alas!&mdash;they who are not
+worthy to win the Holy City are not worthy to behold it.&rsquo;</p>
+<p><i>The vast Imperial dome</i>; The Church of the Holy Sepulchre was
+built by the Emperor Constantine; <span class="smcap">a.d. </span>326-335.</p>
+<p><i>The hidden Grail</i>; This vision forms the subject of one of
+Tennyson&rsquo;s noblest <i>Idylls</i>.</p>
+<h3><!-- page 40--><a name="page40"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 40</span>A
+BALLAD OF EVESHAM</h3>
+<p>August 4: 1265</p>
+<p>Earl Simon on the Abbey tower<br />
+In summer sunshine stood,<br />
+While helm and lance o&rsquo;er Greenhill heights<br />
+Come glinting through the wood.<br />
+&lsquo;My son!&rsquo; he cried, &lsquo;I know his flag<br />
+Amongst a thousand glancing&rsquo;:&mdash;<br />
+Fond father! no!&mdash;&rsquo;tis Edward stern<br />
+In royal strength advancing.</p>
+<p>The Prince fell on him like a hawk<br />
+At Al&rsquo;ster yester-eve,<br />
+And flaunts his captured banner now<br />
+And flaunts but to deceive:&mdash;<br />
+&mdash;Look round! for Mortimer is by,<br />
+And guards the rearward river:&mdash;<br />
+The hour that parted sire and son<br />
+Has parted them for ever!</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Young Simon&rsquo;s dead,&rsquo; he thinks, and look&rsquo;d<br />
+Upon his living son:<br />
+&lsquo;Now God have mercy on our souls,<br />
+Our bodies are undone!<br />
+But, Hugh and Henry, ye can fly<br />
+Before their bowmen smite us&mdash;<br />
+They come on well!&nbsp; But &rsquo;tis from me<br />
+They learn&rsquo;d the skill to fight us.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&mdash;&lsquo;For England&rsquo;s cause, and England&rsquo;s laws,<br />
+With you we fight and fall!&rsquo;<br />
+&mdash;&lsquo;Together, then, and die like men,<br />
+And Heaven has room for all!&rsquo;<br />
+&mdash;Then, face to face, and limb to limb,<br />
+<!-- page 41--><a name="page41"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 41</span>And
+sword with sword inwoven,<br />
+That stubborn courage of the race<br />
+On Evesham field was proven</p>
+<p>O happy hills!&nbsp; O summer sky<br />
+Above the valley bent!<br />
+Your peacefulness rebukes the rage<br />
+Of blood on blood intent!<br />
+No thought was then for death or life<br />
+Through that long dreadful hour,<br />
+While Simon &rsquo;mid his faithful few<br />
+Stood like an iron tower,</p>
+<p>&rsquo;Gainst which the winds and waves are hurl&rsquo;d<br />
+In vain, unmoved, foursquare;<br />
+And round him raged the insatiate swords<br />
+Of Edward and De Clare:<br />
+And round him in the narrow combe<br />
+His white-cross comrades rally,<br />
+While ghastly gashings, cloud the beck<br />
+And crimson all the valley,</p>
+<p>And triple sword-thrusts meet his sword,<br />
+And thrice the charge he foils,<br />
+Though now in threefold flood the foe<br />
+Round those devoted boils:<br />
+And still the light of England&rsquo;s cause<br />
+And England&rsquo;s love was o&rsquo;er him,<br />
+Until he saw his gallant boy<br />
+Go down in blood before him:&mdash;</p>
+<p>He hove his huge two-handed blade,<br />
+He cried &lsquo;&rsquo;Tis time to die!&rsquo;<br />
+And smote around him like a flail,<br />
+And clear&rsquo;d a space to lie:&mdash;<br />
+&lsquo;Thank God!&rsquo;&mdash;no more;&mdash;nor now could life<br />
+From loved and lost divide him:&mdash;<br />
+<!-- page 42--><a name="page42"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 42</span>And
+night fell o&rsquo;er De Montfort dead,<br />
+And England wept beside him.</p>
+<p>In the words given here to Simon (and, indeed, in the bulk of my
+narrative) I have almost literally followed Prothero&rsquo;s <i>Life</i>.&nbsp;
+The struggle, like other critical conflicts in the days of unprofessional
+war, was very brief.</p>
+<h3>THE DIRGE OF LLYWELYN</h3>
+<p>December 10: 1282</p>
+<p>Llanyis on Irfon, thine oaks in the drear<br />
+Red eve of December are wind-swept and sere,<br />
+Where a king by the stream in his agony lies,<br />
+And the life of a land ebbs away as he dies.</p>
+<p>Car&aacute;doc, thy sceptre for centuries kept,<br />
+Shall it pass like the ripple, unhonour&rsquo;d, unwept:<br />
+Unknowing the lance, and the victim unknown,<br />
+Far from Aberffraw&rsquo;s halls and Er&yacute;ri the lone!</p>
+<p>O dark day of winter and Cambria&rsquo;s shame,<br />
+To the treason of Builth when from Gwynedd he came,<br />
+And Walwyn and Frankton and Mortimer fell<br />
+Closed round unawares by the fold in the dell!</p>
+<p>&mdash;As who, where the shadow beneath him is thrown,<br />
+By some well in Saharan high noontide alone<br />
+Sits under the palm-tree, nor hears the low breath<br />
+Of the russet-maned foe panting hot for his death;</p>
+<p>So Llywelyn,&mdash;unarm&rsquo;d, unaware:&mdash;Is it she,<br />
+Bright star of his morning, when Gwynedd was free,<br />
+Fair bride, the long sought, taken early, goes by?<br />
+In the heart of the breeze the lost Eleanor&rsquo;s sigh?</p>
+<p><!-- page 43--><a name="page43"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 43</span>Or
+the one little daughter&rsquo;s sweet face with a gleam<br />
+Of glamour looks out, as the dream in a dream?<br />
+Or for childhood&rsquo;s first sunshine and calm does he yearn,<br />
+As the days of Maesmynan in memory return?</p>
+<p>Or,&mdash;dear to the heart&rsquo;s-blood as first-love or wife,&mdash;<br />
+The mountains whose freedom was one with his life,<br />
+Gray farms and green vales of that ancient domain,<br />
+The thousand-years&rsquo; kingdom, he dreams of again?</p>
+<p>Or is it the rage of stark Edward; the base<br />
+Unkingly revenge on a kinglier race;<br />
+The wrong idly wrought on the patriot dead;<br />
+The dark castle of doom; the scorn-diadem&rsquo;d head?</p>
+<p>&mdash;Lo, where Rhodri and Owain await thee!&mdash;The foe<br />
+Slips nearing in silence: one flash&mdash;and one blow!<br />
+And the ripple that passes wafts down to the Wye<br />
+The last prayer of Llywelyn, the nation&rsquo;s last sigh.</p>
+<p>But Llanynis yet sees the white rivulet gleam,<br />
+And the leaf of December fall sere on the stream;<br />
+While Irfon his dirge whispers on through the combe,<br />
+And the purple-topt hills gather round in their gloom.</p>
+<p><i>Where a king</i>; The war in which Llywelyn fell was the inevitable
+result of the growing power of England under Edward I; and, considering
+the vast preponderance of weight against the Welsh Prince it could not
+have ended but in the conquest of Wales.&nbsp; Yet its issue, as told
+here, was determined as if by chance.</p>
+<p><i>Aberffraw</i>; in Anglesea: the residence of the royal line of
+Gywnedd from the time of Rhodri Mawr onwards.</p>
+<p><i>Eryri</i>; the Eagle&rsquo;s rock is a name for Snowdon.&nbsp;
+The bird has been seen in the neighbourhood within late years.</p>
+<p><i>Is it she</i>; Eleanor, daughter to Simon de Montfort.&nbsp; After
+some years of betrothal and impediment arising from the jealousy of
+Edward I, she and Llywelyn were married in 1278.&nbsp; But after only
+two years of happiness, Eleanor died, leaving one child, Catharine or
+Gwenllian.</p>
+<p><!-- page 44--><a name="page44"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 44</span><i>Maesmynan</i>;
+by Caerwys in Flintshire; where Llywelyn lived retiredly in youth.</p>
+<p><i>The thousand-years&rsquo; kingdom</i>; The descent of the royal
+house of North Wales is legendarily traced from Caradoc-Caractacus.&nbsp;
+But the accepted genealogy of the Princes of Gwynedd begins with Cunedda
+Wledig (Paramount) cir. 400: ending in 1282 with Llywelyn son of Gruffydd.</p>
+<p><i>The scorn-diadem&rsquo;d head</i>; On finding whom he had slain,
+Frankton carried Llywelyn&rsquo;s head to Edward at Rhuddlan, who, with
+a barbarity unworthy of himself, set it over the Tower of London, wreathed
+in mockery of a prediction (ascribed to Merlin) upon the coronation
+of a Welsh Prince in London.</p>
+<p><i>Rhodri and Owain</i>; Rhodri Mawr, (843), who united under his
+supremacy the other Welsh principalities, Powys and Dinefawr; Owain
+Gwynedd, (1137),&mdash;are among the most conspicuous of Llywelyn&rsquo;s
+royal predecessors.</p>
+<h3>THE REJOICING OF THE LAND</h3>
+<p>1295</p>
+<p>So the land had rest! and the cloud of that heart-sore struggle and
+pain<br />
+Rose from her ancient hills, and peace shone o&rsquo;er her again,<br />
+Sunlike chasing the plagues wherewith the land was defiled;<br />
+And the leprosy fled, and her flesh came again, as the flesh of a child.<br />
+&mdash;They were stern and stark, the three children of Rolf, the first
+from Anjou:<br />
+For their own sake loving the land, mayhap, but loving her true;<br />
+France the wife, and England the handmaid; yet over the realm<br />
+Their eyes were in every place, their hands gripp&rsquo;d firm on the
+helm.<br />
+Villein and earl, the cowl and the plume, they were bridled alike;<br />
+One law for all, but arm&rsquo;d law,&mdash;not swifter to aid than
+to strike.<br />
+<!-- page 45--><a name="page45"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 45</span>Lo,
+in the twilight transept, the holy places of God,<br />
+Not with sunset the steps of the altar are dyed, but with scarlet of
+blood!<br />
+Clang of iron-shod feet, and sheep for their shepherd who cry;<br />
+Curses and swords that flash, and the victim proffer&rsquo;d to die!<br />
+&mdash;Bare thy own back to the smiter, O king, at the shrine of the
+dead:<br />
+Thy friend thou hast slain in thy folly; the blood of the Saint on thy
+head:<br />
+Proud and priestly, thou say&rsquo;st;&mdash;yet tender and faithful
+and pure;<br />
+True man, and so, true saint;&mdash;the crown of his martyrdom sure:&mdash;<br />
+As friend with his friend, he could brave thee and warn; thou hast silenced
+the voice,<br />
+Ne&rsquo;er to be heard again:&mdash;nor again will Henry rejoice!<br />
+Green Erin may yield her, fair Scotland submit; but his sunshine is
+o&rsquo;er;<br />
+The tooth of the serpent, the child of his bosom, has smote him so sore:&mdash;<br />
+Like a wolf from the hounds he dragg&rsquo;d off to his lair, not turning
+to bay:&mdash;<br />
+Crying &lsquo;shame on a conquer&rsquo;d king!&rsquo;&mdash;the grim
+ghost fled sullen away.<br />
+&mdash;Then, as in gray Autumn the heavens are pour&rsquo;d on the rifted
+hillside,<br />
+When the Rain-stars mistily gleam, and torrents leap white in their
+pride,<br />
+And the valley is all one lake, and the late, unharvested shocks<br />
+Are rapt to the sea, the dwellings of man, the red kine and the flocks,&mdash;<br />
+O&rsquo;er England the ramparts of law, the old landmarks of liberty
+fell,<br />
+As the brothers in blood and in lust, twin horror begotten of hell,<br />
+<!-- page 46--><a name="page46"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 46</span>Suck&rsquo;d
+all the life of the land to themselves, like Lofoden in flood,<br />
+One in his pride, in his subtlety one, mocking England and God.<br />
+Then tyranny&rsquo;s draught&mdash;once only&mdash;we drank to the dregs!&mdash;and
+the stain<br />
+Went crimson and black through the soul of the land, for all time, not
+in vain!<br />
+We bore the bluff many-wived king, rough rival and victor of Rome;<br />
+We bore the stern despot-protector, whose dawning and sunset were gloom;<br />
+For they temper&rsquo;d the self of the tyrant with love of the land,<br />
+Some touch of the heart, some remorse, refraining the grip of the hand.<br />
+But John&rsquo;s was blackness of darkness, a day of vileness and shame;<br />
+Shrieks of the tortured, and silence, and outrage the mouth cannot name.<br />
+&mdash;O that cry of the helpless, the weak that writhe under the foe,<br />
+Wrong man-wrought upon man, dumb unwritten annals of woe!<br />
+Cry that goes upward from earth as she rolls through the peace of the
+skies<br />
+&lsquo;How long?&nbsp; Hast thou forgotten, O God!&rsquo; . . . and
+silence replies!<br />
+Silence:&mdash;and then was the answer;&mdash;the light o&rsquo;er Windsor
+that broke,<br />
+The Meadow of Law&mdash;true Avalon where the true Arthur awoke!<br />
+&mdash;Not thou, whose name, as a seed o&rsquo;er the world, plume-wafted
+on air,<br />
+Britons on each side sea,&mdash;Caerlleon and Cumbria,&mdash;share,<br />
+Joy of a downtrod race, dear hope of freedom to-be,<br />
+<!-- page 47--><a name="page47"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 47</span>Dream
+of poetic hearts, whom the vision only can see! . . .<br />
+For thine were the fairy knights, fair ideals of beauty and song;<br />
+But ours, in the ways of men, walk&rsquo;d sober, and stumbling, and
+strong;&mdash;<br />
+Stumbling as who in peril and twilight their pathway trace out,<br />
+Hard to trace, and untried, and the foe above and about;<br />
+For the Charter of Freedom, the voice of the land in her Council secure<br />
+All doing, all daring,&mdash;and, e&rsquo;en when defeated, of victory
+sure!<br />
+Langton, our Galahad, first, stamp&rsquo;d Leader by Rome unaware,<br />
+Pembroke and Mowbray, Fitzwarine, Fitzalan, Fitzwalter, De Clare:&mdash;<br />
+&mdash;O fair temple of Freedom and Law!&mdash;the foundations ye laid:&mdash;<br />
+But again came the storm, and the might of darkness and wrong was array&rsquo;d,<br />
+A warfare of years; and the battle raged, and new heroes arose<br />
+From a soil that is fertile in manhood&rsquo;s men, and scatter&rsquo;d
+the foes,<br />
+And set in their place the bright pillars of Order, Liberty&rsquo;s
+shrine,<br />
+O&rsquo;er the land far-seen, as o&rsquo;er Athens the home of Athena
+divine.<br />
+&mdash;So the land had rest:&mdash;and the cloud of that heart-sore
+struggle and pain<br />
+Sped from her ancient hills, and peace shone o&rsquo;er her again,<br />
+Sunlike chasing the plagues wherewith the land was defiled:<br />
+And the leprosy fled, and her flesh came again, as the flesh of a child.<br />
+For lo! the crown&rsquo;d Statesman of Law, Justinian himself of his
+realm,<br />
+<!-- page 48--><a name="page48"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 48</span>Edward,
+since Alfred our wisest of all who have watch&rsquo;d by the helm!<br />
+He who yet preaches in silence his life-word, the light of his way,<br />
+From his marble unadorn&rsquo;d chest, in the heart of the West Minster
+gray,<br />
+<i>Keep thy Faith</i> . . . In the great town-twilight, this city of
+gloom,<br />
+&mdash;O how unlike that blithe London he look&rsquo;d on!&mdash;I look
+on his tomb,<br />
+In the circle of kings, round the shrine, where the air is heavy with
+fame,<br />
+Dust of our moulder&rsquo;d chieftains, and splendour shrunk to a name.<br />
+Silent synod august, ye that tried the delight and the pain,<br />
+Trials and snares of a throne, was the legend written in vain?<br />
+Speak, for ye know, crown&rsquo;d shadows! who down each narrow and
+strait<br />
+As ye might, once guided,&mdash;a perilous passage,&mdash;the keel of
+the State,<br />
+Fourth Henry, fourth Edward, Elizabeth, Charles,&mdash;now ye rest from
+your toil,<br />
+Was it best, when by truth and compass ye steer&rsquo;d, or by statecraft
+and guile?<br />
+Or is it so hard, that steering of States, that as men who throw in<br />
+With party their life, honour soils his own ermine, a lie is no sin?
+. . .<br />
+&mdash;Not so, great Edward, with thee,&mdash;not so!&mdash;For he learn&rsquo;d
+in his youth<br />
+The step straightforward and sure, the proud, bright bearing of truth:&mdash;<br />
+Arm&rsquo;d against Simon at Evesham, yet not less, striking for Law,&mdash;<br />
+Ages of temperate freedom, a vision of order, he saw!&mdash;<br />
+&mdash;Vision of opulent years, a murmur of welfare and peace:<br />
+<!-- page 49--><a name="page49"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 49</span>Orchard
+golden-globed, plain waving in golden increase;<br />
+Hopfields fairer than vineyards, green laughing tendrils and bine;<br />
+Woodland misty in sunlight, and meadow sunny with kine;&mdash;<br />
+Havens of heaving blue, where the keels of Guienne and the Hanse<br />
+Jostle and creak by the quay, and the mast goes up like a lance,<br />
+Gay with the pennons of peace, and, blazon&rsquo;d with Adria&rsquo;s
+dyes,<br />
+Purple and orange, the sails like a sunset burn in the skies.<br />
+Bloodless conquests of commerce, that nation with nation unite!<br />
+Hand clasp&rsquo;d frankly in hand, not steel-clad buffets in fight:<br />
+On the deck strange accents and shouting; rough furcowl&rsquo;d men
+of the north,<br />
+Genoa&rsquo;s brown-neck&rsquo;d sons, and whom swarthy Smyrna sends
+forth:<br />
+Freights of the south; drugs potent o&rsquo;er death from the basilisk
+won,<br />
+Odorous Phoenix-nest, and spice of a sunnier sun:&mdash;<br />
+Butts of Malvasian nectar, Messene&rsquo;s vintage of old,<br />
+Cyprian webs, damask of Arabia mazy with gold:<br />
+Sendal and Samite and Tarsien, and sardstones ruddy as wine,<br />
+Graved by Athenian diamond with forms of beauty divine.<br />
+To the quay from the gabled alleys, the huddled ravines of the town,<br />
+Twilights of jutting lattice and beam, the Guild-merchants come down,<br />
+Cheapening the gifts of the south, the sea-borne alien bales,<br />
+For the snow-bright fleeces of Leom&rsquo;ster, the wealth of Devonian
+vales;<br />
+<!-- page 50--><a name="page50"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 50</span>While
+above them, the cavernous gates, on which knight-robbers have gazed<br />
+Hopeless, in peace look down, their harrows of iron upraised;<br />
+And Dustyfoot enters at will with his gay Autolycus load,<br />
+And the maidens are flocking as doves when they fling the light grain
+on the road.<br />
+Low on the riverain mead, where the dull clay-cottages cling<br />
+To the tall town-ward and the towers, as nests of the martin in spring,<br />
+Where the year-long fever lurks, and gray leprosy burrows secure,<br />
+Are the wattled huts of the Friars, the long, white Church of the poor:<br />
+&mdash;Haven of wearied eyelids; of hearts that care not to live;<br />
+Shadow and silence of prayer; the peace which the world cannot give!<br />
+Tapers hazily gloaming through fragrance the censers outpour;<br />
+Chant ever rising and rippling in sweetness, as waves on the shore;<br />
+Casements of woven stone, with more than the rainbow bedyed;<br />
+Beauty of holiness!&nbsp; Spell yet unbroken by riches and pride!<br />
+&mdash;Ah! could it be so for ever!&mdash;the good aye better&rsquo;d
+by Time:&mdash;<br />
+First-Faith, first-Wisdom, first-Love,&mdash;to the end be true to their
+prime! . .<br />
+Far rises the storm o&rsquo;er horizons unseen, that will lay them in
+dust,<br />
+Crashings of plunder&rsquo;d cloisters, and royal insatiate lust:&mdash;<br />
+Far, unseen, unheard!&mdash;Meanwhile the great Minster on high<br />
+Like a stream of music, aspiring, harmonious, springs to the sky:&mdash;<br />
+Story on story ascending their buttress&rsquo;d beauty unfold,<br />
+<!-- page 51--><a name="page51"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 51</span>Till
+the highest height is attain&rsquo;d, and the Cross shines star-like
+in gold,<br />
+Set as a meteor in heaven; a sign of health and release:&mdash;<br />
+And the land rejoices below, and the heart-song of England is Peace.</p>
+<p>This date has been chosen as representing at once the culminating
+point in the reign of Edward, and of Mediaevalism in England.&nbsp;
+The sound, the fascinating elements of that period rapidly decline after
+the thirteenth century in Church and State, in art and in learning.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;In the person of the great Edward,&rsquo; says Freeman, &lsquo;the
+work of reconciliation is completed.&nbsp; Norman and Englishman have
+become one under the best and greatest of our later Kings, the first
+who, since the Norman entered our land, . . . followed a purely English
+policy.&rsquo;</p>
+<p><i>The three children</i>; William I and II, and Henry I.</p>
+<p><i>The transept</i>; of Canterbury Cathedral, after Becket&rsquo;s
+death named the &lsquo;Martyrdom.&rsquo;</p>
+<p><i>Nor again</i>; See the <i>Early Plantagenets</i>, by Bishop Stubbs:
+one of the very few masterpieces among the shoal of little books on
+great subjects in which a declining literature is fertile.</p>
+<p><i>Britons on each side sea</i>; Armorica and Cornwall, Wales and
+Strathclyde, all share in the great Arthurian legend.</p>
+<p><i>Justinian</i>; &lsquo;Edward,&rsquo; says Dr. Stubbs, &lsquo;is
+the great lawgiver, the great politician, the great organiser of the
+mediaeval English polity:&rsquo; (<i>Early Plantagenets</i>).</p>
+<p><i>Keep thy Faith</i>; &lsquo;Pactum serva&rsquo; may be still seen
+inscribed on the huge stone coffin of Edward I.</p>
+<p><i>The keels of Guienne . . . Adria&rsquo;s dyes</i>; The ships of
+Gascony, of the Hanse Towns, of Genoa, of Venice, are enumerated amongst
+those which now traded with England.</p>
+<p><i>Malvasian nectar</i>; &lsquo;Malvoisie,&rsquo; the sweet wine
+of the Southern Morea, gained its name from Monemvasia, or Napoli di
+Malvasia, its port of shipment.</p>
+<p><i>Sendal</i>; A thin rich silk.&nbsp; <i>Samite</i>; A very rich
+stuff, sometimes wholly of silk, often crimson, interwoven with gold
+and silver thread, and embroidered.&nbsp; <i>Tarsien</i>; Silken stuff
+from Tartary.</p>
+<p><i>Athenian diamond</i>; A few very fine early gems ascribed to Athens,
+are executed wholly with diamond-point.</p>
+<p><i>The snow-bright fleeces</i>; Those of Leominster were very long
+famous.</p>
+<p><i>Devonian vales</i>; The ancient mining region west of Tavistock.</p>
+<p><i>Dustyfoot</i>; Old name for pedlar.</p>
+<h3><!-- page 52--><a name="page52"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 52</span>CRECY</h3>
+<p>August 26: 1346</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;At Crecy by
+Somme in Ponthieu<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; High
+up on a windy hill<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; A mill stands out like
+a tower;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; King
+Edward stands on the mill.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The plain is seething
+below<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; As
+Vesuvius seethes with flame,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; But O! not with fire,
+but gore,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Earth incarnadined
+o&rsquo;er,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Crimson
+with shame and with fame!&mdash;<br />
+To the King run the messengers, crying<br />
+&lsquo;Thy Son is hard-press&rsquo;d to the dying!&rsquo;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;&lsquo;Let alone: for to-day will be written in
+story<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; To the great world&rsquo;s end, and for
+ever:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; So let the boy have
+the glory.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Erin and Gwalia
+there<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; With
+England are one against France;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Outfacing the oriflamme
+red<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The
+red dragons of Merlin advance:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; As harvest in autumn
+renew&rsquo;d<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The
+lances bend o&rsquo;er the fields;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Snow-thick our arrow-heads
+white<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Level the foe as they
+light;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Knighthood
+to yeomanry yields:&mdash;<br />
+Proud heart, the King watches, as higher<br />
+Goes the blaze of the battle, and nigher:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &lsquo;To-day is a day will be written in story<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; To the great world&rsquo;s end, and for
+ever!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Let the boy alone have
+the glory.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Harold at Senlac-on-Sea<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; By
+Norman arrow laid low,&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!-- page 53--><a name="page53"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 53</span>When
+the shield-wall was breach&rsquo;d by the shaft,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;Thou
+art avenged by the bow!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Chivalry! name of romance!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Thou
+art henceforth but a name!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Weapon that none can
+withstand,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Yew in the Englishman&rsquo;s
+hand,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Flight-shaft
+unerring in aim!<br />
+As a lightning-struck forest the foemen<br />
+Shiver down to the stroke of the bowmen:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;&lsquo;O to-day is a day will be written in story<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; To the great world&rsquo;s end, and for
+ever!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; So, let the boy have
+the glory.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Pride of Liguria&rsquo;s
+shore<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Genoa
+wrestles in vain;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Vainly Bohemia&rsquo;s
+King<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Kinglike
+is laid with the slain.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The Blood-lake is wiped-out
+in blood,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The
+shame of the centuries o&rsquo;er;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Where the pride of
+the Norman had sway<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The lions lord over
+the fray,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The
+legions of France are no more:&mdash;<br />
+&mdash;The Prince to his father kneels lowly;<br />
+&mdash;&lsquo;His is the battle! his wholly!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; For to-day is a day will be written in story<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; To the great world&rsquo;s end, and for
+ever:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; So, let him have the
+spurs, and the glory!&rsquo;</p>
+<p><i>Erin and Gwalia</i>; Half of Edward&rsquo;s army consisted of
+light armed footmen from Ireland and Wales&mdash;the latter under their
+old Dragon-flag.</p>
+<p><i>Chivalry</i>; The feudal idea of an army, resting &lsquo;on the
+superiority of the horseman to the footman, of the mounted noble to
+the unmounted churl,&rsquo; may be said to have been ruined by this
+battle: (<i>Green</i>, B. IV: ch. iii).</p>
+<p><i>Liguria</i>; 15,000 cross-bowmen from Genoa were in Philip&rsquo;s
+army.</p>
+<p><i>The Blood-lake</i>; Senlac; Hastings.</p>
+<h3><!-- page 54--><a name="page54"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 54</span>THE
+BLACK SEATS</h3>
+<p>1348-9</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Blue and ever more blue<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The sky of that summer&rsquo;s spring:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; No cloud from dawning to night:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The lidless eyeball of light<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Glared: nor could e&rsquo;en in darkness the dew<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Her pearls on the meadow-grass string.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; As a face of a hundred years,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Mummied and scarr&rsquo;d, for the heart<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Is long dry at the fountain of tears,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Green earth lay brown-faced and torn,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Scarr&rsquo;d and hard and forlorn.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And as that foul monster of Lerna<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Whom H&eacute;racl&eacute;s slew in his
+might,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; But this one slaying, not slain,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; From the marshes, poisonous, white,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Crawl&rsquo;d out a plague-mist and sheeted the plain,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; A hydra of hell and of night.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;Whence upon men has that horror past?<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; From Cathaya westward it stole to Byzance,&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The City of Flowers,&mdash;the vineyards of France;&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; O&rsquo;er the salt-sea ramparts of England, last,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Reeking and rank, a serpent&rsquo;s breath:&mdash;<br />
+What is this, men cry in their fear, what is this that cometh?<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis the Black Death, they whisper:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The black black Death!</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The heart of man at the name<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; To a ball of ice shrinks in,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; With hope, surrendering life:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The husband looks on the wife,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Reading the tokens of doom in the frame,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The pest-boil hid in the skin,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!-- page 55--><a name="page55"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 55</span>And
+flees and leaves her to die.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Fear-sick, the mother beholds<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; In her child&rsquo;s pure crystalline
+eye<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; A dull shining, a sign of despair.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Lo, the heavens are poison, not air;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And they fall as when lambs in the pasture<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; With a moan that is hardly a moan,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Drop, whole flocks, where they stand;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And the mother lays her, alone,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Slain by the touch of her nursing hand,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Where the household before her is strown.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;Earth, Earth, open and cover thy dead!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; For they are smitten and fall who bear<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The corpse to the grave with a prayerless prayer,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And thousands are crush&rsquo;d in the common bed:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;Is it Hell that breathes with an adder&rsquo;s breath?<br />
+ Is it the day of doom, men cry, the Judge that cometh?<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;&rsquo;Tis the Black Death, God
+help us!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The black black Death.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Maid Alice and maid Margaret<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; In the fields have built them a bower<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Of reedmace and rushes fine,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Fenced with sharp albespyne;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Pretty maids hid in the nest; and yet<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Yours is one death, and one hour!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Priest and peasant and lord<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; By the swift, soft stroke of the air,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; By a silent invisible sword,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; In plough-field or banquet, fall:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The watchers are flat on the wall:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Through city and village and valley<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The sweet-voiced herald of prayer<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Is dumb in the towers; the throng<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; To the shrine pace barefoot; and where<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Blazed out from the choir a glory of song,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!-- page 56--><a name="page56"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 56</span>God&rsquo;s
+altar is lightless and bare.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Is there no pity in earth or sky?<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The burden of England, who shall say?<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Half the giant oak is riven away,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And the green leaves yearn for the leaves that die.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Will the whole world drink of the dragon&rsquo;s breath?<br />
+It is the cup, men cry, the cup of God&rsquo;s fury that cometh!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis the Black Death, Lord help
+us!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The black black Death.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In England is heard a moan,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; A bitter lament and a sore,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Rachel lamenting her dead,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And will not be comforted<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; For the little faces for ever gone,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The feet from the silent floor.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And a cry goes up from the land,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Take from us in mercy, O God,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Take from us the weight of Thy hand,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The cup and the wormwood of woe!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &rsquo;Neath the terrible barbs of Thy
+bow<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; This England, this once Thy beloved,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Is water&rsquo;d with life-blood for
+rain;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The bones of her children are white,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; As flints on the Golgotha plain;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Not slain as warriors by warriors in fight,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; By the arrows of Heaven slain.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; We have sinn&rsquo;d: we lift up our souls to Thee,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; O Lord God eternal on high:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Thou who gavest Thyself to die,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Saviour, save! to Thy feet we flee:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Snatch from the hell and the Enemy&rsquo;s breath,<br />
+From the Prince of the Air, from the terror by night that cometh:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; From the Black Death, Christ save us!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The black black Death!</p>
+<p><!-- page 57--><a name="page57"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 57</span><i>That
+foul monster</i>; The Lernaean Hydra of Greek legend.</p>
+<p><i>From the marshes</i>; The drought which preceded the plague in
+England, and may have predisposed to its reception, was followed by
+mist, in which the people fancied they saw the disease palpably advancing.</p>
+<p><i>From Cathaya</i>; The plague was heard of in Central Asia in 1333;
+it reached Constantinople in 1347.</p>
+<p><i>The City of Flowers</i>; Florence, where the ravages of the plague
+were immortalized in the <i>Decamerone</i> of Boccaccio.</p>
+<p><i>The pest boil</i>; Seems to have been the enlarged and discharging
+gland by which the specific blood-poison of the plague relieved itself.&nbsp;
+A &lsquo;muddy glistening&rsquo; of the eye is noticed as one of the
+symptoms.</p>
+<p><i>The common bed</i>; More than 50,000 are said to have been buried
+on the site of the Charter House.</p>
+<p><i>Albespyne</i>; Hawthorn.</p>
+<p><i>Half the giant oak</i>; &lsquo;Of the three or four millions who
+then formed the population of England, more than one-half were swept
+away&rsquo;: (<i>Green</i>, B. IV: ch. iii).</p>
+<h3>THE PILGRIM AND THE PLOUGHMAN</h3>
+<p>1382</p>
+<p>It is a dream, I know:&mdash;Yet on the past<br />
+Of this dear England if in thought we gaze,<br />
+About her seems a constant sunshine cast;<br />
+In summer calm we see and golden haze<br />
+The little London of Plantagenet days;<br />
+Quaint labyrinthine knot of toppling lanes,<br />
+And thorny spires aflame with starlike vanes.</p>
+<p>Our silver Thames all yet unspoil&rsquo;d and clear;<br />
+The many-buttress&rsquo;d bridge that stems the tide;<br />
+Black-timber&rsquo;d wharves; arcaded walls, that rear<br />
+Long, golden-crested roofs of civic pride:&mdash;<br />
+While flaunting galliots by the gardens glide,<br />
+And on Spring&rsquo;s frolic air the May-song swells,<br />
+Mix&rsquo;d with the music of a thousand bells.</p>
+<p><!-- page 58--><a name="page58"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 58</span>Beyond
+the bridge a mazy forest swims,<br />
+Great spars and sails and flame-tongued flags on high,<br />
+Wedged round the quay, a-throng with ruddy limbs<br />
+And faces bronzed beneath another sky:<br />
+And &rsquo;mid the press sits one with aspect shy<br />
+And downcast eyes of watching, and, the while,<br />
+The deep observance of an inward smile.</p>
+<p>In hooded mantle gray he smiled and sate,<br />
+With ink-horn at his knees and scroll and pen.<br />
+And took the toll and register&rsquo;d the freight,<br />
+&rsquo;Mid noise of clattering cranes and strife of men:<br />
+And all that moved and spoke was in his ken,<br />
+With lines and hues like Nature&rsquo;s own design&rsquo;d<br />
+Deep in the magic mirror of his mind.</p>
+<p>Thence oft, returning homeward, on the book,&mdash;<br />
+His of Certaldo, or the bard whose lays<br />
+Were lost to love in Scythia,&mdash;he would look<br />
+Till his fix&rsquo;d eyes the dancing letters daze:<br />
+Then forth to the near fields, and feed his gaze<br />
+On one fair flower in starry myriads spread,<br />
+And in her graciousness be comforted:&mdash;</p>
+<p>Then, joyous with a poet&rsquo;s joy, to draw<br />
+With genial touch, and strokes of patient skill,<br />
+The very image of each thing he saw:&mdash;<br />
+He limn&rsquo;d the man all round, for good or ill,<br />
+Having both sighs and laughter at his will;<br />
+Life as it went he grasp&rsquo;d in vision true,<br />
+Yet stood outside the scene his pencil drew.</p>
+<p>&mdash;Man&rsquo;s inner passions in their conscience-strife,<br />
+The conflicts of the heart against the heart,<br />
+The mother yearning o&rsquo;er the infant&rsquo;s life,<br />
+The maiden wrong&rsquo;d by wealth and lecherous art,<br />
+The leper&rsquo;s loathsome cell from man apart,<br />
+<!-- page 59--><a name="page59"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 59</span>War&rsquo;s
+hell of lust and fire, the village-woe,<br />
+The tinsel chivalry veiling shame below,&mdash;</p>
+<p>Not his to draw,&mdash;to see, perhaps:&mdash;Our eyes<br />
+Hold bias with our humour:&mdash;His, to paint<br />
+With Nature&rsquo;s freshness, what before him lies:<br />
+The knave, the fool; the frolicsome, the quaint:<br />
+His the broad jest, the laugh without restraint,<br />
+The ready tears, the spirit lightly moved;<br />
+Loving the world, and by the world beloved.</p>
+<p>So forth fared Chaucer on his pilgrimage<br />
+Through England&rsquo;s humours; in immortal song<br />
+Bodying the form and pressure of his age,<br />
+Tints gay as pure, and delicate as strong;<br />
+Still to the Tabard the blithe travellers throng,<br />
+Seen in his mind so vividly, that we<br />
+Know them more clearly than the men we see.</p>
+<p>Fair France, bright Italy, those numbers train&rsquo;d;<br />
+First in his pages Nature wedding Art<br />
+Of all our sons of song; yet he remain&rsquo;d<br />
+True English of the English at his heart:&mdash;<br />
+He stood between two worlds, yet had no part<br />
+In that new order of the dawning day<br />
+Which swept the masque of chivalry away.</p>
+<p>O Poet of romance and courtly glee<br />
+And downcast eager glance that shuns the sky,<br />
+Above, about, are signs thou canst not see,<br />
+Portents in heaven and earth!&mdash;And one goes by<br />
+With other than thy prosperous, laughing eye,<br />
+Framing the rough web of his rueful lays,<br />
+The sorrow and the sin&mdash;with bitter gaze</p>
+<p>As down the Strand he stalks, a sable shade<br />
+Of death, while, jingling like the elfin train,<br />
+<!-- page 60--><a name="page60"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 60</span>In
+silver samite knight and dame and maid<br />
+Ride to the tourney on the barrier&rsquo;d plain;<br />
+And he must bow in humble mute disdain,<br />
+And that worst woe of baffled souls endure,<br />
+To see the evil that they may not cure.</p>
+<p>For on sweet Malvern Hill one morn he lay,<br />
+Drowsed by the music of the constant stream:&mdash;<br />
+Loud sang the cuckoo, cuckoo!&mdash;for the May<br />
+Breathed summer: summer floating like a dream<br />
+From the far fields of childhood, with a gleam<br />
+Of alien freshness on her forehead fair,<br />
+And Heaven itself within the common air.</p>
+<p>Then on the mead in vision Langland saw<br />
+A pilgrim-throng; not missal-bright as those<br />
+Whom Chaucer&rsquo;s hand surpass&rsquo;d itself to draw,<br />
+Gay as the lark, and brilliant as the rose;&mdash;<br />
+But such as dungeon foul or spital shows,<br />
+Or the serf&rsquo;s fever-den, or field of fight,<br />
+When festering sunbeams on the wounded smite.</p>
+<p>No sainted shrine the motley wanderers seek,<br />
+Pilgrims of life upon the field of scorn,<br />
+Mocking and mock&rsquo;d; with plague and hunger weak,<br />
+And haggard faces bleach&rsquo;d as those who mourn,<br />
+And footsteps redden&rsquo;d with the trodden thorn;<br />
+Blind stretching hands that grope for truth in vain,<br />
+Across a twilight demon-haunted plain.</p>
+<p>A land whose children toil and rot like beasts,<br />
+Robbers and robb&rsquo;d by turns, the dreamer sees:&mdash;<br />
+Land of poor-grinding lords and faithless priests,<br />
+Where wisdom starves and folly thrones at ease<br />
+&rsquo;Mid lavishness and lusts and knaveries;<br />
+Times out of joint, a universe of lies,<br />
+Till Love divine appear in Ploughman&rsquo;s guise</p>
+<p><!-- page 61--><a name="page61"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 61</span>To
+burn the gilded tares and save the land,<br />
+Risen from the grave and walking earth again:&mdash;<br />
+&mdash;And as he dream&rsquo;d and kiss&rsquo;d the nail-pierced hand,<br />
+A hundred towers their Easter voices rain<br />
+In silver showers o&rsquo;er hill and vale and plain,<br />
+And the air throbb&rsquo;d with sweetness, and he woke<br />
+And all the dream in light and music broke.</p>
+<p>&mdash;He look&rsquo;d around, and saw the world he left<br />
+When to that visionary realm of song<br />
+His spirit fled from bonds of flesh bereft;<br />
+And on the vision he lay musing long,<br />
+As o&rsquo;er his soul rude minstrel-echoes throng,<br />
+Old measures half-disused; and grasp&rsquo;d his pen,<br />
+And drew his cottage-Christ for homely men.</p>
+<p>Thus Langland also took his pilgrimage;<br />
+Rough lone knight-errant on uncourtly ways,<br />
+And wrong and woe were charter&rsquo;d on his page,<br />
+With some horizon-glimpse of sweeter days.<br />
+And on the land the message of his lays<br />
+Smote like the strong North-wind, and cleansed the sky<br />
+With wholesome blast and bitter clarion-cry,</p>
+<p>Summoning the people in the Ploughman&rsquo;s name.<br />
+&mdash;So fought his fight, and pass&rsquo;d unknown away;<br />
+Seeking no other praise, no sculptured fame<br />
+Nor laureate honours for his artless lay,<br />
+Nor in the Minster laid with high array;&mdash;<br />
+But where the May-thorn gleams, the grasses wave,<br />
+And the wind sighs o&rsquo;er a forgotten grave.</p>
+<p>Langland, whom I have put here in contrast with Chaucer, is said
+to have lived between 1332 and 1400.&nbsp; His <i>Vision of Piers the
+Plowman</i> (who is partially identified with our blessed Saviour),
+with some added poems, forms an allegory on life in England, in Church
+and State, as it appeared to him during the dislocated and corrupt age
+which followed the superficial glories of Edward the Third&rsquo;s earlier
+years.</p>
+<p><!-- page 62--><a name="page62"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 62</span><i>Took
+the toll</i>; Amongst other official employments, Chaucer was Comptroller
+of the Customs in the Port of London.&nbsp; See his <i>House of Fame</i>;
+and the beautiful picture of his walks at dawning in the daisy-meadows:
+Prologue to the <i>Legend of Good Women</i>.</p>
+<p><i>His of Certaldo, . . . in Scythia</i>; Boccaccio:&mdash;and Ovid,
+who died in exile at Tomi:&mdash;to both of whom Chaucer is greatly
+indebted for the substance of his tales.</p>
+<p><i>Picture-like</i>; &lsquo;It is chiefly as a comic poet, and a
+minute observer of manners and circumstances, that Chaucer excels.&nbsp;
+In serious and moral poetry he is frequently languid and diffuse, but
+he springs like Antaeus from the earth when his subject changes to coarse
+satire or merry narrative&rsquo; (Hallam, <i>Mid. Ages</i>: Ch. IX:
+Pt. iii).</p>
+<p><i>The Tabard</i>; Inn in Southwark whence the pilgrims to Canterbury
+start.</p>
+<p><i>Down the Strand</i>; It is thus that Langland describes himself
+and his feelings of dissatisfaction with the world.</p>
+<p><i>That worst woe</i>; Literature, even ancient literature, has no
+phrase more deeply felt and pathetic than the words which the Persian
+nobleman at the feast in Thebes before Plataea addressed to Thersander
+of Orchomenus:&mdash;[ &Epsilon;&chi;&theta;&iota;&sigma;&tau;&eta;
+&omicron;&delta;&upsilon;&nu;&eta; &tau;&omega;&nu; &epsilon;&nu; &alpha;&nu;&theta;&rho;&omega;&pi;&omicron;&iota;&sigma;&iota;,
+&pi;&omicron;&lambda;&lambda;&alpha; &phi;&rho;&omicron;&nu;&epsilon;&omicron;&nu;&tau;&alpha;
+&mu;&eta;&delta;&epsilon;&nu;&omicron;&sigmaf; &kappa;&rho;&alpha;&tau;&epsilon;&epsilon;&iota;&nu;]:
+(<i>Herodotus</i>, IX: xvi).</p>
+<p><i>One morn he lay</i>; The <i>Vision</i> opens with a picture of
+the poet asleep on Malvern Hill: the last of the added poems closing
+as he wakes with the Easter chimes.</p>
+<p><i>Old measures</i>; Langland&rsquo;s metre &lsquo;is more uncouth
+than that of his predecessors&rsquo; (Hallam, <i>Mid. Ag</i>. Ch. IX:
+Pt. iii).</p>
+<p><i>In the Minster</i>; Chaucer was buried at the entrance of S. Benet&rsquo;s
+Chapel in Westminster Abbey.</p>
+<h3>JEANNE D&rsquo;ARC</h3>
+<p>1424</p>
+<p>So many stars in heaven,&mdash;<br />
+Flowers in the meadow that shine;<br />
+&mdash;This little one of Domremy,<br />
+What special grace is thine?<br />
+By the fairy beech and the fountain<br />
+What but a child with thy brothers?<br />
+<!-- page 63--><a name="page63"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 63</span>Among
+the maids of the valley<br />
+Art more than one among others?</p>
+<p>Chosen darling of Heaven,<br />
+Yet at heart wast only a child!<br />
+And for thee the wild things of Nature<br />
+Sot aside their nature wild:&mdash;<br />
+The brown-eyed fawn of the forest<br />
+Came silently glancing upon thee;<br />
+The squirrel slipp&rsquo;d down from the fir,<br />
+And nestled his gentleness on thee.</p>
+<p><i>Angelus</i> bell and <i>Ave</i>,<br />
+Like voices they follow the maid<br />
+As she follows her sheep in the valley<br />
+From the dawn to the folding shade:&mdash;<br />
+For the world that we cannot see<br />
+Is the world of her earthly seeing;<br />
+From the air of the hills of God<br />
+She draws her breath and her being.</p>
+<p>Dances by beech tree and fountain,<br />
+They know her no longer:&mdash;apart<br />
+Sitting with thought and with vision<br />
+In the silent shrine of the heart.<br />
+And a voice henceforth and for ever<br />
+Within, without her, is sighing<br />
+&lsquo;Pity for France, O pity,<br />
+France the beloved, the dying!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&mdash;Now between church-wall and cottage<br />
+What comes in the blinding light,<br />
+&mdash;Rainbow plumes and armour,<br />
+Face as the sun in his height . . .<br />
+&lsquo;Angel that pierced the red dragon,<br />
+Pity for France, O pity!<br />
+Holy one, thou shalt save her,<br />
+Vineyard and village and city!&rsquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 64--><a name="page64"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 64</span>Poor
+sweet child of Domremy,<br />
+In thine innocence only strong,<br />
+Thou seest not the treason before thee,<br />
+The gibe and the curse of the throng,&mdash;<br />
+The furnace-pile in the market<br />
+That licks out its flames to take thee;&mdash;<br />
+For He who loves thee in heaven<br />
+On earth will not forsake thee!</p>
+<p>Poor sweet maid of Domremy,<br />
+In thine innocence secure,<br />
+Heed not what men say of thee,<br />
+The buffoon and his jest impure!<br />
+Nor care if thy name, young martyr,<br />
+Be the star of thy country&rsquo;s story:&mdash;<br />
+Mid the white-robed host of the heavens<br />
+Thou hast more than glory!</p>
+<p><i>Angel that pierced</i>; &lsquo;She <i>had pity</i>, to use the
+phrase for ever on her lip, <i>on the fair realm of France</i>.&nbsp;
+She saw visions; St. Michael appeared to her in a flood of blinding
+light&rsquo;: (<i>Green</i>, B. IV: ch. vi).</p>
+<p><i>The buffoon</i>; Voltaire.</p>
+<h3>TOWTON FIELD</h3>
+<p>Palm Sunday: 1461</p>
+<p>Love<span class="smcap">, </span>Who from the throne above<br />
+Cam&rsquo;st to teach the law of love,<br />
+Who Thy peaceful triumph hast<br />
+Led o&rsquo;er palms before Thee cast,<br />
+E&rsquo;en in highest heaven Thine eyes<br />
+Turn from this day&rsquo;s sacrifice!<br />
+Slaughter whence no victor host<br />
+Can the palms of triumph boast;<br />
+<!-- page 65--><a name="page65"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 65</span>Blood
+on blood in rivers spilt,&mdash;<br />
+English blood by English guilt!</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;From the gracious
+Minster-towers<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Of York the priests behold afar<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The field of Towton shimmer like a star<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With light of lance and helm; while both the powers<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Misnamed from the fair rose, with one fell blow,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;In snow-dazed,
+blinding air<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Mass&rsquo;d on the
+burnside bare,&mdash;<br />
+Each army, as one man, drove at the opposing foe.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Ne&rsquo;er
+since then, and ne&rsquo;er before,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; On England&rsquo;s fields with English
+hands<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Have met for death such myriad myriad bands,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Such wolf-like fury, and such greed of gore:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; No natural kindly touch, no check of shame:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And no such bestial
+rage<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Blots our long story&rsquo;s
+page;<br />
+Such lewd remorseless swords, such selfishness of aim</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;Gracious
+Prince of Peace!&nbsp; Yet Thou<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; May&rsquo;st look and bless with lenient
+eyes<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; When trodden races &rsquo;gainst their tyrant rise,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And the bent back no<span class="smcap"> </span>more will
+deign to bow:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Or when they crush some old anarchic feud,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And found the throne
+anew<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; On Law to Freedom true,<br />
+Cleansing the land they love from guilt of blood by blood.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Nor did Heaven
+unmoved behold<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; When Hellas, for her birthright free<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Dappling with gore the dark Saronian sea,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The Persian wave back, past Abydos, roll&rsquo;d:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But in this murderous match of chief &rsquo;gainst chief<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; No chivalry had part,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!-- page 66--><a name="page66"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 66</span>No
+impulse of the heart;<br />
+Nor any sigh for Right triumphant breathes relief.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;Midday
+comes: and no release,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; No carnage-pause to blow on blow!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; While through the choir the palm-wreathed children go,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And gay hosannas hail the Prince of Peace:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And evening falls, and from the Minster height<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; They see the wan Ouse
+stream<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Blood-dark with slaughter
+gleam,<br />
+And hear the demon-struggle shrieking through the night.</p>
+<p>Love, o&rsquo;er palms in triumph strown<br />
+Passing, through the crowd alone,&mdash;<br />
+Silent &rsquo;mid the exulting cry,&mdash;<br />
+At Jerusalem to die:<br />
+Thou, foreknowing all, didst know<br />
+How Thy blood in vain would flow!<br />
+How our madness oft would prove<br />
+Recreant to the law of love:<br />
+Wrongs that men from men endure<br />
+Doing Thee to death once more!</p>
+<p>&lsquo;On the 29th of March 1461 the two armies encountered one another
+at Towton Field, near Tadcaster.&nbsp; In the numbers engaged, as well
+as in the terrible obstinacy of the struggle, no such battle had been
+seen in England since the field of Senlac.&nbsp; The two armies together
+numbered nearly 120,000 men&rsquo;: (<i>Green</i>, B. IV: ch. vi).</p>
+<p><i>Saronian sea</i>; Scene of the battle of Salamis, <span class="smcap">b.c.
+</span>480.</p>
+<p><i>They see the wan Ouse stream</i>; Mr. R. Wilton, of Londesborough,
+has kindly pointed out to me that <i>Wharfe</i>, which from a brook
+received the bloodshed of Towton, does not discharge into <i>Ouse</i>
+until about ten miles south of York.&nbsp; The <i>gleam</i> is, therefore,
+visionary: (1889).</p>
+<h3><!-- page 67--><a name="page67"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 67</span>GROCYN
+AT OXFORD</h3>
+<p><i>THE ENGLISH RENAISSANCE</i></p>
+<p>1491</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As she who in some village-child unknown,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With rustic grace and fantasy bedeck&rsquo;d<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And in her simple loveliness alone,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A sister finds;&mdash;and the long years&rsquo; neglect<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Effaces with warm love and nursing care,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And takes her heart to heart,<br />
+And in her treasured treasures bids her freely share,</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And robes with radiance new, new strength and grace:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Hellas and England! thus it was with ye!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Though distanced far by centuries and by space,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Sisters in soul by Nature&rsquo;s own decree.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And if on Athens in her glory-day<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The younger might not look,<br />
+Her living soul came back, and reinfused our clay.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;It was not wholly lost, that better light,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Not in the darkest darkness of our day;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; From cell to cell, e&rsquo;en through the Danish night,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The torch ran on its firefly fitful way;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And blazed anew with him who in the vale<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Of fair Aosta saw<br />
+The careless reaper-bands, and pass&rsquo;d the heavens&rsquo; high
+pale,</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And supp&rsquo;d with God, in vision!&nbsp; Or
+with him,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Earliest and greatest of his name, who gave<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; His life to Nature, in her caverns dim<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Tracking her soul, through poverty to the grave,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And left his Great Work to the barbarous age<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; That, in its folly-love,<br />
+With wizard-fame defamed his and sweet Vergil&rsquo;s page.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<!-- page 68--><a name="page68"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 68</span>But
+systems have their day, and die, or change<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Transform&rsquo;d to new: Not now from cloister-cell<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And desk-bow&rsquo;d priest, breathes out that impulse
+strange<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &rsquo;Neath which the world of feudal Europe fell:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Throes of new birth, new life; while men despair&rsquo;d<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Or triumph&rsquo;d in their pride,<br />
+As in their eyes the torch of learning fiercely flared.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;For now the cry of Homer&rsquo;s clarion first<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And Plato&rsquo;s golden tongue on English ears<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And souls aflame for that new doctrine burst,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; As Grocyn taught, when, after studious years,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; He came from Arno to the liberal walls<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; That welcomed me in youth,<br />
+And nursed in Grecian lore, long native to her halls.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;O voice that spann&rsquo;d the gulf of vanish&rsquo;d
+years,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Evoking shapes of old from night to light,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Lo at thy spell a long-lost world appears,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Where Rome and Hellas break upon our sight:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The Gothic gloom divides; a glory burns<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Behind the clouds of Time,<br />
+And all that wonder-past in beauty&rsquo;s glow returns.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;For when the Northern floods that lash&rsquo;d
+and curl&rsquo;d<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Around the granite fragments of great Rome<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Outspread Colossus-like athwart the world,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Foam&rsquo;d down, and the new nations found their home,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That earlier Europe, law and arts and arms,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Fell into far-off shade,<br />
+Or lay like some fair maid sleep-sunk in magic charms.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And as in lands once flourishing, now forlorn,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And desolate capitals, the traveller sees<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Wild tribes, in ruins from the ruins torn<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Hutted like beasts &rsquo;mid marble palaces,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <!-- page 69--><a name="page69"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 69</span>Unknowing
+what those relics mean, and whose<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The goblets gold-enchased<br />
+And images of the gods the broken vaults disclose;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;So in the Mid-age from the Past of Man<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The Present was disparted; and they stood<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; As on some island, sever&rsquo;d from the plan<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of the great world, and the sea&rsquo;s twilight flood<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Around them, and the monsters of the unknown;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Blind fancy mix&rsquo;d with fact;<br />
+Faith in the things unseen sustaining them alone.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Age of extremes and contrasts!&mdash;where the
+good<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Was more than human in its tenderness<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of chivalry;&mdash;Beauty&rsquo;s self the prize of blood,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And evil raging round with wild excess<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of more than brutal:&mdash;A disjointed time!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Doubt with Hypocrisy pair&rsquo;d,<br />
+And purest Faith by folly, childlike, led to crime.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;O Florentine, O Master, who alone<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; From thy loved Vergil till our Shakespeare came<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Didst climb the long steps to the imperial throne,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With what immortal dyes of angry flame<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Hast blazon&rsquo;d out the vileness of the day!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; What tints of perfect love<br />
+Rosier than summer rose, etherealize thy lay!</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;Now, as in some new land when night is deep<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The pilgrim halts, nor knows what round him lies<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And wakes with dawn, and finds him on the steep,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; While plains beneath and unguess&rsquo;d summits rise,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And stately rivers widening to the sea,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Cities of men and towers,<br />
+Abash&rsquo;d for very joy, and gazing fearfully;&mdash;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;New worlds, new wisdom, a new birth of things<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; On Europe shine, and men know where they stand:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <!-- page 70--><a name="page70"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 70</span>The
+sea his western portal open flings,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And bold Sebastian strikes the flowery land:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Soon, heaven its secret yields; the golden sun<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Enthrones him in the midst,<br />
+And round his throne man and the planets humbly run.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;New learning all! yet fresh from fountains old,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Hellenic inspiration, pure and deep:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Strange treasures of Byzantine hoards unroll&rsquo;d,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And mouldering volumes from monastic sleep,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Reclad with life by more than magic art:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Till that old world renew&rsquo;d<br />
+His youth, and in the past the present own&rsquo;d its part.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;O vision that ye saw, and hardly saw,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Ye who in Alfred&rsquo;s path at Oxford trod,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Or in our London train&rsquo;d by studious law<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The little-ones of Christ to Him and God,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Colet and Grocyn!&mdash;Though the world forget<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The labours of your love,<br />
+In loving hearts your names live in their fragrance yet.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;O vision that our happier eyes have seen!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; For not till peace came with Elizabeth<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Did those fair maids of holy Hippocrene<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Cross the wan waves and draw a northern breath:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Though some far-echoed strain on Tuscan lyres<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Our Chaucer caught, and sang<br />
+Like her who sings ere dawn has lit his Eastern fires;&mdash;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Herald of that first splendour, when the sky<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Was topaz-clear with hope, and life-blood-red<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With thoughts of mighty poets, lavishly<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Round all the fifty years&rsquo; horizon shed:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Now in our glades the Aglaian Graces gleam,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Around our fountains throng,<br />
+And change Ilissus&rsquo; banks for Thames and Avon stream.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<!-- page 71--><a name="page71"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 71</span>Daughters
+of Zeus and bright Eurynom&eacute;,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; She whose blue waters pave the Aegaean plain,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Children of all surrounding sky and sea,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A larger ocean claims you, not in vain!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Ye who to Helicon from Thessalia wide<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Wander&rsquo;d when earth was young,<br />
+Come from Libethrion, come; our love, our joy, our pride!</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Ah! since your gray Pierian ilex-groves<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Felt the despoiling tread of barbarous feet,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; This land, o&rsquo;er all, the Delian leader loves;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Here is your favourite home, your genuine seat:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In these green western isles renew the throne<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Where Grace by Wisdom shines;<br />
+&mdash;We welcome with full hearts, and claim you for our own!</p>
+<p>If, looking at England, one point may be singled out in that long
+movement, generalized under the name of the Renaissance, as critical,
+it is the introduction of the Greek and Latin literature:&mdash;which
+has remained ever since conspicuously the most powerful and enlarging
+element, the most effectively educational, among all blanches of human
+study.</p>
+<p><i>In the vale Of fair Aosta</i>; See Anselm&rsquo;s youthful vision
+of the gleaners and the palace of heaven (Green: <i>History</i>, B.
+II: ch. ii).</p>
+<p><i>His Great Work</i>; Roger Bacon&rsquo;s so-named <i>Opus Majus</i>:
+&lsquo;At once,&rsquo; says Whewell, &lsquo;the Encyclopaedia and the
+Novum Organum of the thirteenth century.&rsquo;&nbsp; Like Vergil, Bacon
+passed at one time for a magician.</p>
+<p><i>That new doctrine</i>; Grocyn was perhaps the first Englishman
+who studied Greek under Chalcondylas the Byzantine at Florence; certainly
+the first who lectured on Greek in England.&nbsp; This was in the Hall
+of Exeter College, Oxford, in 1491.&nbsp; To him Erasmus (1499) came
+to study the language.&mdash;See the brilliant account of the revival
+of learning in Green, <i>Hist</i>. B. V: ch. ii.</p>
+<p><i>Master, who alone</i>; See <i>The Poet&rsquo;s Euthanasia</i>.</p>
+<p><i>Sebastian</i>; Cabot, who, in 1497, sailed from Bristol, and reached
+Florida.</p>
+<p><i>The golden sun</i>; Refers to Copernicus; whose solar system was,
+however, not published till 1543.</p>
+<p><i>The little-ones</i>; Colet, Dean of S. Paul&rsquo;s, founded the
+school in 1510.&nbsp; <!-- page 72--><a name="page72"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 72</span>&lsquo;The
+bent of its founder&rsquo;s mind was shown by the image of the Child
+Jesus over the master&rsquo;s chair, with the words <i>Hear ye Him</i>
+graven beneath it&rsquo; (Green: B. V: ch. iv).</p>
+<p><i>Fifty years</i>; Between 1570 and 1620 lies almost all the glorious
+production of our so-called Elizabethan period.</p>
+<p><i>From Libethrion</i>;&mdash;<i>Nymphae, noster amor, Libethrides</i>!
+. . . What a music is there in the least little fragment of Vergil&rsquo;s
+exquisite art!</p>
+<h3>MARGARET TUDOR</h3>
+<p><i>PROTHALAMION</i></p>
+<p>1503</p>
+<p>Love who art above us all,<br />
+Guard the treasure on her way,<br />
+Flower of England, fair and tall,<br />
+Maiden-wise and maiden-gay,<br />
+As her northward path she goes;<br />
+Daughter of the double rose.</p>
+<p>Look with twofold grace on her<br />
+Who from twofold root has grown,<br />
+Flower of York and Lancaster,<br />
+Now to grace another throne,<br />
+Rose in Scotland&rsquo;s garden set,&mdash;<br />
+Britain&rsquo;s only Margaret.</p>
+<p>Exile-child from childhood&rsquo;s bower,<br />
+Pledge and bond of Henry&rsquo;s faith,<br />
+James, take home our English flower,<br />
+Guard from touch of scorn and skaith;<br />
+Bearing, in her slender hands,<br />
+Palms of peace to hostile lands.</p>
+<p>Safe by southern smiling shires,<br />
+Many a city, many a shrine;<br />
+<!-- page 73--><a name="page73"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 73</span>By
+the newly kindled fires<br />
+Of the black Northumbrian mine;<br />
+Border clans in ambush set;<br />
+Carry thou fair Margaret.</p>
+<p>&mdash;Land of heath and hill and linn,<br />
+Land of mountain-freedom wild,<br />
+She in heart to thee is kin,<br />
+Tudor&rsquo;s daughter, Gwynedd&rsquo;s child!<br />
+In her lively lifeblood share<br />
+Gwenllian and Angh&aacute;rad fair.</p>
+<p>East and West, from Dee to Yare,<br />
+Now in equal bonds are wed:<br />
+Peace her new-found flower shall wear,<br />
+Rose that dapples white with red;<br />
+North and South, dissever&rsquo;d yet,<br />
+Join in this fair Margaret!</p>
+<p>Ocean round our Britain roll&rsquo;d,<br />
+Sapphire ring without a flaw,<br />
+When wilt thou one realm enfold,<br />
+One in freedom, one in law?<br />
+Will that ancient feud be sped,<br />
+Brothers&rsquo; blood by brothers shed?</p>
+<p>&mdash;Land with freedom&rsquo;s struggle sore,<br />
+Land to whom thy children cling<br />
+With a lover&rsquo;s love and more,<br />
+Take the gentle gift we bring!<br />
+Pearl in thy crown royal set;<br />
+Scotland&rsquo;s other Margaret.</p>
+<p>Margaret Tudor, daughter to Henry VII, married in 1502 to James IV,
+and afterwards to Lord Angus, was thus great-grandmother on both sides
+to James I of England.</p>
+<p><i>Gwynedd&rsquo;s child</i>; The Tudors intermarried with the old
+royal family <!-- page 74--><a name="page74"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 74</span>of
+North Wales, in whose pedigree occur the girl-names Gwenllian and Angharad.</p>
+<p><i>Other Margaret</i>; Sister to Edgar the Etheling, and wife to
+Malcolm.&nbsp; Her life and character are in contrast to the unhappy
+and unsatisfactory career of Margaret Tudor, whom I have here only treated
+as at once representing and uniting England, Scotland, and Wales.</p>
+<h3>LONDON BRIDGE</h3>
+<p>July 6: 1535</p>
+<p>The midnight moaning stream<br />
+Draws down its glassy surface through the bridge<br />
+That o&rsquo;er the current casts a tower&rsquo;d ridge,<br />
+Dark sky-line forms fantastic as a dream;<br />
+And cresset watch-lights on the bridge-gate gleam,<br />
+Where &rsquo;neath the star-lit dome gaunt masts upbuoy<br />
+No flag of festive joy,<br />
+But blanching spectral heads;&mdash;their heads, who died<br />
+Victims to tyrant-pride,<br />
+Martyrs of Faith and Freedom in the day<br />
+Of shame and flame and brutal selfish sway.</p>
+<p>And one in black array<br />
+Veiling her Rizpah-misery, to the gate<br />
+Comes, and with gold and moving speech sedate<br />
+Buys down the thing aloft, and bears away<br />
+Snatch&rsquo;d from the withering wind and ravens&rsquo; prey:<br />
+And as a mother&rsquo;s eyes, joy-soften&rsquo;d, shed<br />
+Tears o&rsquo;er her young child&rsquo;s head,<br />
+Golden and sweet, from evil saved; so she<br />
+O&rsquo;er this, sad-smilingly,<br />
+Mangled and gray, unwarm&rsquo;d by human breath,<br />
+Clasping death&rsquo;s relic with love passing death.</p>
+<p><!-- page 75--><a name="page75"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 75</span>So
+clasping now! and so<br />
+When death clasps her in turn! e&rsquo;en in the grave<br />
+Nursing the precious head she could not save,<br />
+Tho&rsquo; through each drop her life-blood yearn&rsquo;d to flow<br />
+If but for him she might to scaffold go:&mdash;<br />
+And O! as from that Hall, with innocent gore<br />
+Sacred from roof to floor,<br />
+To that grim other place of blood he went&mdash;<br />
+What cry of agony rent<br />
+The twilight,&mdash;cry as of an Angel&rsquo;s pain,&mdash;<br />
+<i>My father, O my father</i>! . . . and in vain!</p>
+<p>Then, as on those who lie<br />
+Cast out from bliss, the days of joy come back,<br />
+And all the soul with wormwood sweetness rack,<br />
+So in that trance of dreadful ecstasy<br />
+The vision of her girlhood glinted by:&mdash;<br />
+And how the father through their garden stray&rsquo;d,<br />
+And, child with children, play&rsquo;d,<br />
+And teased the rabbit-hutch, and fed the dove<br />
+Before him from above<br />
+Alighting,&mdash;in his visitation sweet,<br />
+Led on by little hands, and eager feet.</p>
+<p>Hence among those he stands,<br />
+Elect ones, ever in whose ears the word<br />
+<i>He that offends these little ones</i> . . . is heard,<br />
+With love and kisses smiling-out commands,<br />
+And all the tender hearts within his hands;<br />
+Seeing, in every child that goes, a flower<br />
+From Eden&rsquo;s nursery bower,<br />
+A little stray from Heaven, for reverence here<br />
+Sent down, and comfort dear:<br />
+All care well paid-for by one pure caress,<br />
+And life made happy in their happiness.</p>
+<p><!-- page 76--><a name="page76"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 76</span>He
+too, in deeper lore<br />
+Than woman&rsquo;s in those early days, or yet,&mdash;<br />
+Train&rsquo;d step by step his youthful Margaret;<br />
+The wonders of that amaranthine store<br />
+Which Hellas and Hesperia evermore<br />
+Lavish, to strengthen and refine the race:&mdash;<br />
+For, in his large embrace,<br />
+The light of faith with that new light combined<br />
+To purify the mind:&mdash;<br />
+A crystal soul, a heart without disguise,<br />
+All wisdom&rsquo;s lover, and through love, all-wise.</p>
+<p>&mdash;O face she ne&rsquo;er will see,&mdash;<br />
+Gray eyes, and careless hair, and mobile lips<br />
+From which the shaft of kindly satire slips<br />
+Healing its wound with human sympathy;<br />
+The heart-deep smile; the tear-concealing glee!<br />
+O well-known furrows of the reverend brow!<br />
+Familiar voice, that now<br />
+She will not hear nor answer any more,&mdash;<br />
+Till on the better shore<br />
+Where love completes the love in life begun,<br />
+And smooths and knits our ravell&rsquo;d skein in one!</p>
+<p>Blest soul, who through life&rsquo;s course<br />
+Didst keep the young child&rsquo;s heart unstain&rsquo;d and whole,<br />
+To find again the cradle at the goal,<br />
+Like some fair stream returning to its source;&mdash;<br />
+Ill fall&rsquo;n on days of falsehood, greed, and force!<br />
+Base days, that win the plaudits of the base,<br />
+Writ to their own disgrace,<br />
+With casuist sneer o&rsquo;erglossing works of blood,<br />
+Miscalling evil, good;<br />
+Before some despot-hero falsely named<br />
+Grovelling in shameful worship unashamed.</p>
+<p><!-- page 77--><a name="page77"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 77</span>&mdash;But
+they of the great race<br />
+Look equably, not caring much, on foe<br />
+And fame and misesteem of man below;<br />
+And with forgiving radiance on their face,<br />
+And eyes that aim beyond the bourn of space,<br />
+Seeing the invisible, glory-clad, go up<br />
+And drink the absinthine cup,<br />
+Fill&rsquo;d nectar-deep by the dear love of Him<br />
+Slain at Jerusalem<br />
+To free them from a tyrant worse than this,<br />
+Changing brief anguish for the heart of bliss.</p>
+<p><i>Envoy</i></p>
+<p>&mdash;O moaning stream of Time,<br />
+Heavy with hate and sin and wrong and woe<br />
+As ocean-ward dost go,<br />
+Thou also hast thy treasures!&mdash;Life, sublime<br />
+In its own sweet simplicity:&mdash;life for love:<br />
+Heroic martyr-death:&mdash;<br />
+Man sees them not: but they are seen above.</p>
+<p><i>One in black array</i>; Sir T. More&rsquo;s daughter, Margaret
+Roper.</p>
+<p><i>That Hall</i>; Westminster, where More was tried: <i>That other
+place</i>; Tower Hill.</p>
+<p><i>The vision of her girlhood</i>; More taught his own children,
+and was like a child with them.&nbsp; He &lsquo;would take grave scholars
+and statesmen into the garden to see his girls&rsquo; rabbit-hutches.
+. . . <i>I have given you kisses enough</i>, he wrote to his little
+ones, <i>but stripes hardly ever</i>&rsquo;: (Green, B. V: ch. ii).</p>
+<p><i>The wonders</i>; See first note to <i>Grocyn at Oxford</i>.</p>
+<p><i>In his large embrace</i>; More may be said to have represented
+the highest aim and effort of the &lsquo;new learning&rsquo; in England.&nbsp;
+He is the flower of our Renaissance in genius, wisdom, and beauty of
+nature.&nbsp; &lsquo;When ever,&rsquo; says Erasmus in a famous passage,
+&lsquo;did Nature mould a character more gentle, endearing, and happy,
+than Thomas More&rsquo;s?&rsquo;</p>
+<h3><!-- page 78--><a name="page78"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 78</span>AT
+FOUNTAINS</h3>
+<p>1539-1862</p>
+<p>Blest hour, as on green happy slopes I lie,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Gray walls around and high,<br />
+While long-ranged arches lessen on the view,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And one high gracious curve<br />
+Of shaftless window frames the limpid blue.</p>
+<p>&mdash;God&rsquo;s altar erst, where wind-set rowan now<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Waves its green-finger&rsquo;d bough,<br />
+And the brown tiny creeper mounts the bole<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With curious eye alert,<br />
+And beak that tries each insect-haunted hole,</p>
+<p>And lives her gentle life from nest to nest,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And dies undispossess&rsquo;d:<br />
+Whilst all the air is quick with noise of birds<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Where once the chant went up;<br />
+Now musical with a song more sweet than words.</p>
+<p>Sky-roof&rsquo;d and bare and deep in dewy sod,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Still &rsquo;tis the house of God!<br />
+Beauty by desolation unsubdued:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And all the past is here,<br />
+Thronging with thought this holy solitude.</p>
+<p>I see the taper-stars, the altars gay;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And those who crouch and pray;<br />
+The white-robed crowd in close monastic stole,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Who hither fled the world<br />
+To find the world again within the soul.</p>
+<p>Yet here the pang of Love&rsquo;s defeat, the pride<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of life unsatisfied,<br />
+Might win repose or anodyne; here the weak,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <!-- page 79--><a name="page79"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 79</span>Armour&rsquo;d
+against themselves,<br />
+Exchange true guiding for obedience meek.</p>
+<p>Through day, through night, here, in the fragrant air,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Their hours are struck by prayer;<br />
+Freed from the bonds of freedom, the distress<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of choice, on life&rsquo;s storm-sea<br />
+They gaze unharm&rsquo;d, and know their happiness.</p>
+<p>Till o&rsquo;er this rock of refuge, deem&rsquo;d secure,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;This palace of the poor,<br />
+Ascetic luxury, wealth too frankly shown,&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The royal robber swept<br />
+His lustful eye, and seized the prey his own.</p>
+<p>&mdash;Ah, calm of Nature!&nbsp; Now thou hold&rsquo;st again<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Thy sweet and silent reign!<br />
+And, as our feverish years their orbit roll,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; This pure and cloister&rsquo;d peace<br />
+In its old healing virtue bathes the soul.</p>
+<p>1539 is the year when the greater monasteries, amongst which Fountains
+in Yorkshire held a prominent place, were confiscated and ruined by
+Henry VIII.</p>
+<p><i>The tiny creeper</i>; Certhia Familiaris; the smallest of our
+birds after the wren.&nbsp; It belongs to a class nearly related to
+the woodpecker.</p>
+<p><i>White-robed</i>; The colour of the Cistercian order, to which
+Fountains belonged.</p>
+<h3><!-- page 80--><a name="page80"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 80</span>SIR
+HUGH WILLOUGHBY</h3>
+<p>1553-4</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Two ships upon the steel-blue Arctic seas<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; When day was long and night itself was day,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Forged heavily before the South West breeze<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; As to the steadfast star they curved their way;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Two specks of man, two only signs of life,<br />
+Where with all breathing things white Death keeps endless strife.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Northern Cape is sunk: and to the crew<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; This zone of sea, with ice-floes wedged and rough,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Domed by its own pure height of tender blue,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Seems like a world from the great world cut off:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; While, round the horizon clasp&rsquo;d, a ring of white,<br />
+Snow-blink from snows unseen, walls them with angry light.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Now that long day compact of many days<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Breaks up and wanes; and equal night beholds<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Their hapless driftage past uncharted bays,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And in her chilling, killing arms enfolds:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; While the near stars a thousand arrowy darts<br />
+Bend from their diamond eyes, as the low sun departs.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or the weird Northern Dawn in idle play<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Mocks their sad souls, now trickling down the sky<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In many-quivering lines of golden spray,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Then blazing out, an Iris-arch on high,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With fiery lances fill&rsquo;d and feathery bars,<br />
+And sheeny veils that hide or half-reveal the stars.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A silent spectacle!&nbsp; Yet sounds, &rsquo;tis
+said,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; On their forlornness broke; a hissing cry<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of mockery and wild laugh, as, overhead,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <!-- page 81--><a name="page81"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 81</span>Those
+blight fantastic squadrons flaunted by:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And that false dawn, long nickering, died away,<br />
+And the Sun came not forth, and Heaven withheld the day.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;O King Hyperion, o&rsquo;er the Delphic dale<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Reigning meanwhile in glory, Ocean know<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Thine absence, and outstretch&rsquo;d an icy veil,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A marble pavement, o&rsquo;er his waters blue;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Past the Varangian fiord and Zembla hoar,<br />
+And from Petsora north to dark Arzina&rsquo;s shore:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;An iron ridge o&rsquo;erhung with toppling snow<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And giant beards of icicled cascade:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Where, frost-imprison&rsquo;d as the long mouths go,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The <i>Good Hope</i> and her mate-ship lay embay&rsquo;d;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And those brave crews knew that all hope was gone;<br />
+England be seen no more; no more the living sun.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A store that daily lessens &rsquo;neath their eyes;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A little dole of light and fire and food:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; While Night upon them like a vampyre lies<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Bleaching the frame and thinning out the blood;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And through the ships the frost-bit timbers groan,<br />
+And the Guloine prowls round, with dull heart-curdling moan.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Then sometimes on the soul, far off, how far!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Came back the shouting crowds, the cannon-roar,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The latticed palace glittering like a star,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The buoyant Thames, the green, sweet English shore,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The heartful prayers, the fireside blaze and bliss,<br />
+The little faces bright, and woman&rsquo;s last, last kiss.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;O yet, for all their misery, happy souls!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Happy in faith and love and fortitude:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; For you, one thought of England dear controls<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; All shrinking of the flesh at death so rude!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <!-- page 82--><a name="page82"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 82</span>Though
+long at rest in that far Arctic grave,<br />
+True sailor hero hearts, van of our bravest brave.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And one by one the North King&rsquo;s searching
+lance<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Touch&rsquo;d, and they stiffen&rsquo;d at their task,
+and died;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And their stout leader glanced a farewell glance;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &lsquo;God is as close by sea as land,&rsquo; he cried,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &lsquo;In His own light not nearer than this gloom,&rsquo;&mdash;<br />
+And look&rsquo;d as one who o&rsquo;er the mountains sees his home.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Home!&mdash;happy sound of vanish&rsquo;d happiness!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;But when the unwilling sun crept up again,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And loosed the sea from winter and duresse,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The seal-wrapt race that roams the Lapland main<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Saw in Arzina, wondering, fearing more,<br />
+The tatter&rsquo;d ships, in snows entomb&rsquo;d and vaulted o&rsquo;er:</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And clomb the decks, and found the gallant crew,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; As forms congeal&rsquo;d to stone, where frozen fate<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Took each man in his turn, and gently slew:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Nor knew the heroic chieftain, as he sate,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; English through every fibre, in his place,<br />
+The smile of duty done upon the steadfast face.</p>
+<p>Sir Hugh Willoughby, in the <i>Bona Esperanza</i>, with two other
+vessels, sailed May 10, 1553, saluting the palace of Greenwich is they
+passed.&nbsp; By September 18 he, with one consort, reached the harbour
+of Arzina, where all perished early in 1554.&nbsp; His will, dated in
+January of that year, was found when the ships were discovered by the
+Russians soon after.</p>
+<p>Willoughby has been taken here as the representative of the great
+age of British naval adventure and exploration.</p>
+<p><i>Arzina</i> is placed near the western headland of the White Sea,
+east of the Waranger Fiord, and west of Nova Zembla and the mouth of
+the Petchora.</p>
+<h3><!-- page 83--><a name="page83"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 83</span>CROSSING
+SOLWAY</h3>
+<p>May 16: 1568</p>
+<p>Blow from the North, thou bitter North wind,<br />
+Blow over the western bay,<br />
+Where Nith and Eden and Esk run in<br />
+And fight with the salt sea spray,<br />
+And the sun shines high through the sailing sky<br />
+In the freshness of blue Mid-may.</p>
+<p>Blow North-North-West, and hollow the sails<br />
+Of a Queen who slips over the sea<br />
+As a hare from the hounds; and her covert afar;<br />
+And now she can only flee;<br />
+And death before and the sisterly shore<br />
+That smiles perfidiously.</p>
+<p>O Mid-may freshness about her cheek<br />
+And piercing her poor attire,<br />
+The sting of defeat thou canst not allay,<br />
+The fever of heart and the fire,<br />
+The death-despair for the days that were,<br />
+And famine of vain desire!</p>
+<p>&mdash;On Holyrood stairs an iron-heel&rsquo;d clank<br />
+Came up in the gloaming hour:<br />
+And iron fingers have bursten the bar<br />
+Of the palace innermost bower:<br />
+And fiend-like on her the Douglas and Ker<br />
+And spectral Ruthven glower.</p>
+<p>She hears the shriek as the Morton horde<br />
+Hurry the victim beneath;<br />
+And she feels their dead man&rsquo;s grasp on her skirt<br />
+In the frenzy-terror of death;<br />
+And the dastard King at her bosom cling<br />
+With a serpent&rsquo;s poison-breath.</p>
+<p><!-- page 84--><a name="page84"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 84</span>O
+fair girl Queen, well weep for the friend<br />
+To his faith too faithful and thee;<br />
+For a brother&rsquo;s hypocrite tears; for the flight<br />
+To the Castle set by the sea;&mdash;<br />
+Where thy father&rsquo;s tomb lay and gaped in the gloom<br />
+&rsquo;Twere better for thee to be!</p>
+<p>O better at rest where the crooning dove<br />
+May sing requiem o&rsquo;er thy bed,<br />
+Sweet Robin aflame with love&rsquo;s sign on his breast<br />
+With quick light footstep tread;<br />
+While over the sod the Birds of God<br />
+Their guardian feathers outspread!</p>
+<p>Too womanly sweet, too womanly frail,<br />
+Alone in thy faith and thy need;<br />
+In the homeless home, in the poisonous air<br />
+Of spite and libel and greed;<br />
+Mid perfidy&rsquo;s net thy pathway is set,<br />
+And thy feet in the pitfalls bleed.</p>
+<p>&mdash;O lightnings, not lightnings of Heaven, that flare<br />
+Through the desolate House in the Field!<br />
+Craft that the Fiend had envied in vain;<br />
+Till the terrible Day unreveal&rsquo;d,&mdash;<br />
+Till the Angels rejoice at the Verdict-voice,<br />
+And Mary&rsquo;s pardon is seal&rsquo;d!</p>
+<p>As a bird from the mesh of the fowler freed<br />
+With wild wing shatters the air,<br />
+From shelter to shelter, betray&rsquo;d, she flees,<br />
+Or lured to some treacherous lair,<br />
+And the vulture-cry of the enemy nigh,<br />
+And the heavens dark with despair!</p>
+<p>Bright lily of France, by the storm stricken low,<br />
+A sunbeam thou seest through the shade<br />
+Where Order and Peace are throned &rsquo;neath the smile<br />
+Of a royal sisterly Maid:&mdash;<br />
+<!-- page 85--><a name="page85"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 85</span>For
+hope in the breast of the girl has her nest,<br />
+Ever trusting, and ever betray&rsquo;d.</p>
+<p>Brave womanly heart that, beholding the shore,<br />
+Beholds her own grave unaware,&mdash;<br />
+Though the days to come their shame should unveil<br />
+Yet onward she still would dare!<br />
+Though the meadows smile with statesmanly guile,<br />
+And the cuckoo&rsquo;s call is a snare!</p>
+<p>Turn aside, O Queen, from the cruel land,<br />
+From the greedy shore turn away;<br />
+From shame upon shame:&mdash;But most shame for those<br />
+On their passionate captive who play<br />
+With a subtle net, hope enwoven with threat,<br />
+Hung out to tempt her astray!</p>
+<p>Poor scape-goat of crimes, where,&mdash;her part what it may,&mdash;<br />
+So tortured, so hunted to die,<br />
+Foul age of deceit and of hate,&mdash;on her head<br />
+Least stains of gore-guiltiness lie;<br />
+To the hearts of the just her blood from the dust<br />
+Not in vain for mercy will cry.</p>
+<p>Poor scape-goat of nations and faiths in their strife<br />
+So cruel,&mdash;and thou so fair!<br />
+Poor girl!&mdash;so, best, in her misery named,&mdash;<br />
+Discrown&rsquo;d of two kingdoms, and bare;<br />
+Not first nor last on this one was cast<br />
+The burden that others should share.</p>
+<p>&mdash;When the race is convened at the great assize<br />
+And the last long trumpet-call,<br />
+If Woman &rsquo;gainst Man, in her just appeal,<br />
+At the feet of the Judge should fall,<br />
+O the cause were secure;&mdash;the sentence sure!<br />
+&mdash;But she will forgive him all!&mdash;</p>
+<p><!-- page 86--><a name="page86"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 86</span>O
+keen heart-hunger for days that were;<br />
+Last look at a vanishing shore!<br />
+In two short words all bitterness summ&rsquo;d,<br />
+That <i>Has been</i> and <i>Nevermore</i>!<br />
+Nor with one caress will Mary bless,<br />
+Nor look on the babe she bore!</p>
+<p>Blow, bitter wind, with a cry of death,<br />
+Blow over the western bay:<br />
+The sunshine is gone from the desolate girl,<br />
+And before is the doomster-day,<br />
+And the saw-dust red with the heart&rsquo;s-blood shed<br />
+In the shambles of Fotheringay.</p>
+<p>Mary of Scotland is one of the five or six figures in our history
+who rouse an undying personal interest.&nbsp; Volumes have been and
+will be written on her:&mdash;yet if we put aside the distorting mists
+of national and political and theological partisanship, the common laws
+of human nature will give an easy clue to her conduct and that of her
+enemies.</p>
+<p>Her flight from Scotland, as the turning-point in Mary&rsquo;s unhappy
+and pathetic career, has been here chosen for the moment whence to survey
+it.</p>
+<p><i>On Holyrood stairs</i>; Riccio was murdered on March 9, 1566.&nbsp;
+Mary&rsquo;s exclamation when she heard of his death next day, <i>No
+more tears</i>; <i>I will think upon a revenge</i>, is the sufficient
+explanation,&mdash;in a great degree should be the sufficient justification,
+with those who still hold her an accomplice in the death of Darnley
+and the marriage with Bothwell,&mdash;(considering the then lawless
+state of Scotland, the complicity of the leading nobles, the hopelessness
+of justice)&mdash;of her later conduct whilst Queen.</p>
+<p><i>The friend</i>; In Riccio&rsquo;s murder the main determinant
+was his efficiency in aiding Mary towards a Roman Catholic reaction,
+which might have deprived a large body of powerful nobles of the church
+lands.&nbsp; The death of Riccio (Mary&rsquo;s most faithful friend)
+prevented this: the death of Darnley became necessary to secure the
+position gained.</p>
+<p><i>A brother&rsquo;s hypocrite tears</i>; Murray, in whose interest
+Riccio was murdered, and whose privity to the murder (as afterwards
+to that of Darnley) is reasonably, though indirectly, proved, affected
+to shed tears on seeing his sister.&nbsp; Next day she learned the details
+of the plot, and her half-brother&rsquo;s share in it.</p>
+<p><i>The flight</i>; Mary then fled by a secret passage from Holyrood
+Palace <!-- page 87--><a name="page87"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 87</span>through
+the Abbey Church, the royal tombs which had been broken open by the
+revolutionary mob of 1559.</p>
+<p><i>The Castle</i>; Dunbar.</p>
+<p><i>Till the terrible Day unreveal&rsquo;d</i>; See <i>Appendix</i>
+A.</p>
+<h3>SIDNEY AT ZUTPHEN</h3>
+<p>October 2: 1586</p>
+<p>1</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Where Guelderland
+outspreads<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Her green wide water-meads<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Laced by the silver of the parted Rhine;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Where round the horizon
+low<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The waving millsails
+go,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And poplar avenues stretch their pillar&rsquo;d line;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; That morn a clinging mist uncurl&rsquo;d<br />
+Its folds o&rsquo;er South-Fen town, and blotted out the world.</p>
+<p>2</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;There, as the
+gray dawn broke,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Cloked by that ghost-white
+cloke,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The fifty knights of England sat in steel;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Each man all ear, for
+eye<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Could not his nearest
+spy;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And in the mirk&rsquo;s dim hiding heart they feel,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;Feel more than hear,&mdash;the
+signal sound<br />
+Of tramp and hoof and wheel, and guns that bruise the ground.</p>
+<p>3</p>
+<p>&mdash;Sudden, the mist gathers up like a curtain, the theatre clear;<br />
+Stage of unequal conflict, and triumph purchased too dear!<br />
+<!-- page 88--><a name="page88"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 88</span>Half
+our boot treasures of gallanthood there, with axe and with glaive,<br />
+One against ten,&mdash;what of that?&mdash;We are ready for glory or
+grave!<br />
+There, Spain and her thousands nearing, with lightning-tongued weapons
+of war;&mdash;<br />
+Ebro&rsquo;s swarthy sons, and the bands from Epirus afar;<br />
+Crescia, Gonzaga, del Vasto,&mdash;world-famous names of affright,<br />
+Veterans of iron and blood, insatiate engines of fight:&mdash;<br />
+But ours were Norris and Essex and Stanley and Willoughby grim,<br />
+And the waning Dudley star, and the star that will never be dim,<br />
+Star of Philip the peerless,&mdash;and now at height of his noon,<br />
+Astrophel!&mdash;not for thyself but for England extinguish&rsquo;d
+too soon!</p>
+<p>4</p>
+<p>Red walls of Zutphen behind; before them, Spain in her might:&mdash;<br />
+O! &rsquo;tis not war, but a game of heroic boyish delight!<br />
+For on, like a bolt-head of steel, go the fifty, dividing their way,<br />
+Through and over the brown mail-shirts,&mdash;Farnese&rsquo;s choicest
+array;<br />
+Over and through, and the curtel-axe flashes, the plumes in their pride<br />
+Sink like the larch to the hewer, a death-mown avenue wide:<br />
+While the foe in his stubbornness flanks them and bars them, with merciless
+aim<br />
+Shooting from musket and saker a scornful death-tongue of flame.<br />
+As in an autumn afar, the Six Hundred in Chersonese hew&rsquo;d<br />
+<!-- page 89--><a name="page89"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 89</span>Their
+road through a host, for their England and honour&rsquo;s sake wasting
+their blood,<br />
+Foolishness wiser than wisdom!&mdash;So these, since Azincourt morn,<br />
+First showing the world the calm open-eyed rashness of Englishmen born!</p>
+<p>5</p>
+<p>Foes ere the cloud went up, black Norris and Stanley in one<br />
+Pledge iron hands and kiss swords, each his mate&rsquo;s, in the face
+of the sun,<br />
+Warm with the generous wine of the battle; and Willoughby&rsquo;s might<br />
+To the turf bore Crescia, and lifted again,&mdash;knight honouring knight;<br />
+All in the hurry and turmoil:&mdash;where North, half-booted and rough,<br />
+Launch&rsquo;d on the struggle, and Sidney struck onward, his cuisses
+thrown off,<br />
+Rash over-courage of poet and youth!&mdash;while the memories, how<br />
+At the joust long syne She look&rsquo;d on, as he triumph&rsquo;d, were
+hot on his brow,<br />
+&lsquo;Stella! mine own, my own star!&rsquo;&mdash;and he sigh&rsquo;d:&mdash;and
+towards him a flame<br />
+Shot its red signal; a shriek!&mdash;and the viewless messenger came;<br />
+Found the unguarded gap, the approach left bare to the prey,<br />
+Where through the limb to the life the death-stroke shatter&rsquo;d
+a way.</p>
+<p>6</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;Astrophel!&nbsp;
+England&rsquo;s pride!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; O stroke that, when
+he died,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Smote through the realm,&mdash;our best, our fairest ta&rsquo;en!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; For now the wound accurst<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!-- page 90--><a name="page90"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 90</span>Lights
+up death&rsquo;s fury-thirst;&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Yet the allaying cup, in all that pain,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Untouch&rsquo;d, untasted he gives o&rsquo;er<br />
+To one who lay, and watch&rsquo;d with eyes that craved it more:&mdash;</p>
+<p>7</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&lsquo;Take
+it,&rsquo; he said, &lsquo;&rsquo;tis thine;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Thy need is more than
+mine&rsquo;;&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And smiled as one who looks through death to life:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;Then pass&rsquo;d,
+true heart and brave,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Leal from birth to
+grave:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; For that curse-laden roar of mortal strife,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; With God&rsquo;s own peace ineffable
+fill&rsquo;d,&mdash;<br />
+In that eternal Love all earthly passion still&rsquo;d.</p>
+<p>In 1585 Elizabeth, who was then aiding the United Provinces in their
+resistance to Spain, sent Sir Philip Sidney (born 1554) as governor
+of the fortress of Flushing in Zealand.&nbsp; The Earl of Leicester,
+chosen by the Queen&rsquo;s unhappy partiality to command the English
+force, named Sidney (his nephew) General of the horse.&nbsp; He marched
+thence to Zutphen in Guelderland, a town besieged by the Spaniards,
+in hopes of destroying a strong reinforcement which they were bringing
+in aid of the besiegers.&nbsp; The details of the rash and heroic charge
+which followed may be read in Motley&rsquo;s <i>History of the United
+Netherlands</i>, ch. ix.</p>
+<p>St. 1 <i>Guelderland</i>; in this province the Rhine divides before
+entering the sea: &lsquo;gliding through a vast plain.&rsquo;&mdash;<i>South-Fen</i>;
+Zutphen, on the Yssel (Rhine).</p>
+<p>St. 3 <i>The bands from Epirus</i>; Crescia, the Epirote chief, commanded
+a body of Albanian cavalry.&mdash;<i>The waning Dudley star</i>; Leicester,
+who was near the end of his miserable career.&mdash;<i>Astrophel</i>;
+Sidney celebrated his love for Penelope Devereux, Lady Rich, in the
+series of Sonnets and Lyrics named <i>Astrophel and Stella</i>:&mdash;posthumously
+published in 1591.&mdash;After, or with Shakespeare&rsquo;s Sonnets,
+this series seems to me to offer the most powerful picture of the passion
+of love in the whole range of our poetry.</p>
+<p>St. 4 <i>Saker</i>; early name for field-piece.&mdash;<i>The Six
+Hundred</i>; The Crimea in ancient days was named <i>Chersonesus Taurica</i>.</p>
+<p>St. 5 <i>Black Norris</i>; had been at variance with Sir W. Stanley
+before the engagement.&nbsp; Morris was one of twelve gallant brothers,
+whose <!-- page 91--><a name="page91"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 91</span>complexion
+followed that of their mother, named by Elizabeth &lsquo;her own crow.&rsquo;&mdash;<i>North</i>;
+was lying bedrid from a wound in the leg, but could not resist volunteering
+at Zutphen, and rode up &lsquo;with one boot on and one boot off.&rsquo;&mdash;<i>Cuisses</i>;</p>
+<blockquote><p>I saw young Harry, with his beaver on,<br />
+His cuisses on his thighs: (<i>Henry IV</i>, Part I: A. iv: S. i):&mdash;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Sidney flung off his &lsquo;in a fit of chivalrous extravagance.&rsquo;&mdash;<i>At
+the joust</i>; In Sonnets 41 and 53 of <i>Astrophel and Stella</i> Sidney
+describes how the sudden sight of his lady-love dazzled him as he rode
+in certain tournaments.&nbsp; In Son. 69 he cries:</p>
+<blockquote><p>I, I, O, I, may say that she is mine.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<h3>ELIZABETH AT TILBURY</h3>
+<p>September: 1588</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Let them come, come never so proudly,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; O&rsquo;er the green waves as giants
+ride;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Silver clarions menacing loudly,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &lsquo;All the Spains&rsquo; on their
+banners wide;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; High on deck of the gilded galleys<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Our light sailers they scorn below:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; We will scatter them, plague, and shatter them,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Till their flag hauls down to their foe!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; For our oath we swear<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; By the name we bear,<br />
+By England&rsquo;s Queen, and England free and fair,&mdash;<br />
+Her&rsquo;s ever and her&rsquo;s still, come life, come death:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; God save Elizabeth!</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sidon&iacute;a, Recalde, and Leyva<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Watch from their Castles in swarthy scorn,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Lords and Princes by Philip&rsquo;s favour;&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; We by birthright are noble born!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Freemen born of the blood of freemen,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Sons of Crecy and Flodden are we!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <!-- page 92--><a name="page92"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 92</span>We
+shall sunder them, fire, and plunder them,&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; English boats on an English sea!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And our oath we swear,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; By the name we bear,<br />
+By England&rsquo;s Queen, and England free and fair,&mdash;<br />
+Her&rsquo;s ever and her&rsquo;s still, come life, come death!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; God save Elizabeth!</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Drake and Frobisher, Hawkins, and Howard,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Raleigh, Cavendish, Cecil, and Brooke,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Hang like wasps by the flagships tower&rsquo;d,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Sting their way through the thrice-piled
+oak:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Let them range their seven-mile crescent,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Giant galleons, canvas wide!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Ours will harry them, board, and carry them,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Plucking the plumes of the Spanish pride.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; For our oath we swear<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; By the name we bear,<br />
+By England&rsquo;s Queen, and England free and fair,&mdash;<br />
+Her&rsquo;s ever and her&rsquo;s still, come life, come death!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; God save Elizabeth!</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;Hath God risen in wrath and scatter&rsquo;d?<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Have His tempests smote them in scorn?<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Past the Orcad&eacute;s, dumb and tatter&rsquo;d,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &rsquo;Mong sea-beasts do they drift
+forlorn?<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; We were as lions hungry for battle;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; God has made our battle His own!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; God has scatter&rsquo;d them, sunk, and shatter&rsquo;d
+them:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Give the glory to Him alone!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; While our oath we swear,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; By the name we bear,<br />
+By England&rsquo;s Queen, and England free and fair,&mdash;<br />
+Her&rsquo;s ever and her&rsquo;s still, come life, come death!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; God save Elizabeth!</p>
+<h3><!-- page 93--><a name="page93"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 93</span>AT
+BEMERTON</h3>
+<p>1630-1633</p>
+<p>Sick with the strife of tongues, the blustering hate<br />
+Of frantic Party raving o&rsquo;er the realm,<br />
+Sonorous insincerities of debate,<br />
+And jealous factions snatching at the helm,<br />
+And Out o&rsquo;er-bidding In with graceless strife,<br />
+Selling the State for votes:&mdash;O happy fields,<br />
+I cried, where Herbert, by the world misprized,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Found in his day the life<br />
+That no unrest or disappointment yields,<br />
+Vergilian vision here best realized!</p>
+<p>His memory is Peace: and peace is here;&mdash;<br />
+The eternal lullaby of the level brook,<br />
+With bird-like chirpings mingled, glassy-clear;<br />
+The narrow pathway to the yew-clipp&rsquo;d nook;<br />
+Trim lawn, familiar to the pensive feet;<br />
+The long gray walls he raised:&mdash;A household nest<br />
+Where Hope and firm-eyed Faith and heavenly Love<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Made human love more sweet;<br />
+While,&mdash;earth&rsquo;s rare visitant from the choirs above,&mdash;<br />
+Urania&rsquo;s holy steps the cottage blest.</p>
+<p>Peace there:&mdash;and peace upon the house of God,<br />
+The little road-side church that room-like stands<br />
+Crouching entrench&rsquo;d in slopes of daisy sod,<br />
+And duly deck&rsquo;d by Herbert-honouring hands:&mdash;<br />
+Cell of detachment!&nbsp; Shrine to which the heart<br />
+Withdraws, and all the roar of life is still;<br />
+Then sinks into herself, and finds a shrine<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Within the shrine apart:<br />
+<!-- page 94--><a name="page94"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 94</span>Alone
+with God, as on the Arabian hill<br />
+Man knelt in vision to the All-divine!</p>
+<p>&mdash;Thrice happy they,&mdash;and know their happiness,&mdash;<br />
+Who read the soul&rsquo;s star-orbit Heaven-ward clear;<br />
+Not roving comet-like through doubt and guess,<br />
+But &rsquo;neath their feet tread nescient pride and fear;<br />
+Scan the unseen with sober certainty,<br />
+God&rsquo;s hill above Himalah;&mdash;Love green earth<br />
+With deeper, truer love, because the blue<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of Heaven around they see;&mdash;<br />
+Who in the death-gasp hail man&rsquo;s second birth,<br />
+And yield their loved ones with a brief adieu!</p>
+<p>&mdash;Thee, too, esteem I happy in thy death,<br />
+Poet! while yet peace was, and thou might&rsquo;st live<br />
+Unvex&rsquo;d in thy sweet reasonable faith,<br />
+The gracious creed that knows how to forgive:&mdash;<br />
+Not narrowing God to self,&mdash;the common bane<br />
+Of sects, each man his own small oracle;<br />
+Not losing innerness in external rite;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A worship pure and plain,<br />
+Yet liberal to man&rsquo;s heaven-imbreathed delight<br />
+In all that sound can hint, or beauty tell.</p>
+<p>A golden moderation!&mdash;which the wise<br />
+Then highest rate, when fury-factions roar,<br />
+And folly&rsquo;s choicest fools the most despise:&mdash;<br />
+&mdash;O happy Poet! laid in peace before<br />
+Rival intolerants each &rsquo;gainst other flamed,<br />
+And flames were slaked in blood, and all the grace<br />
+Of life before that sad illiterate gloom<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Puritan, fled ashamed:<br />
+While, as the red moon lifts her turbid face,<br />
+Titanic features on the horizon loom!</p>
+<p><!-- page 95--><a name="page95"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 95</span>George
+Herbert&rsquo;s brief career as a parish priest was passed at Bemerton,
+a pretty village near Salisbury in the vale of the Avon.&nbsp; His parsonage,
+with its garden running down to the stream, and the little church across
+the road in which he lies buried, remain comparatively unchanged (March
+26, 1880) since he lived and mused and wrote his Poems within these
+precincts.&nbsp; The justly-famous <i>Temple</i> was published shortly
+after his death by his friend Nicholas Ferrar.</p>
+<p><i>Arabian hill</i>; Mount Sinai.</p>
+<p><i>Titanic features</i>; See <i>A Churchyard in Oxfordshire</i>,
+st. iii.</p>
+<h3>PRINCESS ANNE</h3>
+<p>November 5: 1640</p>
+<p>Harsh words have been utter&rsquo;d and written on her, Henrietta
+the Queen:<br />
+She was young in a difficult part, on a cruel and difficult scene:&mdash;<br />
+Was it strange she should fail? that the King overmuch should bow down
+to her will?<br />
+&mdash;So of old with the women, God bless them!&mdash;it was, so will
+ever be still!<br />
+Rash in counsel and rash in courage, she aided and marr&rsquo;d<br />
+The shifting tides of the fight, the star of the Stuarts ill-starr&rsquo;d.<br />
+In her the false Florentine blood,&mdash;in him the bad strain of the
+Guise;<br />
+Suspicion against her and hate, all that malice can forge and devise;&mdash;<br />
+As a bird by the fowlers o&rsquo;ernetted, she shuffles and changes
+her ground;<br />
+No wile unlawful in war, and the foe unscrupulous round!<br />
+Woman-like overbelieving Herself and the Cause and the Man,<br />
+Fights with two-edged intrigue, suicidal, plan upon plan;<br />
+<!-- page 96--><a name="page96"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 96</span>Till
+the law of this world had its way, and she fled,&mdash;like a frigate
+unsail&rsquo;d,<br />
+Unmasted, unflagg&rsquo;d,&mdash;to her land; and the strength of the
+stronger prevail&rsquo;d.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But it was not thus, not thus, in the years of
+thy springtide, O Queen,<br />
+When thy children came in their beauty, and all their future unseen:<br />
+When the kingdom had wealth and peace, one smile o&rsquo;er the face
+of the land:<br />
+England, too happy, if thou could&rsquo;st thy happiness understand!<br />
+As those over Etna who slumber, and under them rankles the fire.<br />
+At her side was the gallant King, her first-love, her girlhood&rsquo;s
+desire,<br />
+And around her, best jewels and dearest to brighten the steps of the
+throne,<br />
+Three golden heads, three fair little maids, in their nursery shone.<br />
+&lsquo;As the mother, so be the daughters,&rsquo; they say:&mdash;nor
+could mother wish more<br />
+For her own, than men saw in the Queen&rsquo;s, ere the rosebud-dawning
+was o&rsquo;er,<br />
+Heart-wise and head-wise, a joy to behold, as they knelt for her kiss,&mdash;<br />
+Best crown of a woman&rsquo;s life, her true vocation and bliss!&mdash;<br />
+But the flowers were pale and frail, and the mother watch&rsquo;d them
+with dread,<br />
+As the sunbeams play&rsquo;d round the room on each gay, glistening
+head.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<!-- page 97--><a name="page97"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 97</span>Anne
+in that garden of childhood grew nearest Elizabeth: she<br />
+Tenderly tended and loved her, a babe with a babe on her knee:<br />
+Slight and white from the cradle was Anne; a floweret born<br />
+Rathe, out of season, a rose that peep&rsquo;d out when the hedge was
+in thorn.<br />
+&lsquo;Why should it be so with us?&rsquo; thought Elizabeth oft; for
+in her<br />
+The soul &rsquo;gainst the body protesting, was but more keenly astir:<br />
+&lsquo;As saplings stunted by forest around o&rsquo;ershading, we two:<br />
+What work for our life, my mother,&rsquo; she said, &lsquo;is left us
+to do?<br />
+Or is&rsquo;t from the evil to come, the days without pleasure, that
+God<br />
+In mercy would spare us, over our childhood outstretching the rod?&rsquo;<br />
+&mdash;So she, from her innocent heart; in all things seeing the best<br />
+With the wholesome spirit of childhood; to God submitting the rest:<br />
+Not seeing the desolate years, the dungeon of Carisbrook drear;<br />
+Eyes dry-glazed with fever, and none to lend even a tear!<br />
+Now, all her heart to the little one goes; for, day upon day,<br />
+As a rosebud in canker, she pales and pines, and the cough has its way.<br />
+And the gardens of Richmond on Thames, the fine blythe air of the vale<br />
+Stay not the waning pulse, and the masters of science fail.<br />
+Then the little footsteps are faint, and a child may take her with ease;<br />
+As the flowers a babe flings down she is spread on Elizabeth&rsquo;s
+knees,<br />
+<!-- page 98--><a name="page98"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 98</span>Slipping
+back to the cradle-life, in her wasting weakness and pain:<br />
+And the sister prays and smiles and watches the sister in vain.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;So she watch&rsquo;d by the bed all night, and
+the lights were yellow and low,<br />
+And a cold blue blink shimmer&rsquo;d up from the park that was sheeted
+in snow:<br />
+And the frost of the passing hour, when souls from the body divide,<br />
+The Sarsar-wind of the dawn, crept into the palace, and sigh&rsquo;d.<br />
+And the child just turn&rsquo;d her head towards Elizabeth there as
+she lay,<br />
+And her little hands came together in haste, as though she would pray;<br />
+And the words wrestled in her for speech that the fever-dry mouth cannot
+frame,<br />
+And the strife of the soul on the delicate brow was written in flame:<br />
+And Elizabeth call&rsquo;d &lsquo;O Father, why does she look at me
+so?<br />
+Will it soon be better for Anne? her face is all in a glow&rsquo;:&mdash;<br />
+But with womanly speed and heed is the mother beside her, and slips<br />
+Her arm &rsquo;neath the failing head, and moistens the rose of the
+lips,<br />
+Pale and sweet as the wild rose of June, and whispers to pray<br />
+To the Father in heaven, &lsquo;the one she likes best, my baby, to
+say&rsquo;:<br />
+And the soul hover&rsquo;d yet o&rsquo;er the lips, as a dove when her
+pinions are spread,<br />
+And the light of the after-life came again in her eyes, and she said;<br />
+<!-- page 99--><a name="page99"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 99</span>&lsquo;For
+my long prayer it is not time; for my short one I think I have breath;<br />
+<i>Lighten mine eyes, O Lord, that I sleep not the sleep of death</i>.&rsquo;<br />
+&mdash;O! into life, fair child, as she pray&rsquo;d, her innocence
+slept!<br />
+&lsquo;It is better for her,&rsquo; they said:&mdash;and knelt, and
+kiss&rsquo;d her, and wept.</p>
+<p><i>In her</i>; Henrietta&rsquo;s mother was by birth Mary de&rsquo;
+Medici; the great-grandmother of Charles was Mary of Guise.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;With Charles I,&rsquo; says Ranke, &lsquo;nothing was more
+seductive than secrecy.&nbsp; The contradictions in his conduct entangled
+him in embarrassments, in which his declarations, if always true in
+the sense he privately gave them, were only a hair&rsquo;s-breadth removed
+from actual, and even from intentional, untruth.&rsquo;&mdash;Whether
+traceable to descent, or to the evil influence of Buckingham and the
+intriguing atmosphere of the Spanish marriage-negotiations, this defect
+in political honesty is, unquestionably, the one serious blot on the
+character of Charles I.&mdash;Yet, whilst noting it, candid students
+will regretfully confess that the career of Elizabeth and her counsellors
+is defaced by shades of bad faith, darker and more numerous.</p>
+<p><i>When the kingdom</i>; See Clarendon&rsquo;s description of England
+during this period, &lsquo;enjoying the greatest calm and the fullest
+measure of felicity that any people in any age for so long time together
+have been blessed with.&rsquo;</p>
+<p><i>Three golden heads</i>; Mary, the second child of Charles and
+Henrietta, was born Nov. 4, 1631: Elizabeth, Dec. 28, 1635: Anne, Mar.
+17, 1637.&nbsp; The last two were feeble from infancy.&nbsp; Consumption
+soon showed itself in Anne, and her short life, passed at Richmond,
+closed in November, 1640.&nbsp; For her last words, we are indebted
+to Fuller, who adds: &lsquo;This done, the little lamb gave up the ghost.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>The affection and care of the royal parents is well attested.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Their arrival,&rsquo; when visiting the nursery, &lsquo;was the
+signal of a general rejoicing.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>In the latter portion of this piece I have ventured, it will be seen,
+on an ideal treatment.&nbsp; The main facts, and the words of the dear
+child, are historical:&mdash;for the details I appeal to any mother
+who has suffered similar loss whether they could have been much otherwise.</p>
+<p><i>Not seeing</i>; See the <i>Captive Child</i>.</p>
+<p><i>The frost</i>; It is noticed that death, the <i>Sarsar-wind</i>
+of Southey&rsquo;s <i>Thalaba</i>, often occurs at the turn between
+night and day, when the atmosphere is wont to be at the coldest.</p>
+<h3><!-- page 100--><a name="page100"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 100</span>AFTER
+CHALGROVE FIGHT</h3>
+<p>June 18: 1643</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Flags crape-smother&rsquo;d and arms reversed,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With one sad volley lay him to rest:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Lay him to rest where he may not see<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; This England he loved like a lover accursed<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; By lawlessness masking as liberty,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; By the despot in Freedom&rsquo;s panoply drest:&mdash;<br />
+Bury him, ere he be made duplicity&rsquo;s tool and slave,<br />
+Where he cannot see the land that he could not save!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Bury him, bury him, bury him<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; With his face downward!</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Chalgrove!&nbsp;
+Name of patriot pain!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; O&rsquo;er thy fresh fields that summer
+pass&rsquo;d<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The brand of war&rsquo;s red furnace
+blast,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Till heaven&rsquo;s soft tears wash&rsquo;d out the blackening
+stain;&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Wash&rsquo;d out and wept;&mdash;But could not so restore<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; England&rsquo;s
+gallant son:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Ere
+the fray was done<br />
+The stately head bow&rsquo;d down; shatter&rsquo;d; his warfare o&rsquo;er.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Bending to
+the saddle-bow<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; With leaden arm that idle hangs,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Faint with the lancing torture-pangs,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; He drops the rein; he lets the battle go:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; There, where the wife of his first love he woo&rsquo;d<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Turning
+for retreat;&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Memories
+bitter-sweet<br />
+Through death&rsquo;s fast-rising mist in youth&rsquo;s own light renew&rsquo;d.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Then, as those
+who drown, perchance,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And all their years, a waking dream,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Flash pictured by in lightning gleam,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; His childhood home appears, the mother&rsquo;s glance,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <!-- page 101--><a name="page101"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 101</span>The
+hearth-side smile; the fragrance of the fields:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;Now,
+war&rsquo;s iron knell<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Wakes
+the hounds of hell,<br />
+Whilst o&rsquo;er the realm her scourge the rushing Fury wields!</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Doth he now
+the day lament<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; When those who stemm&rsquo;d despotic
+might<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; O&rsquo;erstrode the bounds of law and
+right,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And through the land the torch of ruin sent?<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Or that great rival statesman as he stood<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Lion-faced
+and grim,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Hath
+he sight of him,<br />
+Strafford&mdash;the meteor-axe&mdash;the fateful Hill of Blood?</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;Heroes
+both! by passion led,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; In days perplex&rsquo;d &rsquo;tween
+new and old,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Each at his will the realm to mould;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; This, basing sovereignty on the single head,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; This, on the many voices of the Hall:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Each
+for his own creed<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Prompt
+to die at need:<br />
+His side of England&rsquo;s shield each saw, and took for all.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Heroes both!&nbsp;
+For Order one<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And one for Freedom dying!&mdash;We<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; May judge more justly both, than ye<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Could, each, his brother, ere the strife was done!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;O Goddess of that even scale and weight,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; In
+whose awful eyes<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Truest
+mercy lies,<br />
+This hero-dirge to thee I vow and dedicate!</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;Slanting
+now,&mdash;the foe is by,&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Through Hazeley mead the warrior goes,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And hardly fords the brook that flows<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Bearing to Thame its cool, sweet, summer-cry.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Here take thy rest; here bind the broken heart!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!-- page 102--><a name="page102"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 102</span>By
+death&rsquo;s mercy-doom<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Hid
+from ills to come,<br />
+Great soul, and greatly vex&rsquo;d, Hampden!&mdash;in peace depart!</p>
+<p>In the heart of the fields he loved and the hills,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Look your last, and lay him to rest,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With the faded flower, the wither&rsquo;d grass;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Where the blood-face of war and the myriad ills<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of England dear like phantoms pass<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And touch not the soul that is with the Blest.<br />
+Bury him in the night and peace of the holy grave,<br />
+Where he cannot see the land that he could not save!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Bury him, bury him, bury him<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; With his face downward!</p>
+<p>John Hampden met his death at Chalgrove in an attempt to check the
+raids which Prince Rupert was making from Oxford.&nbsp; Struck at the
+onset in the shoulder by two carabine balls, he rode off before the
+action was ended by Hazeley towards Thame, finding it impossible to
+reach Pyrton, the home of his father-in-law.&nbsp; The body was carried
+to his own house amid the woods and hills of the Chiltern country, and
+buried in the church close by.</p>
+<p><i>With his face downward</i>; This was the dying request of some
+high-minded Spaniard of old, unwilling, even in the grave, as it were,
+to look on the misfortunes of his country.</p>
+<p><i>O&rsquo;erstrode the bounds</i>; &lsquo;After every allowance
+has been made,&rsquo; says Hallam, speaking of the Long Parliament from
+a date so early as August, 1641, &lsquo;he must bring very heated passions
+to the records of those times, who does not perceive in the conduct
+of that body a series of glaring violations, not only of positive and
+constitutional, but of those higher principles which are paramount to
+all immediate policy&rsquo;: (<i>Const. Hist</i>. ch. ix).</p>
+<p><i>The axe</i>; A clear and impartial sketch of Stafford&rsquo;s
+trial will be found in Ranke (B. viii): who deals dispassionately and
+historically with an event much obscured by declamation in popular narratives.&nbsp;
+Even in Hallam&rsquo;s hand the balance seems here to waver a little.</p>
+<p><i>Heroes both</i>;&mdash;<i>Each his side</i>; See <i>Appendix</i>
+B.</p>
+<h3><!-- page 103--><a name="page103"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 103</span>A
+CHURCHYARD IN OXFORDSHIRE</h3>
+<p>September: 1643</p>
+<p>Sweet air and fresh; glades yet unsear&rsquo;d by hand<br />
+Of Midas-finger&rsquo;d Autumn, massy-green;<br />
+Bird-haunted nooks between,<br />
+Where feathery ferns, a fairy palmglove, stand,<br />
+An English-Eastern band:&mdash;<br />
+While e&rsquo;en the stealthy squirrel o&rsquo;er the grass<br />
+Beside me to the beech-clump dares to pass:&mdash;<br />
+In this still precinct of the happy dead,<br />
+The sanctuary of silence,&mdash;Blessed they!<br />
+I cried, who &rsquo;neath the gray<br />
+Peace of God&rsquo;s house, each in his mounded bed<br />
+Sleep safe, nor reck how the great world runs on;<br />
+Peasant with noble here alike unknown.</p>
+<p>Unknown, unnamed beneath one turf they sleep,<br />
+Beneath one sky, one heaven-uplifted sign<br />
+Of love assured, divine:<br />
+While o&rsquo;er each mound the quiet mosses creep,<br />
+The silent dew-pearls weep:<br />
+&mdash;Fit haven-home for thee, O gentlest heart<br />
+Of Falkland! all unmeet to find thy part<br />
+In those tempestuous times of canker&rsquo;d hate<br />
+When Wisdom&rsquo;s finest touch, and, by her side,<br />
+Forbearance generous-eyed<br />
+To fix the delicate balance of the State<br />
+Were needed;&mdash;King or Nation, which should hold<br />
+Supreme supremacy o&rsquo;er the kingdoms old.</p>
+<p>&mdash;God&rsquo;s heroes, who? . . . Not most, or likeliest, he<br />
+Whom iron will cramps to one narrow road,<br />
+Driving him like a goad<br />
+Till all his heart decrees seem God&rsquo;s decree;<br />
+<!-- page 104--><a name="page104"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 104</span>That
+worst hypocrisy<br />
+When self cheats self, and conscience at the wheel<br />
+Herself is steer&rsquo;d by passion&rsquo;s blindfold zeal;<br />
+A nether-world archangel!&nbsp; Through whose eyes<br />
+Flame the red mandates of remorseless might;<br />
+A gloom of lurid light<br />
+That holds no commerce with the crystal skies;<br />
+Like those rank fires that o&rsquo;er the fen-land flee,<br />
+Or on the mast-head sign the wrath to be.</p>
+<p>As o&rsquo;er that ancient weird Arlesian plain<br />
+Where Zeus hail&rsquo;d boulder-stones on the giant crew,<br />
+And changed to stone, or slew,<br />
+No bud may burgeon in Spring&rsquo;s gracious rain,<br />
+No blade of grass or grain:<br />
+&mdash;So bare, so scourged, a prey to chaos cast<br />
+The wisest despot leaves his realm at last!<br />
+Though for the land he toil&rsquo;d with iron will,<br />
+Earnest to reach persuasion&rsquo;s goal through power,<br />
+The fruit without the flower!<br />
+And pray&rsquo;d and wrestled to charm good from ill;<br />
+Waking perchance, or not, in death,&mdash;to find<br />
+Man fights a losing fight who fights mankind!</p>
+<p>And as who in the Theban avenue,<br />
+Sphinx ranged by Sphinx, goes awestruck, nor may read<br />
+That ancient awful creed<br />
+Closed in their granite calm:&mdash;so dim the clue,<br />
+So tangled, tracking through<br />
+That labyrinthine soul which, day by day<br />
+Changing, yet kept one long imperious way:<br />
+Strong in his weakness; confident, yet forlorn;<br />
+Waning and waxing; diamond-keen, or dull,<br />
+As that star Wonderful,<br />
+Mira, for ever, dying and reborn:&mdash;<br />
+Blissful or baleful, yet a Power throughout,<br />
+Throned in dim altitude o&rsquo;er the common rout.</p>
+<p><!-- page 105--><a name="page105"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 105</span>Alas,
+great Chief!&nbsp; The pity of it!&mdash;For he<br />
+Lay on his unlamented bier; his life<br />
+Wreck&rsquo;d on that futile strife<br />
+To wed things alien by heaven&rsquo;s decree,<br />
+Sword-sway with liberty:&mdash;<br />
+Coercing, not protecting;&mdash;for the Cause<br />
+Smiting with iron heel on England&rsquo;s laws:<br />
+&mdash;Intolerant tolerance!&nbsp; Soul that could not trust<br />
+Its finer instincts; self-compell&rsquo;d to run<br />
+The blood-path once begun,<br />
+And murder mercy with a sad &lsquo;I must!&rsquo;<br />
+Great lion-heart by guile and coarseness marr&rsquo;d;<br />
+By his own heat a hero warp&rsquo;d and scarr&rsquo;d.</p>
+<p>Despot despite himself!&mdash;And when the cry<br />
+Moan&rsquo;d up from England, dungeon&rsquo;d in that drear<br />
+Sectarian atmosphere,<br />
+With glory he gilt her chains; in Spanish sky<br />
+Flaunting the Red Cross high;&mdash;<br />
+Wars, just or unjust, ill or well design&rsquo;d,<br />
+Urged with the will that masters weak mankind.<br />
+&mdash;God&rsquo;s hammer Thou!&mdash;not hero!&mdash;Forged to break<br />
+The land,&mdash;salve wounds with wounds, heal force by force;<br />
+Sword-surgeon keen and coarse:&mdash;<br />
+To all who worship power for power&rsquo;s own sake,&mdash;<br />
+Strength for itself,&mdash;Success, the vulgar test,&mdash;<br />
+Fit idol of bent knee, and servile breast!</p>
+<p>&mdash;O in the party plaudits of the crowd<br />
+Glorious, if this be glory!&mdash;o&rsquo;er that shout<br />
+A small still voice breathes out<br />
+With subtle sweetness silencing the loud<br />
+Hoarse vaunting of the proud,&mdash;<br />
+A song of exaltation for the vale,<br />
+And how the mountain from his height shall fail!<br />
+How God&rsquo;s true heroes, since this earth began,<br />
+<!-- page 106--><a name="page106"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 106</span>Go
+sackcloth-clad through scourge and sword and scorn,<br />
+Crown&rsquo;d with the bleeding thorn,<br />
+Down-trampled by man&rsquo;s heel as foes to man,<br />
+And whispering <i>Eli</i>, <i>Eli</i>! as they die,&mdash;<br />
+Martyrs of truth and Saint Humility.</p>
+<p>These conquer in their fall: Persuasion flies<br />
+Wing&rsquo;d, from their grave: The hearts of men are turn&rsquo;d<br />
+To worship what they burn&rsquo;d:<br />
+Owning the sway of Love&rsquo;s long-suffering eyes,<br />
+Love&rsquo;s sweet self-sacrifice;<br />
+The might of gentleness; the subduing force<br />
+Of wisdom on her mid-way measured course<br />
+Gliding;&mdash;not torrent-like with fury spilt,<br />
+Impetuous, o&rsquo;er Himalah&rsquo;s rifted side,<br />
+To ravage blind and wide,<br />
+And leave a lifeless wreck of parching silt;&mdash;<br />
+Gliding by thorpe and tower and grange and lea<br />
+In tranquil transit to the eternal sea.</p>
+<p>&mdash;Children of Light!&mdash;If, in the slow-paced course<br />
+Of vital change, your work seem incomplete,<br />
+Your conquest-hour defeat,<br />
+Won by mild compromise, by the invisible force<br />
+That owns no earthly source;<br />
+Yet to all time your gifts to man endure,<br />
+God being with you, and the victory sure!<br />
+For though o&rsquo;er Gods the Giants in the course<br />
+May lord it, Strength o&rsquo;er Beauty; yet the Soul<br />
+Immortal, clasps the goal;<br />
+Fair Wisdom triumphs by her inborn force:<br />
+&mdash;Thus far on earth! . . . But, ah!&mdash;from mortal sight<br />
+The crowning glory veils itself in light!</p>
+<p><i>Envoy</i></p>
+<p>&mdash;Seal&rsquo;d of that holy band,<br />
+Rest here, beneath the foot-fall hushing sod,<br />
+<!-- page 107--><a name="page107"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 107</span>Wrapt
+in the peace of God,<br />
+While summer burns above thee; while the land<br />
+Disrobes; till pitying snow<br />
+Cover her bareness; till fresh Spring-winds blow,<br />
+And the sun-circle rounds itself again:&mdash;<br />
+Whilst England cries in vain<br />
+For thy wise temperance, Lucius!&mdash;But thine ear<br />
+The violent-impotent fever-restless cry,<br />
+The faction-yells of triumph, will not hear:<br />
+&mdash;Only the thrush on high<br />
+And wood-dove&rsquo;s moaning sweetness make reply.</p>
+<p>Lucius Cary, second Viscount Falkland, may perhaps be defined as
+at once the most poetically chivalrous and the most philosophically
+moderate amongst all who took part in the pre-restoration struggles.&nbsp;
+He was killed in the royal army at the first battle of Newbury, Sep.
+20, 1643, aged but 33 years, and buried, without mark or memorial, in
+the church of Great Tew (North Oxfordshire), the manor of which he owned.</p>
+<p><i>English Eastern</i>; The common brake-fern and its allies seem
+to betray tropical sympathies by their late appearance and sensitiveness
+to autumnal frost.</p>
+<p><i>That Arlesian plain</i>; Now named the <i>Crau</i>.&nbsp; It lies
+between Aries and the sea&mdash;a bare and malarious tract of great
+size covered with shingle and boulders.&nbsp; Aeschylus describes it
+as a &lsquo;snow-shower of round stones,&rsquo; which Zeus rained down
+in aid of Heracles, who was contending with the Ligurians.</p>
+<p><i>Mira</i>; A star in the <i>Whale</i>, conspicuous for its singular
+and rapid changes of apparent size.</p>
+<p><i>The Cause</i>; After passing through several phases this word,
+in Cromwell&rsquo;s mouth, with the common logic of tyranny, became
+simply a synonym for personal rule.</p>
+<p><i>Smiting with iron heel</i>; The terrorism of the Protector&rsquo;s
+government, and the almost universal hatred which it inspired, are powerfully
+painted by Hallam.&nbsp; &lsquo;To govern according to law may sometimes
+be an usurper&rsquo;s wish, but can seldom be in his power.&nbsp; The
+protector abandoned all thought of it. . . . All illusion was now (1655)
+gone, as to the pretended benefits of the civil war.&nbsp; It had ended
+in a despotism, compared to which all the illegal practices of former
+kings, all that had cost Charles his life and crown, appeared as dust
+in the balance.&rsquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 108--><a name="page108"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 108</span><i>The
+blood-path</i>; The trials under which Gerard and Vowel were executed
+in 1654, Slingsby and Hewit in 1658, are the most flagrant instances
+of Cromwell&rsquo;s perversion of justice, and contempt for the old
+liberties of England.&nbsp; But they do not stand alone.</p>
+<p><i>Guile and coarseness</i>; &lsquo;A certain coarse good nature
+and affability that covered the want of conscience, honour, and humanity:
+quick in passion, but not vindictive, and averse to unnecessary crimes,&rsquo;
+is the deliberate summing-up of Hallam,&mdash;in the love of liberty
+inferior to none of our historians, and eminent above all for courageous
+impartiality,&mdash;<i>iustissimus unus</i>.</p>
+<p><i>With glory he gilt</i>; See <i>Appendix</i> C.</p>
+<p><i>Success, the vulgar test</i>; See Matthew Arnold&rsquo;s finely
+discriminative <i>Essay</i> on Falkland.</p>
+<h3>MARSTON MOOR</h3>
+<p>July 2: 1644</p>
+<p>O, summer-high that day the sun<br />
+His chariot drove o&rsquo;er Marston wold:<br />
+A rippling sea of amber wheat<br />
+That floods the moorland vale with gold.</p>
+<p>With harvest light the valley laughs,<br />
+The sheaves in mellow sunshine sleep;<br />
+&mdash;Too rathe the crop, too red the swathes<br />
+Ere night the scythe of Death shall reap!</p>
+<p>Then thick and fast o&rsquo;er all the moor<br />
+The crimson&rsquo;d sabre-lightnings fly;<br />
+And thick and fast the death-bolts dash,<br />
+And thunder-peals to peals reply.</p>
+<p>Where Evening arched her fiery dome<br />
+Went up the roar of mortal foes:&mdash;<br />
+Then o&rsquo;er a deathly peace the moon<br />
+In silver silence sailing rose.</p>
+<p><!-- page 109--><a name="page109"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 109</span>Sweet
+hour, when heaven is nearest home,<br />
+And children&rsquo;s kisses close the day!<br />
+O disaccord with nature&rsquo;s calm,<br />
+Unholy requiem of the fray!</p>
+<p>White maiden Queen that sail&rsquo;st above,<br />
+Thy dew-tears on the fallen fling,&mdash;<br />
+The blighted wreaths of civil strife,<br />
+The war that can no triumph bring!</p>
+<p>&mdash;O pale with that deep pain of those<br />
+Who cannot save, yet must foresee,&mdash;<br />
+Surveying all the ills to flow<br />
+From that too-victor victory;</p>
+<p>When &rsquo;gainst the unwisely guided King<br />
+The dark self-centred Captain stood,<br />
+And law and right and peace went down<br />
+In that red sea of brothers&rsquo; blood;&mdash;</p>
+<p>O long, long, long the years, fair Maid,<br />
+Before thy patient eye shall view<br />
+The shrine of England&rsquo;s law restored,<br />
+Her homes their native peace renew!</p>
+<p><i>That day</i>; The actual fight lay between 7 and 9 p.m.</p>
+<p><i>Too-victor victory</i>; At Naseby, says Hallam,&mdash;and the
+remark, (though Charles was not personally present), is equally true
+of Marston Moor&mdash;&lsquo;Fairfax and Cromwell triumphed, not only
+over the king and the monarchy, but over the parliament and the nation.&rsquo;</p>
+<p><i>Unwisely guided</i>; &lsquo;Never would it have been wiser, in
+Rupert,&rsquo; remarks Ranke, &lsquo;to avoid a decisive battle than
+at that moment.&nbsp; But he held that the king&rsquo;s letter not only
+empowered, but instructed him to fight.&rsquo;</p>
+<p><i>Red sea</i>; &lsquo;The slaughter was deadly, for Cromwell had
+forbidden quarter being given&rsquo;: (Ranke, ix: 3).</p>
+<h3><!-- page 110--><a name="page110"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 110</span>THE
+FUGITIVE KING</h3>
+<p>August 7: 1645</p>
+<p>Cold blue cloud on the hill-tops,<br />
+Cold buffets of hill-side rain:&mdash;<br />
+As a bird that they hunt on the mountains,<br />
+The king, he turns from Rh&ocirc;s lane:<br />
+A writing of doom on his forehead,<br />
+His eyes wan-wistful and dim;<br />
+For his comrades seeking a shelter:<br />
+But earth has no shelter for him!</p>
+<p>Gray silvery gleam of armour,<br />
+White ghost of a wandering king!<br />
+No sound but the iron-shod footfall<br />
+And the bridle-chains as they ring:<br />
+Save where the tears of heaven,<br />
+Shed thick o&rsquo;er the loyal hills,<br />
+Rush down in the hoarse-tongued torrent,<br />
+A roar of approaching ills.</p>
+<p>But now with a sweeping curtain,<br />
+In solid wall comes the rain,<br />
+And the troop draw bridle and hide them<br />
+In the bush by the stream-side plain.<br />
+King Charles smiled sadly and gently;<br />
+&lsquo;&rsquo;Tis the Beggar&rsquo;s Bush,&rsquo; said he;<br />
+&lsquo;For I of England am beggar&rsquo;d,<br />
+And her poorest may pity me.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&mdash;O safe in the fadeless fir-tree<br />
+The squirrel may nestle and hide;<br />
+And in God&rsquo;s own dwelling the sparrow<br />
+Safe with her nestlings abide:&mdash;<br />
+But he goes homeless and friendless,<br />
+<!-- page 111--><a name="page111"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 111</span>And
+manlike abides his doom;<br />
+For he knows a king has no refuge<br />
+Betwixt the throne and the tomb.</p>
+<p>And the purple-robed braes of Alban,<br />
+The glory of stream and of plain,<br />
+The Holyrood halls of his birthright<br />
+Charles ne&rsquo;er will look on again:&mdash;<br />
+And the land he loved well, not wisely,<br />
+Will almost grudge him a grave:<br />
+Then weep, too late, in her folly,<br />
+The dark Dictator&rsquo;s slave!</p>
+<p>This incident occurred during the attempt made by Charles, in the
+dark final days of his struggle, to march from South Wales with the
+hope of joining Montrose in Scotland.&nbsp; He appears to have halted
+for the night of Aug. 6, 1645, at Old Radnor and &lsquo;the name of
+<i>Rails Yat</i>, (Royal gate) still points out the spot where, on the
+following morning, he left the Rh&ocirc;s Lane for the road which brought
+him to shelter at Beggar&rsquo;s Bush&rsquo;: a name which is reported
+to be still preserved.</p>
+<h3>THE CAPTIVE CHILD</h3>
+<p>September 8: 1650</p>
+<p>Child in girlhood&rsquo;s early grace,<br />
+Pale white rose of royal race,<br />
+Flower of France, and England&rsquo;s flower,<br />
+What dost here at twilight hour<br />
+Captive bird in castle-hold,<br />
+Picture-fair and calm and cold,<br />
+Cold and still as marble stone<br />
+In gray Carisbrook alone?<br />
+&mdash;Fold thy limbs and take thy rest,<br />
+Nestling of the silent nest!</p>
+<p><!-- page 112--><a name="page112"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 112</span>Ah
+fair girl!&nbsp; So still and meek,<br />
+One wan hand beneath her cheek,<br />
+One on the holy texts that tell<br />
+Of God&rsquo;s love ineffable;&mdash;<br />
+Last dear gift her father gave<br />
+When, before to-morrow&rsquo;s grave,<br />
+By no unmanly grief unmann&rsquo;d,<br />
+To his little orphan band<br />
+In that stress of anguish sore<br />
+He bade farewell evermore.</p>
+<p>Doom&rsquo;d, unhappy King!&nbsp; Had he<br />
+Known the pangs in store for thee,<br />
+Known the coarse fanatic rage<br />
+That,&mdash;despite her flower-soft age,<br />
+Maidenhood&rsquo;s first blooming fair,&mdash;<br />
+Fever-struck in the imprison&rsquo;d air<br />
+As rosebud on the dust-hill thrown<br />
+Cast a child to die alone,&mdash;<br />
+He had shed, with his last breath,<br />
+Bitterer tears than tears of death!</p>
+<p>As in her infant hour she took<br />
+In her hand the pictured book<br />
+Where Christ beneath the scourger bow&rsquo;d,<br />
+Crying &lsquo;O poor man!&rsquo; aloud,<br />
+And in baby tender pain<br />
+Kiss&rsquo;d the page, and kiss&rsquo;d again,<br />
+While the happy father smiled<br />
+On his sweet warm-hearted child;<br />
+&mdash;So now to him, in Carisbrook lone,<br />
+All her tenderness has flown.</p>
+<p>Oft with a child&rsquo;s faithful heart<br />
+She has seen him act his part;<br />
+Nothing in his life so well<br />
+Gracing him as when he fell;<br />
+<!-- page 113--><a name="page113"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 113</span>Seen
+him greet his bitter doom<br />
+As the mercy-message Home;<br />
+Seen the scaffold and the shame,<br />
+The red shower that fell like flame;<br />
+Till the whole heart within her died,<br />
+Dying in fancy by his side.</p>
+<p>&mdash;Statue-still and statue-fair<br />
+Now the low wind may lift her hair,<br />
+Motionless in lip and limb;<br />
+E&rsquo;en the fearful mouse may skim<br />
+O&rsquo;er the window-sill, nor stir<br />
+From the crumb at sight of her;<br />
+Through the lattice unheard float<br />
+Summer blackbird&rsquo;s evening note;&mdash;<br />
+E&rsquo;en the sullen foe would bless<br />
+That pale utter gentleness.</p>
+<p>&mdash;Eyes of heaven, that pass and peep,<br />
+Do not question, if she sleep!<br />
+She has no abiding here,<br />
+She is past the starry sphere;<br />
+Kneeling with the children sweet<br />
+At the palm-wreathed altar&rsquo;s feet;<br />
+&mdash;Innocents who died like thee,<br />
+Heaven-ward through man&rsquo;s cruelty,<br />
+To the love-smiles of their Lord<br />
+Borne through pain and fire and sword.</p>
+<p>Elizabeth, second daughter of Charles I. and Henrietta Maria, was
+born on Innocents&rsquo; Day, 1635.&nbsp; The incident accounted in
+Stanza iv occurred in 1637.&nbsp; She had been taken on a visit to Hampton
+Court to her mother, who wished her to be present at her own vesper-service,
+when Elizabeth, not yet two years old, became very restless.&nbsp; To
+quiet her a book of devotion was shown to her.&rsquo;&nbsp; The King,
+when the Queen drew his attention, said, &lsquo;She begins young!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>This tale is told by Mrs. Green, in her excellent <i>Princesses of
+England</i>, (London, 1853),&mdash;a book deserving to be better known,&mdash;on
+the authority of the Envoy Con.</p>
+<p><!-- page 114--><a name="page114"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 114</span>The
+first grief of a very happy and promising childhood may have been the
+loss of her sister Anne in 1640.&nbsp; But by 1642, the evils of the
+time began to press upon Princess Elizabeth; her mother&rsquo;s departure
+from England, followed by her own capture by order of the Parliament;
+her confinement under conditions of varying severity; and the final
+farewell to her father, Jan. 29, 1649.</p>
+<p>From that time her life was overshadowed by the sadness of her father&rsquo;s
+death, her own isolation, and her increasing feebleness of health.&nbsp;
+She seems to have been a singularly winning and intelligent girl, and
+she hence found or inspired affection in several of the guardians successively
+appointed to take charge of her.&nbsp; But if she had not been thus
+marked by beauty of nature, our indignant disgust would hardly be less
+at the brutal treatment inflicted by the Puritan-Independent authorities
+upon this child:&mdash;at the refusal of her prayer to be sent to her
+elder sister Mary, in Holland; at the captivity in Carisbrook; at the
+isolation in which she was left to die.&mdash;Yet it is not she who
+most merits pity!</p>
+<p>In this poem, written before the plan of the book had been formed,
+I find that some slight deviation from the best authorities has been
+made.&nbsp; Elizabeth&rsquo;s young brother Henry, Duke of Gloster,
+shared her prison: and although her own physician, Mayerne, had been
+dismissed, yet some medical attendance was supplied.&mdash;Henry Vaughan
+has described the patience of the young sufferer in two lovely lines:</p>
+<blockquote><p>Thou didst not murmur, nor revile,<br />
+And drank&rsquo;st thy wormwood with a smile.</p>
+<p>&mdash;<i>Olor Iscanus</i>; 1651.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<h3>THE WRECK OF THE ADMIRAL</h3>
+<p><i>A TALE OF PRINCE RUPERT</i></p>
+<p>September 30: 1651</p>
+<p>Seventy league from Terceira they lay<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In the mid Atlantic straining;<br />
+And inch upon inch as she settles they know<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The leak on the Admiral gaining.</p>
+<p>Below them &rsquo;tis death rushes greedily in;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But their signal unheeded is waving,<br />
+<!-- page 115--><a name="page115"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 115</span>For
+the shouts by their billow-toss&rsquo;d consort unheard<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Are lost in the tempest&rsquo;s wild raving.</p>
+<p>For Maurice in vain o&rsquo;er the bulwark leant forth,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; While Rupert to rescue was crying;<br />
+And the voice of farewell on his face is flung back<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With the scud on the billow-top flying!</p>
+<p>But no time was for tears, save for duty no thought,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; When brother is parting from brother;<br />
+For Rupert the brave and his high-hearted crew,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; They must die, as they lived, by each other.</p>
+<p>Unregarded the boat, for none care from their post<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To steal off while the Prince is beside them,<br />
+All, all, side by side with his comrades to share<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Till the death-plunge at last shall divide them.</p>
+<p>Ah, sharp in his bosom meanwhile is the smart,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; He alone for his king is contending!<br />
+And the brightness and blaze of his youth in its prime<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Must here in mid-waves have their ending!</p>
+<p>&mdash;The seas they break over, the seas they press in<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; From fo&rsquo;csle to binnacle streaming;<br />
+And a ripple runs over the Admiral&rsquo;s deck,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With blue cold witch-fire gleaming.</p>
+<p>O then in a noble rebellion they rise;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; They may die, but the Prince shall o&rsquo;erlive them!<br />
+With a loving rough force to the boat he is thrust,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And he must be saved and forgive them!</p>
+<p>Now their flame-pikes they lift, the last signal for life,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Flaring wild in the wild rack above them:&mdash;<br />
+And each breast has one prayer for the Mercy on high,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And one for the far-off who love them.</p>
+<p><!-- page 116--><a name="page116"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 116</span>O
+high-beating hearts that are still&rsquo;d in the deep<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Unknown treasure-caverns of Ocean!<br />
+There, where storms cannot vex, the three hundred are laid<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In their silent heroic devotion.</p>
+<p>Rupert, nephew to Charles through his sister Elizabeth, wife to the
+Elector Palatine, after the ruin of his uncle&rsquo;s cause, carried
+on the struggle at sea.&nbsp; The incident here treated occurred on
+one of his last voyages, when cruising in the Atlantic near the Canaries:
+it is told at full length in E. Warburton&rsquo;s narrative of Rupert&rsquo;s
+life.</p>
+<p><i>Brother is parting from brother</i>; Maurice, a year younger than
+himself,&mdash;then in the companion ship <i>Swallow</i>, in which Rupert,
+by the devoted determination of his comrades, was ultimately saved.&nbsp;
+Maurice was not long after drowned in the West Indies.</p>
+<p><i>Flame-pikes</i>; Two &lsquo;fire-pikes,&rsquo; it is stated, were
+burned as a signal just before the flag-ship sank.&nbsp; Three hundred
+and thirty-three was the estimate of the number drowned.</p>
+<h3>THE RETURN OF LAW</h3>
+<p>1660</p>
+<p>At last the long darkness of anarchy lifts, and the dawn o&rsquo;er
+the gray<br />
+In rosy pulsation floods; the tremulous amber of day:<br />
+In the golden umbrage of spring-tide, the dewy delight of the sward,<br />
+The liquid voices awake, the new morn with music reward.<br />
+Peace in her car goes up; a rainbow curves for her road;<br />
+Law and fair Order before her, the reinless coursers of God;&mdash;<br />
+Round her the gracious maids in circling majesty shine;<br />
+They are rich in blossoms and blessings, the Hours, the white, the divine!</p>
+<p><!-- page 117--><a name="page117"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 117</span>Hands
+in sisterly hands they unite, eye calling on eye;<br />
+Smiles more speaking than words, as the pageant sweeps o&rsquo;er the
+sky.<br />
+Plenty is with them, and Commerce; all gifts of all lands from her horn<br />
+Raining on England profuse; and, clad in the beams of the morn,<br />
+Her warrior-guardian of old the red standard rears in its might;<br />
+And the Love-star trembles above, and passes, light into light.</p>
+<p>Many the marvels of earth, the more marvellous wonders on high,<br />
+Worlds past number on worlds, blank lightless abysses of sky;<br />
+But thou art the wonder of wonders, O Man!&nbsp; Thy impalpable soul,<br />
+Atom of consciousness, measuring the Infinite, grasping the whole:<br />
+Then, on the trivialest transiencies fix&rsquo;d, or plucking for fruit<br />
+Dead-sea apples and ashes of sin, more brute than the brute.<br />
+Yet in thy deepest depths, filth-wallowing orgies of night,<br />
+Lust remorseless of blood, yet, allow&rsquo;d an inlet for light:<br />
+As where, a thousand fathom beneath us, midnight afar<br />
+Glooms in some gulph, and we gaze, and, behold! one flash of one star!<br />
+For, ever, the golden gates stand open, the transit is free<br />
+For the human to mix with divine; from himself to the Highest to flee.<br />
+Lo on its knees by the bedside the babe:&mdash;and the song that we
+hear<br />
+Has been heard already in Heaven! the low-lisp&rsquo;d music is clear:&mdash;<br />
+For, fresh from the hand of the Maker, the child still breathes the
+light air<br />
+<!-- page 118--><a name="page118"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 118</span>Of
+the House Angelic, the meadow where souls yet unbodied repair,<br />
+Lucid with love, translucent with bliss, and know not the doom<br />
+In the Marah valley of life laid up for the sons of the womb.<br />
+&mdash;I speak not of grovelling hearts, souls blind and begrimed from
+the birth,<br />
+But the spirits of nobler strain, the elect of the children of earth:&mdash;<br />
+For the needle swerves from the pole; they cannot do what they would;<br />
+In their truest aim is falsehood, and ill out-balancing good.<br />
+Faith&rsquo;s first felicities fade; the world-mists thicken and roll,<br />
+&rsquo;Neath the heavens arching their heaven; o&rsquo;er-hazing the
+eye of the soul.<br />
+Then the vision is pure no longer; refracted above us arise<br />
+The phantasmal figures of passion; earth&rsquo;s mirage exhaled to the
+skies.<br />
+And they go as the castled clouds o&rsquo;er the verge when the tempest
+is laid,<br />
+Towering Ambition, and Glory, and Self as Duty array&rsquo;d:&mdash;<br />
+Idols no less than that idol whom lustful Ammon of yore<br />
+With the death-scream of children, a furnace of blood, was fain to adore!<br />
+So these, in the shrine of the soul, for a Moloch sacrifice cry,<br />
+The conscience of candid childhood, the pure directness of eye:&mdash;<br />
+Till the man yields himself to himself, accepting his will as his fate,<br />
+And the light from above within him is darkness; the darkness how great!</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;O Land whom the Gods,&mdash;loving most,&mdash;most
+sorely in wisdom have tried,<br />
+England! since Time was Time, thrice swept by the conqueror tide,<br />
+<!-- page 119--><a name="page119"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 119</span>Why
+on thyself thrice turn, thrice crimson thy greenness in gore,<br />
+With the slain of thy children, as sheep, thy meadows whitening-o&rsquo;er?<br />
+Race impatiently patient; tenacious of foe as of friend;<br />
+Slow to take flame; but, enflamed, that burns thyself out to the end:<br />
+Slow to return to the balance, once moved; not easily sway&rsquo;d<br />
+From the centre, and, star-like, retracing thy orbit through sunlight
+and shade!<br />
+&mdash;Without hate, without party affection, we now look back on the
+fray,<br />
+Through the mellowing magic of time the phantoms emerging to day!<br />
+Grasping too much for self, unjust to his rival in strife,<br />
+Each foe with good conscience and honour advances; war to the knife!<br />
+Lo, where with feebler hand the Stuart essays him to guide<br />
+The disdainful coursers of Henry, the Tudor car in its pride!<br />
+For he saw not the past was past; nor the swirl and inrush of the tide,<br />
+A nation arising in manhood; its will would no more be denied.<br />
+They would share in the labour and peril of State; they must perish
+or win;<br />
+&rsquo;Tis the instinct of Freedom that cries; a voice of Nature within!<br />
+Narrow the cry and sectarian oft: true sons of their age;<br />
+Justice avenged unjustly; yet more in sorrow than rage;<br />
+Till they drank the poison of power, the Circ&eacute;-cup of command,<br />
+And the face of Liberty fail&rsquo;d, and the sword was snatch&rsquo;d
+from her hand.<br />
+Now Law &rsquo;neath the scaffold cowers, and,&mdash;shame engendering
+shame,&mdash;<br />
+<!-- page 120--><a name="page120"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 120</span>The
+hell-pack of war is laid close on the land for ruin and flame.<br />
+For as things most holy are worst, from holiness when they decline,<br />
+So Law, in the name of law once outraged, demon-divine,<br />
+Swoops back as Anarchy arm&rsquo;d, and maddens her lovers of yore,<br />
+Changed from their former selves, and clothed in the chrisom of gore.<br />
+Then Falkland and Hampden are gone; and darker counsels arise;<br />
+Vane with his tortuous soul, through over-wisdom unwise;<br />
+Pym, deep stately designer, the subtle in simple disguised,<br />
+Artist in plots, projector of panics he used, and despised!<br />
+&mdash;But as, in the mountain world, where the giants each lift up
+their horn<br />
+To the skies defiant and pale, and our littleness measure and scorn,<br />
+Frowning-out from their far-off summits: and eye and mind may not know<br />
+Which is hugest, where all are huge: But, as from the region we go<br />
+Receding, the Titan of Titans comes forth, and above him the sky<br />
+Is deepest: and lo!&mdash;&rsquo;tis the White One, the Monarch!&mdash;He
+mounts, as we fly!<br />
+Or as over the sea the gay ships and the dolphins glisten and flit,<br />
+And then that Leviathan comes, and takes his pastime in it;<br />
+And wherever he ploughs his dark road, they must sink or follow him
+still,<br />
+For his is the bulkiest strength, the proud and paramount will!<br />
+&mdash;Thou wast great, O King! (for we grudge not the style thou didst
+yearn-for in vain,<br />
+But a river of blood was between and an ineffaceable stain),<br />
+<!-- page 121--><a name="page121"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 121</span>Great
+with an earth-born greatness; a Titan of awe, not of love;<br />
+&rsquo;Twas strength and subtlety balanced; the wisdom not from above.<br />
+For he leant o&rsquo;er his own deep soul, oracular; over the pit<br />
+As the Pythia throned her of old, where the rock in Delphi was split;<br />
+And the vapour and echo within he mis-held for divine; and the land<br />
+Heard and obey&rsquo;d, unwillingly willing, the voice of command.<br />
+&mdash;Soaring enormous soul, that to height o&rsquo;er the highest
+aspires;<br />
+All that the man can seize being nought to what he desires!<br />
+And as, in a palace nurtured, the child to courtesy grows,<br />
+Becoming at last what it acts; so man on himself can impose,<br />
+Drill and accustom himself to humility, till, like an art,<br />
+The lesson the fingers have learn&rsquo;d appears the command of the
+heart;<br />
+Whilst pride, as the snake at the charmer&rsquo;s command, coils low
+in its place,<br />
+And he wears to himself and his fellows the mask that is almost a face.<br />
+Truest of hypocrites, he!&mdash;in himself entangled, he thinks<br />
+Earth uprising to Heaven, while earth-ward the heavenly sinks:<br />
+Conscience, we grant it, his guide; but conscience drugg&rsquo;d and
+deceived;<br />
+Conscience which all that his self-belief whisper&rsquo;d as duty believed.<br />
+And though he sought earnest for God, in life-long wrestle and prayer,<br />
+Yet the sky by a veil was darken&rsquo;d, a phantom flitting in air;<br />
+For a cloud from that seething cavernous heart fumed out in his youth,<br />
+<!-- page 122--><a name="page122"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 122</span>And
+whatever he will&rsquo;d in the strength of the soul was imaged as truth:&mdash;<br />
+Grew with his growth: And now &rsquo;tis Ambition, disguised in success;<br />
+And he walks with the step assured, that cares not its issue to guess,<br />
+Clear in immediate purpose: and moulding his party at will,<br />
+He thrones it o&rsquo;er obstinate sects, his ideal constrain&rsquo;d
+to fulfil.<br />
+Cool in his very heat, self-master, he masters the realm:<br />
+God and His glory the flag; but King Oliver lord of the helm!<br />
+As he needs, steers crooked or straight: with his eye controlling the
+proud,<br />
+While blandness runs from his tongue, as the candidate fawns on the
+crowd;<br />
+Sagest of Titans, he stands; dark, ponderous, muddy-profound,<br />
+Greatness untemper&rsquo;d, untuned; no song, but a chaos of sound:&mdash;<br />
+Yet the key-note is ever beneath: &lsquo;Mere humble instruments!&nbsp;
+See!<br />
+Poor weak saints, at the best: but who has triumph&rsquo;d as we?&rsquo;<br />
+Thanks the Lord for each massacre-mercy, His glory, for His is the Cause:<br />
+Catlike he bridles, and purrs about God: but within are the claws,<br />
+The lion-strength is within!&mdash;Vane, Ludlow, Hutchinson, knew,<br />
+When the bauble of Law disappear&rsquo;d, and the sulky senate withdrew:<br />
+When the tyrannous Ten sword-silenced the land, and the necks of the
+strong<br />
+By the heel of their great Dictator were bruised, wrong trampling on
+wrong.<br />
+<!-- page 123--><a name="page123"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 123</span>Least
+willing of despots! and fain the fair temple of Law to restore,<br />
+Sheathing the sword in the sceptre: But lo! as in legends of yore,<br />
+Once drawn, once redden&rsquo;d, it may not return to the scabbard!&mdash;and
+straight<br />
+On that iron-track&rsquo;d path he had framed to the end he is goaded
+by Fate.<br />
+And yet, as a temperate man, to flavour some exquisite dish,<br />
+Without stint pours forth the red wine, thus only can compass his wish;<br />
+Upon Erin the death-mark he brands, the Party and Cause to secure;<br />
+Not bloodthirsty by birth; just, liquor &rsquo;twas needful to pour;<br />
+Only the wine of man&rsquo;s blood! . . . But the horrible sacrament
+thrill&rsquo;d<br />
+Right through the heart of a nation; nor yet is the memory still&rsquo;d;<br />
+E&rsquo;en yet the dim spectre returns, the ghost of the murderous years,<br />
+Blood flushing out in hatred; or blood transmuted to tears!<br />
+&mdash;Ah strange drama of Fate! what motley pageantries rise<br />
+On the stage of this make-shift world! what irony silenced in sighs!<br />
+For as when the Switzer looks down on the dell, from the pass and the
+snow,<br />
+Sees the peace of the fields, the white farms, the clear equable streamlet
+below,<br />
+And before him the world unknown, the blaze of the shadowless Line,<br />
+Riches ill-purchased in exile, the toiling plantation and mine;<br />
+And the horn floats up the faint music of youth from his forefathers&rsquo;
+fold,<br />
+And he sighs for the patient life, the peace more golden than gold:&mdash;<br />
+<!-- page 124--><a name="page124"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 124</span>So
+He now looks back on the years, and groans &rsquo;neath the load he
+must bear,<br />
+Loving this England that loathed him, and none the burden to share!<br />
+Gagging not gaining souls: to the close he wonders in vain<br />
+Why he cannot win hearts: why &rsquo;tis only the will that resigns
+to his reign.<br />
+As that great image in Dura, the land perforce must obey,<br />
+Unloved, unlovely,&mdash;and not the feet only of iron and clay,&mdash;<br />
+Atlas of this wide realm! in himself he summ&rsquo;d up the whole;<br />
+Its children the Cause had devour&rsquo;d: the sword was childless and
+sole.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;Ah strange drama of Fate! what motley pageantries
+rise<br />
+On the stage of this make-shift world! what irony silenced in sighs!<br />
+In the strait beneath Etna for as the waves ebb, and Scylla betrays<br />
+The monster below, foul scales of the serpent and slime,&mdash;could
+we gaze<br />
+On Tyranny stript of her tinsel, what vision of dool and dismay!<br />
+Terror in confidence clothed, and anarchy biding her day:<br />
+Selfishness hero-mask&rsquo;d; stage-tricks of the shabby-sublime;<br />
+Impotent gaspings at good; and the deluge after her time!</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;Is it war that thunders o&rsquo;er England,
+and bursts the millennial oak<br />
+From his base like a castle uprooted, and shears with impalpable stroke<br />
+The sails from the ocean, the houses of men, while the Conqueror lay<br />
+On the morn of his crowning mercy, and life flicker&rsquo;d down with
+the day?<br />
+Is it war on the earth, or war in the skies, or Nature who tolls<br />
+<!-- page 125--><a name="page125"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 125</span>Her
+passing-bell as from earth they go up, her imperial souls?<br />
+&mdash;He rests:&mdash;&rsquo;Tis a lion-sleep: and the sternness of
+Truth is reproved:<br />
+The sleep of a leader of men; unhuman, to watch him unmoved!<br />
+In the stillness of pity and awe we remember his troublesome years,<br />
+For man is the magnet to man, and mortal failure has tears.<br />
+&mdash;He rests:&mdash;On the massive brows, as a rock by the sunrise
+is crown&rsquo;d,<br />
+His passionate love for the land, in a glory-coronal bound!<br />
+And Mercy dawns fast o&rsquo;er the dead, from the bier as we turn and
+depart,<br />
+England for England&rsquo;s sake clasp&rsquo;d firm as a child to his
+heart.<br />
+&mdash;He rests:&mdash;And the storm-clouds have fled, and the sunshine
+of Nature repress&rsquo;d<br />
+Breaks o&rsquo;er the realm in smiles, and the land again has her rest.<br />
+He rests: the great spirit is hid where from heaven the veil is unroll&rsquo;d,<br />
+And justice merges in love, and the dross is purged from the gold.</p>
+<p>The general point of view from which this subject is here approached
+is given in the following passages:&mdash;&lsquo;The whole nation,&rsquo;
+says Macaulay (1659), &lsquo;was sick of government by the sword, and
+pined for government by the law.&rsquo;&nbsp; Hence, when Charles landed,
+&lsquo;the cliffs of Dover were covered by thousands of gazers, among
+whom scarcely one could be found who was not weeping with delight .
+. . Every where flags were flying, bells and music sounding, wine and
+ale flowing in rivers to the health of him whose return was the return
+of peace, of law, and of freedom.&rsquo;&nbsp; Nor was this astonishing:
+the name of the Commonwealth, a greater than Macaulay remarks, &lsquo;was
+grown infinitely odious: it was associated with the tyranny of ten years,
+the selfish rapacity of the Rump, the hypocritical despotism of Cromwell,
+the arbitrary sequestrations of committee-men, the iniquitous decimations
+of <!-- page 126--><a name="page126"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 126</span>military
+prefects, the sale of British citizens for slavery in the West Indies,
+the blood of some shed on the scaffold without legal trial, . . . the
+persecution of the Anglican Church, the bacchanalian rant of sectaries,
+the morose preciseness of puritans . . . It is universally acknowledged
+that no measure was ever more national, or has ever produced more testimonies
+of public approbation, than the restoration of Charles II. . . . For
+the late government, whether under the parliament or the protector,
+had never obtained the sanction of popular consent, nor could have subsisted
+for a day without the support of the army.&nbsp; The King&rsquo;s return
+seemed to the people the harbinger of a real liberty, instead of that
+bastard Commonwealth which had insulted them with its name&rsquo; (Hallam:
+<i>Const. Hist</i>. ch. x and xi).</p>
+<p><i>Peace in her car</i>; It will be seen that the Rospigliosi <i>Aurora</i>,
+Guido&rsquo;s one inspired work, has been here before the writer&rsquo;s
+memory.</p>
+<p><i>On thyself thrice turn</i>; The civil wars of the Barons, the
+Roses, and the Commonwealth.</p>
+<p><i>He saw not</i>; Ranke&rsquo;s dispassionate summary of the attempted
+&lsquo;arrest of five members,&rsquo; which has been always held one
+of the King&rsquo;s most arbitrary steps, as it was, perhaps, the most
+fatal, illustrates the view here taken: &lsquo;The prerogative of the
+Crown, <i>in the sense of the early kings</i>&rsquo; (unconditional
+right of arrest, in cases of treason), &lsquo;and the privilege of Parliament,
+<i>in the sense of coming times</i>, were directly contradictory to
+each other&rsquo;: (viii: 10).</p>
+<p><i>Till they drank the poison</i>; A sentence weighty with his judicial
+force may be here quoted from Hallam:&mdash;&lsquo;The desire of obtaining
+or retaining power, if it be ever sought as a means, is soon converted
+into an end.&rsquo;&nbsp; The career of the Long Parliament supports
+this judgment: of it &lsquo;it may be said, I think, with not greater
+severity than truth, that scarce two or three public acts of justice,
+humanity, or generosity, and very few of political wisdom and courage,
+are recorded of them from their quarrel with the King to their expulsion
+by Cromwell&rsquo;: (<i>Const. Hist</i>. ch. x: Part i).</p>
+<p><i>The chrisom</i>; Name for the white cloth in which babes were
+veiled immediately after Baptism.</p>
+<p><i>Artist in plots</i>; See Ranke (viii: 5) for Pym&rsquo;s skilful
+use of a supposed plot, (the main element in which was known by himself
+to be untrue), in older to terrify the House and ensure the destruction
+of Stafford; and Hallam (ch. ix).&mdash;Admiration of Pym may be taken
+as a proof that a historian is ignorant of, or faithless to, the fundamental
+principles of the Constitution:&mdash;as the worship of Cromwell is
+decisive against any man&rsquo;s love of liberty, whatever his professions.</p>
+<p><i>O King</i>; &lsquo;Cromwell, like so many other usurpers, felt
+his position <!-- page 127--><a name="page127"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 127</span>too
+precarious, or his vanity ungratified, without the name which mankind
+have agreed to worship.&rsquo;&nbsp; The conversations recorded by Whitelock
+are conclusive on this point: &lsquo;and, though compelled to decline
+the crown, he undoubtedly did not lose sight of the object for the short
+remainder of his life&rsquo; (<i>Hallam</i>).</p>
+<p><i>The sky by a veil</i>; See <i>Appendix</i> D.</p>
+<p><i>And he walks</i>; &lsquo;He said on one occasion, <i>He goes furthest
+who knows not whither he is going</i>&rsquo;: (Ranke: xii: 1).</p>
+<p><i>Purrs about God</i>; Examples, (the tone of which justifies this
+phrase, and might deserve a severer), may be found by the curious in
+the frailties of poor human nature, <i>passim</i>, in Cromwell&rsquo;s
+&lsquo;Letters and Speeches,&rsquo; for which, (although not always
+edited with precise accuracy), we are indebted to Mr. T. Carlyle.&nbsp;
+But the view which he takes of his &lsquo;hero,&rsquo; whether in regard
+of many particular facts alleged or neglected, or of the general estimate
+of Cromwell as a man,&mdash;as it appears to the author plainly untenable
+in face of proved historical facts, is here rejected.</p>
+<p>The familiar figure of the Tyrant, too long known to the world,&mdash;with
+the iron, the clay, and the little gold often interfused also in the
+statue,&mdash;has been always easily recognisable by unbiassed eyes
+in Oliver Cromwell.&nbsp; His tyranny was substantially that of his
+kind, before his time and since, in its actions, its spirit, its result.&nbsp;
+Fanaticism and Paradox may come with their apparatus of rhetoric to
+blur, as they whitewash, the lineaments of their idol.&nbsp; Such eulogists
+may &lsquo;paint an inch thick&rsquo;: yet despots,&mdash;political,
+military, ecclesiastical,&mdash;will never be permanently acknowledged
+by the common sense of mankind as worthy the great name of Hero.</p>
+<p><i>The tyrannous Ten</i>; The Major-Generals, originally ten, (but
+the number varied), amongst whom, in 1655, the Commonwealth was divided.&nbsp;
+They displayed &lsquo;a rapacity and oppression beyond their master&rsquo;s&rsquo;
+(Hallam): a phrase amply supported by the hardly-impeachable evidence
+of Ludlow.</p>
+<p><i>The horrible sacrament</i>; See <i>Appendix</i> D.</p>
+<p><i>Why he cannot win hearts</i>; &lsquo;In the ascent of this bold
+usurper to greatness . . . he had encouraged the levellers and persecuted
+them; he had flattered the Long Parliament and betrayed it; he had made
+use of the sectaries to crush the Commonwealth; he had spurned the sectaries
+in his last advance to power.&nbsp; These, with the Royalists and Presbyterians,
+forming in effect the whole people . . . were the perpetual, irreconcilable
+enemies of his administration&rsquo; (Hallam ch. x).</p>
+<p><i>Stage-tricks</i>; See the curious regal imitations and adaptations
+of the <!-- page 128--><a name="page128"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 128</span>Protector
+during his later years, in matters regarding his own and his family&rsquo;s
+titles and state, or the marriage of his daughters.</p>
+<p><i>Mortal failure</i>; See <i>Appendix</i> D.</p>
+<h3>THE POET&rsquo;S EUTHANASIA</h3>
+<p>November: 1674</p>
+<p>Cloked in gray threadbare poverty, and blind,<br />
+Age-weak, and desolate, and beloved of God;<br />
+High-heartedness to long repulse resign&rsquo;d,<br />
+Yet bating not one jot of hope, he trod<br />
+The sunless skyless streets he could not see;<br />
+By those faint feet made sacrosanct to me.</p>
+<p>Yet on that laureate brow the sign he wore<br />
+Of Phoebus&rsquo; wrath; who,&mdash;for his favourite child,<br />
+When war and faction raised their rancorous roar,<br />
+Leagued with fanatic frenzy, blood-defiled,<br />
+To the sweet Muses and himself untrue,&mdash;<br />
+Around the head he loved thick darkness threw.</p>
+<p>&mdash;He goes:&mdash;But with him glides the Pleiad throng<br />
+Of that imperial line, whom Phoebus owns<br />
+His ownest: for, since his, no later song<br />
+Has soar&rsquo;d, as wide-wing&rsquo;d, to the diadem&rsquo;d thrones<br />
+That, in their inmost heaven, the Muses high<br />
+Set for the sons of immortality.</p>
+<p>Most loved, most lovely, near him as he went,<br />
+Vergil: and He, supremest for all time,<br />
+In hoary blindness:&mdash;But the sweet lament<br />
+Of Lesbian love, the Parian song sublime,<br />
+Follow&rsquo;d:&mdash;and that stern Florentine apart<br />
+Cowl&rsquo;d himself dark in thought, within his heart</p>
+<p><!-- page 129--><a name="page129"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 129</span>Nursing
+the dream of Church and Caesar&rsquo;s State,<br />
+Empire and Faith:&mdash;while Fancy&rsquo;s favourite child,<br />
+The myriad-minded, moving up sedate<br />
+Beckon&rsquo;d his countryman, and inly smiled:&mdash;<br />
+Then that august Theophany paled from view,<br />
+To higher stars drawn up, and kingdoms new.</p>
+<p>The last ten years of Milton&rsquo;s life were passed at his house
+situate in the (then) &lsquo;Artillery Walk,&rsquo; Bunhill, near Aldersgate.&nbsp;
+He is described as a spare figure, of middle stature or a little less,
+who walked, generally clothed in a gray camblet overcoat, in the streets
+between Bunhill and Little Britain.</p>
+<p><i>Vergil</i>; placed first as most like Milton in consummate art
+and permanent exquisiteness of phrase.&nbsp; It is to him, also, (if
+to any one), that Milton is metrically indebted.&mdash;The other poets
+classed as &lsquo;Imperial&rsquo; are Homer, Sappho, Archilochus, Dante,
+Shakespeare.&nbsp; The supremacy in rank which the writer has here ventured
+to limit to these seven poets, (though with a strong feeling of diffidence
+in view of certain other Hellenic and Roman claims), is assigned to
+Sappho and Archilochus, less on account of the scanty fragments, though
+they be &lsquo;more golden than gold,&rsquo; which have reached us,
+than in confidence that the place collateral with Homer, given them
+by their countrymen (who criticized as admirably as they created), was,
+in fact, justified by their poetry.</p>
+<p><i>The dream</i>; Dante&rsquo;s political wishes and speculations,
+wholly opposed to Milton&rsquo;s, are, however, like his in their impracticable
+originality.</p>
+<p><i>Theophany</i>; Vision of the Gods.</p>
+<h3><!-- page 130--><a name="page130"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 130</span>WHITEHALL
+GALLERY</h3>
+<p>February 11: 1655</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As when the King of old<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &rsquo;Mid Babylonian gold,<br />
+And picture-woven walls, and lamps that gleam&rsquo;d<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Unholy radiance, sate,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And with some smooth slave-mate<br />
+Toy&rsquo;d, and the wine laugh&rsquo;d round, and music stream&rsquo;d<br />
+Voluptuous undulation, o&rsquo;er the hall,&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Till on the palace-wall</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Forth came a hand divine<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And wrote the judgment-sign,<br />
+And Babylon fell!&mdash;So now, in that his place<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Of Tudor-Stuart pride,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The golden gallery wide,<br />
+&rsquo;Mid venal beauty&rsquo;s lavish-arm&rsquo;d embrace,<br />
+And hills of gambler-gold, a godless King<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Moved through the revelling</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;With quick brown falcon-eye<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And lips of gay reply;<br />
+Wise in the wisdom not from Heaven!&mdash;as one<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Who from his exile-days<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Had learn&rsquo;d to scorn the praise<br />
+Of truth, the crown by martyr-virtue won:<br />
+Below ambition:&mdash;Grant him regal ease!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The rest, as fate may please!</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;O royal heir, restored<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Not by the bitter sword,<br />
+But when the heart of these great realms in free,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Full, triple, unison beat<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The Martyr&rsquo;s son to greet,<br />
+<!-- page 131--><a name="page131"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 131</span>Her
+ancient law and faith and flag with thee<br />
+Rethroned,&mdash;not thus!&mdash;in this inglorious hall<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Of harem-festival,</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Not thus!&mdash;For even now,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The blaze is on thy brow<br />
+Scored by the shadowy hand of him whose wing<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Knows neither haste nor rest;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Who from the board each guest<br />
+In season calling,&mdash;knight and kerne and king,&mdash;<br />
+Where Arthur lies, and Alfred, signs the way;&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;We know him, and obey.</p>
+<p>Lord Macaulay&rsquo;s lively description of this scene (<i>Hist</i>.
+Ch iv) should be referred to.&nbsp; &lsquo;Even then,&rsquo; he says,
+&lsquo;the King had complained that he did not feel well.&rsquo;</p>
+<p><i>Tudor-Stuart</i>; This famous Gallery was of sixteenth-century
+date.</p>
+<p><i>When the heart</i>; The weariness of England under the triple
+yoke of Puritanism, the Independents, and the Protector, has been already
+noticed: (Note on p. 125).</p>
+<p>&lsquo;The Restoration,&rsquo; says Professor Seeley, in an able
+essay on current perversions of seventeenth-century-history, &lsquo;was
+not a return to servitude, but the precise contrary.&nbsp; It was a
+great emancipation, an exodus out of servitude into liberty . . . As
+to the later Stuarts, I regard them as pupils of Cromwell: . . . it
+was their great ambition to appropriate his methods,&rsquo; (and, we
+may add, to follow his foreign policy in regard to France and Holland),
+for the benefit of the old monarchy.&nbsp; They failed where their model
+had succeeded, and the distinction of having enslaved England remained
+peculiar to Cromwell.&rsquo;</p>
+<h3><!-- page 132--><a name="page132"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 132</span>THE
+BALLAD OF KING MONMOUTH</h3>
+<p>1685</p>
+<p><i>Fear not</i>, <i>my child, though the days be dark</i>,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <i>Never fear</i>, <i>he will come again</i>,<br />
+<i>With the long brown hair</i>, <i>and the banner blue</i>,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <i>King Monmouth and all his men</i>!</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The summer-smiling bay<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Has doff&rsquo;d its vernal gray;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A peacock breast of emerald shot with blue:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Is it peace or war that lands<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; On these pale quiet sands,<br />
+As round the pier the boats run-in their silent crew?</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Bent knee, and forehead bare;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; That moment was for prayer!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Then swords flash out, and&mdash;Monmouth!&mdash;is the
+cry:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The crumbling cliff o&rsquo;erpast,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The hazard-die is cast,<br />
+&rsquo;Tis James &rsquo;gainst James in arms!&nbsp; Soho! and Liberty!</p>
+<p>&mdash;<i>Fear not, my child, though he come with few</i>;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <i>Alone will he come again</i>;<br />
+<i>God with him, and his right hand more strong</i><br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <i>Than a thousand thousand men</i>!</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;They file by Colway now;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; They rise o&rsquo;er Uplyme brow;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And faithful Taunton hails her hero-knight:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And girlhood&rsquo;s agile hand<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Weaves for the patriot band<br />
+The crown-emblazon&rsquo;d flag, their gathering star of fight.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;Ah flag of shame and woe!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; For not by these who go,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Scythe-men and club-men, foot and hunger-worn,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!-- page 133--><a name="page133"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 133</span>These
+levies raw and rude,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Can England be subdued,<br />
+Or that ancestral throne from its foundations torn!</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Yet by the dour deep trench<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Their mettle did not blench,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; When mist and midnight closed o&rsquo;er sad Sedgemoor;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Though on those hearts of oak<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The tall cuirassiers broke,<br />
+And Afric&rsquo;s tiger-bands sprang forth with sullen roar:</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Though the loud cannon plane<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Death&rsquo;s lightning-riven lane,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Levelling that unskill&rsquo;d valour, rude, unled:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;Yet happier in their fate<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Than whom the war-fiends wait<br />
+To rend them limb from limb, the gibbet-withering dead!</p>
+<p>&mdash;<i>Yet weep not, my child, though the dead be dead</i>,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <i>And the wounded rise not again</i>!<br />
+<i>For they are with God who for England fought</i>,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <i>And they bore them as Englishmen</i>.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Stout hearts, and sorely tried!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;But he, for whom they died,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Skulk&rsquo;d like the wolf in Cranborne, torn and gaunt:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Till, dragg&rsquo;d and bound, he knelt<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; To one no prayers could melt,<br />
+Nor bond of blood, nor fear of fate, from vengeance daunt.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;O hill of death and gore,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Fast by the tower&rsquo;d shore,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; What wealth of precious blood is thine, what tears!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; What calmly fronted scorn;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; What pangs, not vainly borne!<br />
+For heart beats hot with heart, and human grief endears!</p>
+<p><!-- page 134--><a name="page134"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 134</span>&mdash;<i>Then
+weep not, my child, though the days be dark</i>;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <i>Fear not; He will come again</i>,<br />
+<i>With Arthur and Harold and good Saint George</i>,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <i>King Monmouth and all his men</i>!</p>
+<p>Monmouth&rsquo;s invasion forms one of the most brilliant,&mdash;perhaps
+the most brilliant,&mdash;of Lord Macaulay&rsquo;s narratives.&nbsp;
+But many curious details are added in the <i>History</i> by Mr. G Roberts
+(1844).</p>
+<p>The belief, which this poem represents, that &lsquo;King Monmouth,&rsquo;
+as he was called in the West, would return, lasted long.&nbsp; He landed
+in Lyme Bay, June 11, 1685, between the Cobb (Harbour-pier) and the
+beginning of the Ware cliffs: marching north, after a few days, by the
+road which left the ruins of Colway House on the right and led over
+Uplyme to Axminster.</p>
+<p><i>Soho</i>; the watch-word on Monmouth&rsquo;s side at Sedgemoor;
+his London house was in the Fields, (now Square), bearing that name.</p>
+<p><i>Faithful Taunton</i>; here the Puritan spirit was strong; and
+here Monmouth was persuaded to take the title of king (June 20), symbolized
+by the flag which the young girls of Taunton presented to him.&nbsp;
+It bore a crown with the cypher J B.&mdash;Monmouth&rsquo;s own name
+being James.</p>
+<p><i>Dour deep trench</i>; Sedgemoor lies in a marshy district near
+Bridgewater, much intersected by trenches or &lsquo;Rhines.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+One, the Busses Rhine, lay between the two armies as they fought, July
+6.&nbsp; Monmouth was caught hiding in Cranborne Chase, July 8; executed,
+after a vain attempt to move the heart of his uncle the king, July 15,
+on Tower Hill.</p>
+<p><i>Afric&rsquo;s tiger-bands</i>; Kirke savage troops from Tangier.</p>
+<h3><!-- page 135--><a name="page135"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 135</span>WILLELMUS
+VAN NASSAU</h3>
+<p>Yes<span class="smcap">!</span> we confess it! &rsquo;mong the sons
+of Fate,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Earth&rsquo;s great ones, thou art great!<br />
+As that tall peak which from her silver cone<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of maiden snow unstain&rsquo;d<br />
+All but the bravest scares, and reigns alone</p>
+<p>In glacier isolation: Thus wert thou,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With that pale steadfast brow,<br />
+Gaunt aquiline: Thy whole life one labouring breath,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Yet the strong soul untamed;<br />
+France bridled, England saved, thy task ere death!</p>
+<p>&mdash;O day of triumph, when thy bloodless host<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; From Devon&rsquo;s russet coast<br />
+Through the fair capital of the garden-West,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And that, whose gracious spire<br />
+Like childhood&rsquo;s prayer springs heaven-ward unrepress&rsquo;d,</p>
+<p>To Thames march&rsquo;d legion-like, and at their tread<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The sullen despot fled,<br />
+And Law and Freedom fair,&mdash;so late restored,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And to so-perilous life,<br />
+While Stuart craft replaced the Usurper&rsquo;s sword,&mdash;</p>
+<p>Broke forth, as sunshine from the breaking sky,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; When vernal storm-wings fly!<br />
+That day was thine, great Chief, from sea to sea:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The whole land&rsquo;s welcome seem&rsquo;d<br />
+The welcome of one man! a realm by thee</p>
+<p>Deliver&rsquo;d!&mdash;But the crowning hour of fame,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The zenith of a name<br />
+Is ours once only: and he, too just, too stern,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <!-- page 136--><a name="page136"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 136</span>Too
+little Englishman,<br />
+A nation&rsquo;s gratitude did not care to earn,</p>
+<p>On wider aims, not worthier, set:&mdash;A soul<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Immured in self-control;<br />
+Saving the thankless in their own despite:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Then turning with a gasp<br />
+Of joy, to his own land by native right;</p>
+<p>Changing the Hall of Rufus and the Keep<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of Windsor&rsquo;s terraced steep<br />
+For Guelderland horizons, silvery-blue;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The green deer-twinkling glades,<br />
+And long, long, avenues of the stately Loo.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;William,&rsquo; says his all too zealous panegyrist, &lsquo;never
+became an Englishman.&nbsp; He served England, it is true; but he never
+loved her, and he never obtained her love.&nbsp; To him she was always
+a land of exile, visited with reluctance and quitted with delight. .
+. . Her welfare was not his chief object.&nbsp; Whatever patriotic feeling
+he had was for Holland. . . . In the gallery of Whitehall he pined for
+the familiar House in the Wood at the Hague, and never was so happy
+as when he could quit the magnificence of Windsor for his humbler seat
+at Loo:&rsquo; (Macaulay: <i>Hist</i>. ch. vii)</p>
+<p><i>One labouring breath</i>; William throughout life was tortured
+by asthma.</p>
+<p><i>Demon&rsquo;s russet coast</i>; Torbay.&mdash;<i>Capital of the
+garden-West</i>; Exeter.&mdash;<i>Gracious spire</i>; Salisbury.&mdash;<i>Hall
+of Rufus</i>; The one originally built by William II at Westminster.</p>
+<h3><!-- page 137--><a name="page137"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 137</span>THE
+CHILDLESS MOTHER</h3>
+<p>1700-1702</p>
+<p>Oft in midnight visions<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Ghostly by my bed<br />
+Stands a Father&rsquo;s image,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Pale discrown&eacute;d head:&mdash;<br />
+&mdash;I forsook thee, Father!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Was no child to thee!<br />
+Child-forsaken Mother,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Now &rsquo;tis so with me.</p>
+<p>Oft I see the brother,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Baby born to woe,<br />
+Crouching by the church-wall<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; From the bloodhound-foe.<br />
+Evil crown&rsquo;d of evil,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Heritage of strife!<br />
+Mine, an heirless sceptre:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; His, an exile life!</p>
+<p>&mdash;O my vanish&rsquo;d darlings,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; From the cradle torn!<br />
+Dewdrop lives, that never<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Saw their second morn!<br />
+Buds that fell untimely,&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Till one blossom grew;<br />
+As I watch&rsquo;d its beauty,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Fading whilst it blew.</p>
+<p>Thou wert more to me, Love,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; More than words can tell:<br />
+All my remnant sunshine<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Died in one farewell.<br />
+Midnight-mirk before me<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Now my life goes by,<br />
+<!-- page 138--><a name="page138"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 138</span>For
+the baby faces<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; As in vain I cry.</p>
+<p>O the little footsteps<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; On the nursery floor!<br />
+Lispings light and laughter<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; I shall hear no more!<br />
+Eyes that gleam&rsquo;d at waking<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Through their silken bars;<br />
+Starlike eyes of children,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Now beyond the stars!</p>
+<p>Where the murder&rsquo;d Mary<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Waits the rising sign,<br />
+They are laid in darkness,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Little lambs of mine.<br />
+Only this can comfort:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Safe from earthly harms<br />
+Christ the Saviour holds them<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In His loving arms:&mdash;</p>
+<p>Spring eternal round Him,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Roses ever fair:&mdash;<br />
+Will His mercy set them<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; All beside me there?<br />
+Will their Angels guide me<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Through the golden gate?<br />
+&mdash;Wait a little, children!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Mother, too, must wait!</p>
+<p><i>I forsook thee</i>; Marlborough, desirous to widen the breach
+between Anne and William III, influenced her to write to her Father,
+&lsquo;supplicating his forgiveness, and professing repentance for the
+part she had taken.&rsquo;</p>
+<p><i>Now &rsquo;tis so</i>; Anne &lsquo;was said to attribute the death
+of her children to the part she had taken in dethroning her father:&rsquo;
+(Lecky, <i>History of the Eighteenth Century</i>).</p>
+<p><i>The brother</i>; The infant son of James, known afterwards as
+the &lsquo;Old Pretender,&rsquo; or as James III.&nbsp; He was carried
+as an infant from the <!-- page 139--><a name="page139"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 139</span>Palace
+(Dec. 1688) to Lambeth, where he was in great peril of discovery.&nbsp;
+The story is picturesquely told by Macaulay.</p>
+<p><i>One blossom</i>; The Duke of Gloucester, who grew up to eleven
+years, dying in July 1700.&nbsp; After his death Anne signed, in private
+letters, &lsquo;your unfortunate&rsquo; friend.</p>
+<p>Anne&rsquo;s character, says the candid Lecky, &lsquo;though somewhat
+peevish and very obstinate, was pure, generous, simple, and affectionate;
+and she displayed, under bereavements far more numerous than fall to
+the share of most, a touching piety that endeared her to her people.&rsquo;</p>
+<p><i>Where the murder&rsquo;d Mary</i>; &lsquo;Above and around, in
+every direction,&rsquo; says Dean Stanley, describing the vault beneath
+the monument of Mary of Scotland in Henry the Seventh&rsquo;s Chapel,&mdash;&lsquo;crushing
+by the accumulated weight of their small coffins the receptacles of
+the illustrious dust beneath, lie the eighteen children of Queen Anne,
+dying in infancy or stillborn, ending with William Duke of Gloucester,
+the last hope of the race:&rsquo; (<i>Historical Memorials of Westminster
+Abbey</i>, ch. iii).</p>
+<h3>BLENHEIM</h3>
+<p>August 13: 1704</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Oft hast thou acted thy part,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; My country, worthily thee!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Lifted up often thy load<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Atlantean, enormous, with glee:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; For on thee the burden is laid to uphold<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; World-justice; to keep the balance of states;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; On thee the long cry of the tyrant-oppress&rsquo;d,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The oppress&rsquo;d in the name of liberty, waits:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Ready, aye ready, the blade<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; In its day to draw forth, unafraid;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Thou dost not blench from thy fate!<br />
+By thy high heart, only, secure; by thy magnanimity, great.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;E&rsquo;en so it was on the morn<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; When France with Spain, in one realm<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Welded, one thunderbolt, stood,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; With one stroke the world to o&rsquo;erwhelm.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <!-- page 140--><a name="page140"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 140</span>&mdash;They
+have pass&rsquo;d the great stream, they have stretch&rsquo;d their
+white camp<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Above the protecting morass and the dell,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Blenheim to Lutzingen, where the long wood<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In summer-thick leafage rounds o&rsquo;er the fell:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;England! in nine-fold advance<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Cast thy red flood upon France;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Over marsh over beck ye must go,<br />
+Wholly together! or, Danube to Rhine, all slides to the foe!</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As the lava thrusts onward its
+wall,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; One mass down the valley they tramp;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Fascine-fill the marsh and the stream;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Like hornets they swarm up the ramp,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Lancing a breach through the long palisade,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Where the rival swarms of the stubborn foe,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; While the sun goes high and goes down o&rsquo;er the fight,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Sting them back, blow answering blow:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; O life-blood lavish as rain<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; On war&rsquo;s red Aceldama plain!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; While the volleying death-rattle rings,<br />
+And the peasant pays for the pride and the fury-ambition of kings!</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And as those of Achaia and Troia<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; By the camp on the sand, so they<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; In the aether-amber of evening<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Kept even score in the fray;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Rank against rank, man match&rsquo;d with man,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In backward, forward, struggle enlaced,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Grappled and moor&rsquo;d to the ground where they stood<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; As wrestlers wrestling, as lovers embraced:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And the lightnings insatiable fly,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; As the lull of the tempest is nigh,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And each host in its agony reels,<br />
+And the musket falls hot from the hand, enflamed by the death that it
+deals.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<!-- page 141--><a name="page141"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 141</span>But,
+as when through the vale the rain-clouds<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Darker and heavier flow,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Above them the dominant summit<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Stands clad in calmness and snow;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; So thou, great Chief, awaiting the turn<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of the purple tide:&mdash;And the moment has come!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And the signal-word flies out with a smile,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And they charge the foe in his fastness, home:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; As one long wave when the wind<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Urges an ocean behind,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; One line, they sweep on the foe,<br />
+And France from our battle recoils, and Victory edges the blow.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As a rock by blue lightning divided<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Down the hillside scatters its course,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; So in twain their army is parted<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; By the sabres sabring in force:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; They have striven enough for honour! . . . and now<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Crumble and shatter, and sheer o&rsquo;er the bank<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Where torrent Danube hisses and swirls<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Slant and hurry in rankless rank:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; There are sixty thousand the morn<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &rsquo;Gainst the Lions marching in scorn;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; But twenty, when even is here,<br />
+Broken and brave and at bay, the Lilied banner uprear.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;So be it!&mdash;All honour
+to him<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Who snatch&rsquo;d the world, in his
+day,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; From an overmastering King,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; A colossal imperial sway!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Calm adamantine endurant chief,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Fit forerunner of him, whose crowning stroke,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Rousing his Guards on the Flandrian plain,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Unvassall&rsquo;d Europe from despot yoke!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; He who from Ganges to Rhine<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <!-- page 142--><a name="page142"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 142</span>Traced
+o&rsquo;er the world his red line<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Irresistible; while in the breast<br />
+Reign&rsquo;d devotedness utter, and self for England suppress&rsquo;d!</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;O names that enhearten the soul,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Blenheim and Waterloo!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; In no vain worship of glory<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The poet turns him to you!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; O sung by worthier song than mine,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; If the day of a nation&rsquo;s weakness rise,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of the little counsels that dare not dare,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of a land that no more on herself relies,&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; O breath of our great ones that were,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Burn out this taint in the air!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The old heart of England restore,<br />
+Till the blood of the heroes awake, and shout in her bosom once more!</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;Morning is fresh on the
+field<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Where the war-sick champions lie,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; By the wreckage of stiffening dead,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The anguish that yearns but to die.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Ah note of human agony heard<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The paean of victory over and through!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Ah voice of duty and justice stern<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That, at e&rsquo;en this price, commands them to do!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And a vision of Glory goes by,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Veil&rsquo;d head and remorseful eye,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; A triumph of Death!&mdash;And they cried<br />
+&lsquo;Only less dark than defeat is the morning of conquest&rsquo;;&mdash;and
+sigh&rsquo;d.</p>
+<p>Blenheim is fully described in Lord Stanhope&rsquo;s <i>Reign of
+Queen Anne</i>.&nbsp; Its importance as a critical battle in European
+history lies in the fact that the work of liberating the Great Alliance
+against the paramount power of France under Lewis XIV, (which England
+had unwisely fostered from Cromwell to James II), was secured by this
+victory.&nbsp; &lsquo;The loss of France could not be measured by men
+or fortresses.&nbsp; A <!-- page 143--><a name="page143"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 143</span>hundred
+victories since Rocroi had taught the world to regard the armies of
+Lewis as all but invincible, when Blenheim and the surrender of the
+flower of the French soldiery broke the spell&rsquo;: (Green: <i>History
+of the English People</i>: B. VIII: ch. iii).</p>
+<p>&lsquo;The French and Bavarians, who numbered, like their opponents,
+some fifty thousand men, lay behind a little stream which ran through
+swampy ground to the Danube . . . It was not till midday that Eugene,
+who commanded on the right, succeeded in crossing the stream.&nbsp;
+The English foot at once forded it on the left.&rsquo;&nbsp; They were
+repelled for the time.&nbsp; But, in the centre, Marlborough, &lsquo;by
+making an artificial road across the morass which covered it,&rsquo;
+in two desperate charges turned the day.</p>
+<p>A map of 1705 in the <i>Annals of Queen Anne&rsquo;s Reign</i>, shows
+vast hillsides to the right of the Allies covered with wood.&nbsp; This
+map also specifies the advance of the English in nine columns.</p>
+<p><i>Only less</i>; &lsquo;Marlborough,&rsquo; says Lord Stanhope,
+&lsquo;was a humane and compassionate man.&nbsp; Even in the eagerness
+to pursue fresh conquests he did not ever neglect the care of the wounded.&rsquo;</p>
+<h3>AT HURSLEY IN MARDEN</h3>
+<p>1712</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;We count him
+wise,<br />
+Timoleon, who in Syracuse laid down<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That gleaming bait of all men&rsquo;s eyes,<br />
+And for his cottage changed the invidious crown;<br />
+Moving serenely through his grayhair&rsquo;d day<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &rsquo;Mid vines and olives gray.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;He also, whom<br />
+The load of double empire, half the world<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; His own, within a living tomb<br />
+Press&rsquo;d down at Yuste,&mdash;Spain&rsquo;s great banner furl&rsquo;d<br />
+His winding-sheet around him,&mdash;while he strove<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The impalpable Above</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Though mortal
+yet,<br />
+To breathe, is blazon&rsquo;d on the sages&rsquo; roll:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <!-- page 144--><a name="page144"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 144</span>High
+soaring hearts, who could forget<br />
+The sceptre, to the hermitage of the soul<br />
+Retired, sweet solitudes of the musing eye,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And let the world go by!</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;There, if the
+cup<br />
+Of Time, that brims ere we can reach repose,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Fill&rsquo;d slow, the soul might summon up<br />
+The strenuous heat of youth, the silenced foes;<br />
+The deeds of fame, star-bright above the throne;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The better deeds unknown.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;There, when
+the cloud<br />
+Eased its dark breast in thunder, and the light<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Ran forth, their hearts recall the loud<br />
+Hoarse onset roar, the flashing of the fight;<br />
+Those other clouds piled-up in white array<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Whence deadlier lightnings play.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;There, when
+the seas<br />
+Murmur at midnight, and the dome is clear,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And from their seats in heaven the breeze<br />
+Loosens the stars, to blaze and disappear,<br />
+<i>And such as Glory</i>! . . . with a sigh suppress&rsquo;d<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; They smile, and turn to rest.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;But
+he, who here<br />
+Unglorious hides, untrain&rsquo;d, unwilling Lord,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The phantom king of half a year,<br />
+From England&rsquo;s throne push&rsquo;d by the bloodless sword,<br />
+Unheirlike heir to that colossal fame;&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; How should men name his name,</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;How rate his
+worth<br />
+With those heroic ones who, life&rsquo;s labour done,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Mark&rsquo;d out their six-foot couch of earth,<br />
+The laurell&rsquo;d rest of manhood&rsquo;s battle won?<br />
+<!-- page 145--><a name="page145"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 145</span>&mdash;Not
+so with him! . . . Yet, ere we turn away,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; A still small voice will say,</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;By other rule<br />
+Than man&rsquo;s coarse glory-test does God bestow<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; His crowns: exalting oft the fool,<br />
+So deem&rsquo;d, and the world-hero levelling low.<br />
+&mdash;And he, who from the palace pass&rsquo;d obscure,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And honourably poor,</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Spurning a
+throne<br />
+Held by blood-tenure, &rsquo;gainst a nation&rsquo;s will;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Lived on his narrow fields alone,<br />
+Content life&rsquo;s common service to fulfil;<br />
+Not careful of a carnage-bought renown,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Or that precarious crown:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Him count we
+wise,<br />
+Him also! though the chorus of the throng<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Be silent: though no pillar rise<br />
+In slavish adulation of the strong:&mdash;<br />
+But here, from blame of tongues and fame aloof,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &rsquo;Neath a low chancel roof,</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;The
+peace of God,&mdash;<br />
+He sleeps: unconscious hero!&nbsp; Lowly grave<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; By village-footsteps daily trod<br />
+Unconscious: or while silence holds the nave,<br />
+And the bold robin comes, when day is dim,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And pipes his heedless hymn.</p>
+<p><i>Timoleon</i>; was invited from Corinth by the Syracusans (<span class="smcap">b.c.</span>
+344) to be their leader in throwing off the tyranny of the second Dionysius.&nbsp;
+Having effected this, defeated the Carthaginian invaders, and reduced
+all the minor despotisms within Sicily, he voluntarily resigned his
+paramount power and died in honoured retirement.</p>
+<p><i>He also</i>; In 1556 the Emperor Charles V gave up all his dominions,
+withdrawing in 1557 to Yuste;&mdash;a monastery situated in a region
+of <!-- page 146--><a name="page146"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 146</span>singular
+natural beauty, between Xarandilla and Plasencia in Estremadura.&nbsp;
+He died there, Sep. 21, 1558.</p>
+<p><i>Loosens the stars</i>; So Vergil, <i>Georg</i>. I., 365:</p>
+<blockquote><p>Saepe etiam stellas vento inpendente videbis<br />
+Praecipites caelo labi . . .</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p><i>The phantom king</i>; Richard Cromwell was Protector from Sep.
+3, 1658 to May 25, 1659.&nbsp; After 1660 his life was that of a simple
+country gentleman, till his death in 1712, when he was buried at Hursley
+near Winchester.</p>
+<p><i>Unheirlike heir</i>; See <i>Appendix</i> E.</p>
+<h3>CHARLES EDWARD AT ROME</h3>
+<p>1785</p>
+<p>1</p>
+<p><span class="smcap">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;O</span>
+sunset<span class="smcap">, </span>of the rise<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Unworthy!&mdash;that, so brave, so clear, so gay;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; This, prison&rsquo;d in low-hanging earth-mists gray,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And ever-darken&rsquo;d skies:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Sad sunset of a royal race in gloom,<br />
+Accomplishing to the end the dolorous Stuart doom!</p>
+<p>2</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Ghost of a king, he sate<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In Rome, the city of ghosts and thrones outworn,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Drowsing his thoughts in wine;&mdash;a life forlorn;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pageant of faded state;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Aged before old age, and all that Past,<br />
+Like a forgotten thing of shame, behind him cast.</p>
+<p>3</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Yet if by chance the cry<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of the sharp pibroch through the palace thrill&rsquo;d,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; He felt the pang of high hope unfulfill&rsquo;d:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And once, when one came by<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <!-- page 147--><a name="page147"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 147</span>With
+the dear name of Scotland on his lips,<br />
+The heart broke forth behind that forty-years&rsquo; eclipse,</p>
+<p>4</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Triumphant in its pain:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Then the old days of Holyrood halls return&rsquo;d<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The leaden lethargy from his soul he spurn&rsquo;d,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And was the Prince again:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; All Scotland waking in him; all her bold<br />
+Chieftains and clans:&mdash;and all their tale, and his, he told:</p>
+<p>5</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;Told how, o&rsquo;er the
+boisterous seas<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; From faithless France he danced his way<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Where Alban&rsquo;s thousand islands
+lay,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The kelp-strown ridge of the lone Hebrides:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; How down each strath they stream&rsquo;d as springtide
+rills,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; When
+he to Finnan vale<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Came
+from Glenaladale,<br />
+And that snow-handful grew an avalanche of the hills.</p>
+<p>6</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;There Lochiel,
+Glengarry there,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Macdonald, Cameron: souls untried<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; In war, but stout in mountain-pride<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; All odds against all worlds to laugh and dare:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Unpurchaseable faith of chief and clan!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Enough!&nbsp;
+Their Prince has thrown<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Himself
+upon his own!<br />
+By hearts not heads they count, and manhood measures man!</p>
+<p>7</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;Torrent
+from Lochaber sprung,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Through Badenoch bare and Athole turn&rsquo;d,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The fettering Forth o&rsquo;erpast and
+spurn&rsquo;d,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Then on the smiling South in fury flung;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <!-- page 148--><a name="page148"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 148</span>Now
+gather head with all thine affluent force,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Draw
+forth the wild mellay!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; At
+Gladsmuir is the fray;<br />
+Scotland &rsquo;gainst England match&rsquo;d: White Rose against White
+Horse!</p>
+<p>8</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Cluster&rsquo;d
+down the slope they go,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Red clumps of ragged valour, down,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; While morn-mists yet the hill-top crown:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Clan Colla! on!&mdash;the Camerons touch the foe!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; One touch!&mdash;the battle breaks, the fight is fought,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; As
+summit-boulders glide<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Riddling
+the forest-side,<br />
+And in one moment&rsquo;s crash an army melts to nought!</p>
+<p>9</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;Ah gay
+nights of Holyrood!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Star-eyes of Scotland&rsquo;s fairest
+fair,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Sun-glintings of the golden hair,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Life&rsquo;s tide at full in that brief interlude!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Then as a bark slips from her natural coast<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Deep
+into seas unknown,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Scotland
+went forth alone,<br />
+Unfriended, unallied; a handful &rsquo;gainst a host.</p>
+<p>10</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;By the Bolder
+moorlands bare,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; By faithless Solway&rsquo;s glistening
+sands,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And where Caer Luel&rsquo;s dungeon stands,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Huge keep of ancient Urien, huge, foursquare:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Preston, and loyal Lancashire; . . . and then<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; From
+central Derby down,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; To
+strike the royal town,<br />
+And to his German realm the usurper thrust again!</p>
+<p><!-- page 149--><a name="page149"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 149</span>11</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;O the
+lithesome mountaineers,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Wild hearts with kingly boyhood high,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And victory in each forward eye,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; While stainless honour his white banner rears!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Then all the air with mountain-music thrill&rsquo;d,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The
+bonnets o&rsquo;er the brow,&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; My
+gallant clans! . . . and now<br />
+The voices closed in earth, in death the pibroch still&rsquo;d!</p>
+<p>12</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;As beneath
+Ben Aille&rsquo;s crest<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The west wind weaves its roof of gray,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And all the glory of the day<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Blooms off from loch and copse and green hill-breast;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; So, when that craven council spoke retreat,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The
+fateful shameful word<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; They
+heard,&mdash;and scarcely heard!<br />
+At Scotland&rsquo;s name how should the blood refuse to beat?</p>
+<p>13</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;O soul-piercing
+stroke of shame!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; O last, last, chance,&mdash;and wasted
+so!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Work wanting but the final blow,&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And, then, the hopeless hope, the crownless name,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The heart&rsquo;s desire defeated!&mdash;What boots now<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; That
+ice-brook-temper&rsquo;d will,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Indomitable
+still<br />
+As on through snow and storm their path the dalesmen plough?</p>
+<p>14</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;Yet
+again the tartans hail<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; One smile of Scotland&rsquo;s ancient
+face;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; One favour waits the faithful race,&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; One triumph more at Falkirk crowns the Gael!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <!-- page 150--><a name="page150"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 150</span>And
+O! what drop of Scottish blood that runs<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Could
+aught, save do or die,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And
+Bannockburn so nigh?<br />
+What cause to higher height could animate her sons?</p>
+<p>15</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Up the gorse-embattled
+brae,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; With equal eager feet they dash,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And on the moorland summit clash,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Friend mix&rsquo;d with foe in stormy disarray:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Once more the Northern charge asserts its right,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; As
+with the driving rain<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; They
+drive them down the plain:<br />
+That star alone before Drummossie gilds the night.</p>
+<p>16</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;Ah!&nbsp;
+No more!&mdash;let others tell<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The agony of the mortal moor;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Death&rsquo;s silent sheepfold dotted
+o&rsquo;er<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With Scotland&rsquo;s best, sleet-shrouded as they fell!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; There on the hearts, once mine, the snow-wreaths drift;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Night&rsquo;s
+winter dews at will<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; In
+bitter tears distil,<br />
+And o&rsquo;er the field the stars their squadrons coldly shift.</p>
+<p>17</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Faithful in
+a faithless age!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Yet happier, in that death-dew drench&rsquo;d,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; In each rude hand the claymore clench&rsquo;d,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Than who, to soothe a nation&rsquo;s craven rage,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To the red scaffold went with steady eye,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And
+the red martyr-grave,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; For
+one, who could not save!<br />
+Who only lives to weep the weight of life, and die!</p>
+<p>18</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;He ended, with such grief<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; As fits and honours manhood:&mdash;Then, once more<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <!-- page 151--><a name="page151"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 151</span>Weaving
+that long romantic lay, told o&rsquo;er<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The names of clan and chief<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Who perill&rsquo;d all for him, and died;&mdash;and how<br />
+In islets, caves, and clefts, and bare high mountain-brow</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;19</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The wanderer hid, and all<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; His Odyssey of woes!&mdash;Then, agonized<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Not by the wrongs he suffer&rsquo;d and despised,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; But for the Cause&rsquo;s fall,&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The faces, loved and lost, that for his sake<br />
+Were raven-torn and blanch&rsquo;d, high on the traitor&rsquo;s stake,</p>
+<p>20</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As on Drummossie drear<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; They fell,&mdash;as a dead body falls,&mdash;so he;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Swoon-senseless at that killing memory<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Seen across year on year:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; O human tears!&nbsp; O honourable pain!<br />
+Pity unchill&rsquo;d by age, and wounds that bleed again!</p>
+<p>21</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;Ah, much enduring heart!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Ah soul, miscounsell&rsquo;d oft and lured astray,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In that long life-despair, from wisdom&rsquo;s way<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And thy young hero-part!&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;And yet&mdash;<span class="smcap">Dilexit multum!</span>&mdash;In
+that cry<br />
+Love&rsquo;s gentler judgment pleads; thine epitaph a sigh!</p>
+<p>The sad old age of Prince Charles is described by Lord Mahon [Stanhope]
+in his able <i>History</i>: ch. xxx: and some additional details will
+be found in Chambers&rsquo; narrative of the expedition.&nbsp; During
+later life, an almost entire silence seems to have been maintained by
+the Prince upon his earlier days and his royal claims.&nbsp; But the
+bagpipe was occasionally heard in the Roman Palace, and a casual visit,
+which Lord Mahon fixes in 1785, drew forth the recital which is the
+subject of this poem.&nbsp; The prince fainted as he recalled what his
+Highland followers had gone through, and his daughter rushing in exclaimed
+to the visitor, &lsquo;Sir! what is this!&nbsp; You must have been <!-- page 152--><a name="page152"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 152</span>speaking
+to my father about Scotland and the Highlanders!&nbsp; No one dares
+to mention these subjects in his presence:&rsquo; (Mahon: ch. xxvi).</p>
+<p>St. 2 <i>Drowsing His thoughts</i>; The habit of intemperance, common
+in that century to many who had not Charles Edward&rsquo;s excuses,
+appear to have been learned during the long privations which accompanied
+his wanderings, between Culloden and his escape to France.</p>
+<p>St. 5 <i>Hebrides</i>; Charles landed at Erisca, an islet between
+Barra and South Uist, in July 1745.</p>
+<p>St. 7 <i>Fettering Forth</i>; &lsquo;Forth,&rsquo; according to the
+proverb, &lsquo;bridles the wild Highlandman.&rsquo;&mdash;Charles passed
+it at the Ford of Frew, about eight miles above Stirling.&mdash;<i>At
+Gladsmuir</i>; or Preston Pans; Sep. 21, 1745.&mdash;<i>White Horse</i>;
+The armorial bearing of Hanover.</p>
+<p>St. 8 <i>Clan Colla</i>; general name for the sept of the Macdonalds.</p>
+<p>St. 10 <i>Caer Luel</i>; Urien ap Urbgen is an early hero of Strathclyde
+or Alcluith, the British kingdom lying between Dumbarton and Carlisle,
+then Caer Luel.</p>
+<p>St. 12 <i>Ben Aille</i>; a mountain over Loch Ericht in the central
+Highlands.</p>
+<p>St. 13 <i>Ice-brook-temper&rsquo;d</i>; &lsquo;It is a sword of Spain,
+the ice-brook&rsquo;s temper&rsquo;: (<i>Othello</i>: A. 5: S. 2).</p>
+<p>St. 14 <i>At Falkirk</i>; Jan 17, 1746.&nbsp; &lsquo;On the eve after
+his victory Charles again encamped on Bannockburn.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>St. 16 <i>The mortal moor</i>; named Culloden and Drummossie: Ap.
+16, 1746.&nbsp; The cold at that time was very severe.</p>
+<p>St. 17&nbsp; A <i>nation&rsquo;s craven rage</i>; See <i>Appendix</i>
+F.</p>
+<p>St. 21&nbsp; <i>Love&rsquo;s gentler judgment</i>; We may perhaps
+quote on his behalf Vergil&rsquo;s beautiful words</p>
+<blockquote><p>. . . utcumque ferent ea facta minores,<br />
+Vincet amor patriae laudumque inmensa cupido.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>&mdash;It is also pleasant to record that over the coffin of Charles
+in S. Peter&rsquo;s, Rome, a monument was placed by George the Fourth,
+upon which, by a graceful and gallant &lsquo;act of oblivion,&rsquo;
+are inscribed the names of James the Third, Charles the Third, and Henry
+the Ninth, &lsquo;Kings of England.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>On the simple monument set up by his brother Henry in S. Pietro,
+Frascati, it may be worth notice that Charles is only described as <i>Paterni
+iuris et regiae</i> | <i>dignitatis successor et heres</i>:&mdash;the
+title, King, (given to his Father in the inscription), not being assigned
+to Charles, or assumed by the Cardinal.</p>
+<h3><!-- page 153--><a name="page153"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 153</span>TRAFALGAR</h3>
+<p>October 21: 1805</p>
+<p>Heard ye the thunder of battle<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Low in the South and afar?<br />
+Saw ye the flash of the death-cloud<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Crimson o&rsquo;er Trafalgar?<br />
+Such another day never<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; England will look on again,<br />
+When the battle fought was the hottest,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And the hero of heroes was slain!</p>
+<p>For the fleet of France and the force of Spain were gather&rsquo;d
+for fight,<br />
+A greater than Philip their lord, a new Armada in might:&mdash;<br />
+And the sails were aloft once more in the deep Gaditanian bay,<br />
+Where <i>Redoubtable</i> and <i>Bucentaure</i> and great <i>Trinidada</i>
+lay;<br />
+Eager-reluctant to close; for across the bloodshed to be<br />
+Two navies beheld one prize in its glory,&mdash;the throne of the sea!<br />
+Which were bravest, who should tell? for both were gallant and true;<br />
+But the greatest seaman was ours, of all that sail&rsquo;d o&rsquo;er
+the blue.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;From Cadiz the enemy sallied: they knew not Nelson
+was there;<br />
+His name a navy to us, but to them a flag of despair.<br />
+&rsquo;Twixt Algeziras and Ayamonte he guarded the coast,<br />
+Till he bore from Tavira south; and they now must fight, or be lost;&mdash;<br />
+Vainly they steer&rsquo;d for the Rock and the Midland sheltering sea,<br />
+For he headed the Admirals round, constraining them under his lee,<br />
+<!-- page 154--><a name="page154"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 154</span>Villeneuve
+of France, and Gravina of Spain: so they shifted their ground,<br />
+They could choose,&mdash;they were more than we;&mdash;and they faced
+at Trafalgar round;<br />
+Rampart-like ranged in line, a sea-fortress angrily tower&rsquo;d!<br />
+In the midst, four-storied with guns, the dark <i>Trinidada</i> lower&rsquo;d.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;So with those.&mdash;But meanwhile, as against
+some dyke that men massively rear,<br />
+From on high the torrent surges, to drive through the dyke as a spear,<br />
+Eagled-eyed e&rsquo;en in his blindness, our chief sets his double array,<br />
+Making the fleet two spears, to thrust at the foe, any way, . . .<br />
+&lsquo;Anyhow!&mdash;without orders, each captain his Frenchman may
+grapple perforce:<br />
+Collingwood first&rsquo; (yet the <i>Victory</i> ne&rsquo;er a whit
+slacken&rsquo;d her course)<br />
+&lsquo;Signal for action!&nbsp; Farewell! we shall win, but we meet
+not again!&rsquo;<br />
+&mdash;Then a low thunder of readiness ran from the decks o&rsquo;er
+the main,<br />
+And on,&mdash;as the message from masthead to masthead flew out like
+a flame,<br />
+<span class="smcap">England expects every man will do his duty,&mdash;</span>they
+came.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;Silent they come:&mdash;While the thirty
+black forts of the foeman&rsquo;s array<br />
+Clothe them in billowy snow, tier speaking o&rsquo;er tier as they lay;<br />
+Flashes that thrust and drew in, as swords when the battle is rife;&mdash;<br />
+<!-- page 155--><a name="page155"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 155</span>But
+ours stood frowningly smiling, and ready for death as for life.<br />
+&mdash;O in that interval grim, ere the furies of slaughter embrace,<br />
+Thrills o&rsquo;er each man some far echo of England; some glance of
+some face!<br />
+&mdash;Faces gazing seaward through tears from the ocean-girt shore;<br />
+Faces that ne&rsquo;er can be gazed on again till the death-pang is
+o&rsquo;er. . . .<br />
+Lone in his cabin the Admiral kneeling, and all his great heart<br />
+As a child&rsquo;s to the mother, goes forth to the loved one, who bade
+him depart<br />
+. . . O not for death, but glory! her smile would welcome him home!<br />
+&mdash;Louder and thicker the thunderbolts fall:&mdash;and silent they
+come.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As when beyond Dongola the lion, whom hunters attack,<br />
+Plagued by their darts from afar, leaps in, dividing them back;<br />
+So between Spaniard and Frenchman the <i>Victory</i> wedged with a shout,<br />
+Gun against gun; a cloud from her decks and lightning went out;<br />
+Iron hailing of pitiless death from the sulphury smoke;<br />
+Voices hoarse and parch&rsquo;d, and blood from invisible stroke.<br />
+Each man stood to his work, though his mates fell smitten around,<br />
+As an oak of the wood, while his fellow, flame-shatter&rsquo;d, besplinters
+the ground:&mdash;<br />
+Gluttons of danger for England, but sparing the foe as he lay;<br />
+For the spirit of Nelson was on them, and each was Nelson that day.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<!-- page 156--><a name="page156"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 156</span>&lsquo;She
+has struck!&rsquo;&mdash;he shouted&mdash;&lsquo;She burns, the <i>Redoubtable</i>!&nbsp;
+Save whom we can,<br />
+Silence our guns&rsquo;:&mdash;for in him the woman was great in the
+man,<br />
+In that heroic heart each drop girl-gentle and pure,<br />
+Dying by those he spared;&mdash;and now Death&rsquo;s triumph was sure!<br />
+From the deck the smoke-wreath clear&rsquo;d, and the foe set his rifle
+in rest,<br />
+Dastardly aiming, where Nelson stood forth, with the stars on his breast,&mdash;<br />
+&lsquo;In honour I gain&rsquo;d them, in honour I die with them&rsquo;
+. . . Then, in his place,<br />
+Fell . . . &lsquo;Hardy! &rsquo;tis over; but let them not know&rsquo;:
+and he cover&rsquo;d his face.<br />
+Silent, the whole fleet&rsquo;s darling they bore to the twilight below:<br />
+And above the war-thunder came shouting, as foe struck his flag after
+foe.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;To his heart death rose: and for Hardy, the faithful,
+he cried in his pain,&mdash;<br />
+&lsquo;How goes the day with us, Hardy?&rsquo; . . . &lsquo;&rsquo;Tis
+ours&rsquo;:&mdash;Then he knew, not in vain<br />
+Not in vain for his comrades and England he bled: how he left her secure,<br />
+Queen of her own blue seas, while his name and example endure.<br />
+O, like a lover he loved her! for her as water he pours<br />
+Life-blood and life and love, lavish&rsquo;d all for her sake, and for
+ours!<br />
+&mdash;&lsquo;Kiss me, Hardy!&mdash;Thank God!&mdash;I have done my
+duty!&rsquo;&mdash;And then<br />
+Fled that heroic soul, and left not his like among men.</p>
+<p>Hear ye the heart of a nation<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Groan, for her saviour is gone;<br />
+<!-- page 157--><a name="page157"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 157</span>Gallant
+and true and tender,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Child and chieftain in one?<br />
+Such another day never<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; England will weep for again,<br />
+When the triumph darken&rsquo;d the triumph,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And the hero of heroes was slain.</p>
+<h3>TORRES VEDRAS</h3>
+<p>1810</p>
+<p>As who, while erst the Achaians wall&rsquo;d the shore,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Stood Atlas-like before,<br />
+A granite face against the Trojan sea<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of foes who seethed and foam&rsquo;d,<br />
+From that stern rock refused incessantly;</p>
+<p>So He, in his colossal lines, astride<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; From sea to river-side,<br />
+Alhandra past Aruda to the Towers,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Our one true man of men<br />
+Frown&rsquo;d back bold France and all the Imperial powers.</p>
+<p>For when that Eagle, towering in his might<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Beyond the bounds of Right,<br />
+O&rsquo;ercanopied Europe with his rushing wings,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And all the world was prone<br />
+Before him as a God, a King of Kings;</p>
+<p>When Freedom to one isle, her ancient shrine,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; O&rsquo;er the free favouring brine<br />
+Fled, as a girl by lustful war and shame<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Discloister&rsquo;d from her home,<br />
+Barefoot, with glowing eyes, and cheeks on flame,</p>
+<p><!-- page 158--><a name="page158"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 158</span>And
+call&rsquo;d aloud, and bade the realm awake<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To arms for Freedom&rsquo;s sake:<br />
+&mdash;Yet,&mdash;for the land had rusted long in rest,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The nerves of war unstrung,<br />
+Faint thoughts or rash alternate in her breast,</p>
+<p>While purblind party-strife with venomous spite<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Made plausible wrong seem right,&mdash;<br />
+O then for that unselfish hero-chief<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Tender and true, and lost<br />
+At Trafalgar,&mdash;or him, whose patriot grief</p>
+<p>Died with the prayer for England, as he died,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In vain we might have cried!<br />
+But this one pillar rose, and bore the war<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Upon himself alone;<br />
+Supreme o&rsquo;er Fortune and her idle star.</p>
+<p>For not by might but mind, by skill, not chance,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; He headed stubborn France<br />
+From Tagus back by Douro to Garonne;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And on the last, worst, field,<br />
+The crown of all his hundred victories won,</p>
+<p>World-calming Waterloo!&mdash;Then, laying by<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; War&rsquo;s fearful enginery,<br />
+In each state-tempest mann&rsquo;d the wearying helm;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; E&rsquo;en through life&rsquo;s winter-years<br />
+Serving with all his strength the ungrateful realm.</p>
+<p>O firm and foursquare mind!&nbsp; O solid will<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Fix&rsquo;d, inexpugnable<br />
+By crowns or censures! only bent to do<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The day&rsquo;s work in the day;&mdash;<br />
+Fame with her idiot yelp might come, or go!</p>
+<p>O breast that dared with Nature&rsquo;s patience wait<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Till the slow wheels of Fate<br />
+<!-- page 159--><a name="page159"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 159</span>Struck
+the consummate hour; in leash the while<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Reining his eager bands,<br />
+The prey in view,&mdash;with that foreseeing smile!</p>
+<p>And when for blood on Salamanca ridge<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Morn broke, or Orthez&rsquo; bridge,<br />
+He read the ground, and his stern squadrons moved<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And placed with artist-skill,<br />
+Red counters in the perilous game they loved,</p>
+<p>Impassive, iron, he and they!&mdash;and then<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With eagle-keener ken<br />
+Glanced through the field, the crisis-instant knew,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And through the gap of war<br />
+His thundering legions on their victory threw.</p>
+<p>Not iron, he, but adamant!&nbsp; Diamond-strong,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And diamond-clear of wrong:<br />
+For truth he struck right out, whate&rsquo;er befall!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Above the fear of fear:<br />
+Duty for duty&rsquo;s sake his all-in-all.</p>
+<p>Among the many wonders of Wellington&rsquo;s Peninsular campaign,
+from Vimiera (1808) to Toulouse (1814), the magnificent unity of scheme
+preserved throughout is, perhaps, the most wonderful: the dramatic coherence,
+development, and final catastrophe of triumph.&nbsp; For this, however,
+readers must be referred to Napier&rsquo;s <i>History</i>; Enough here
+to add that one of the most decisive steps was the formation of the
+lines in defence of Lisbon, of which the most northerly ran from Alhandra
+on the Tagus by Aruda and Zibreira to Torres Vedras near the sea-coast
+at the mouth of the Zizandre.</p>
+<p><i>When Freedom</i>; the unwise and uncertain management of the campaign
+by the English home Government has been set forth by Napier with so
+much emphasis as, in some degree, to impair the reader&rsquo;s full
+conviction.&nbsp; Yet the amazing superiority in energy and wisdom with
+which Wellington towered over his contemporaries, (the field being,
+however, cleared by the recent deaths of Nelson and Pitt), is so patent,
+that this attempt to do justice to his greatness is offered with hesitation
+and apology.</p>
+<p><i>Orthez&rsquo; Bridge</i>; crosses the river named Gave de Pau;&mdash;and
+covered Soult&rsquo;s forces then lying north of it.</p>
+<h3><!-- page 160--><a name="page160"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 160</span>THE
+SOLDIERS&rsquo; BATTLE</h3>
+<p>November 5: 1854</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In the solid sombre mist<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And the drizzling dazzling shower<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; They may mass them as they list,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The gray-coat Russian power;<br />
+They are fifties &rsquo;gainst our tens, they, and more!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And from the fortress-town<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In silent squadrons down<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; O&rsquo;er the craggy mountain-crown<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Unseen, they pour.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;On the meagre British line<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That northern ocean press&rsquo;d;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But we never knew how few<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Were we who held the crest!<br />
+While within the curtain-mist dark shadows loom<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Making the gray more gray,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Till the volley-flames betray<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With one flash the long array:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And then, the gloom.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;For our narrow line too wide<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; On the narrow crest we stood,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And in pride we named it <i>Home</i>,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; As we sign&rsquo;d it with our blood.<br />
+And we held-on all the morning, and the tide<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of foes on that low dyke<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Surged up, and fear&rsquo;d to strike,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Or on the bayonet-spike<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Flung them, and died.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It was no covert, that,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &rsquo;Gainst the shrieking cannon-ball!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But the stout hearts of our men<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <!-- page 161--><a name="page161"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 161</span>Were
+the bastion and the wall:&mdash;<br />
+And their chiefs hardly needed give command;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; For they tore through copse and gray<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Mist that before them lay,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And each man fought, that day,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; For his own hand!</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Yet should we not forget<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &rsquo;Gainst that dun sea of foes<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; How Egerton bank&rsquo;d his line,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Till in front a cloud uprose<br />
+From the level rifle-mouths; and they dived<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With bayonet-thrust beneath;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Clench&rsquo;d teeth and sharp-drawn breath,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Plunging to certain death,&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And yet survived!</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Nor the gallant chief who led<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Those others, how he fell;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; When our men the captive guns<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Set free they loved so well,<br />
+And embraced them as live things, by loss endear&rsquo;d:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Nor, when the crucial stroke<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; On their last asylum broke,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And e&rsquo;en those hearts of oak<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Might well have fear&rsquo;d,&mdash;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;How Stanley to the fore<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The citadel rush&rsquo;d to guard,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With that old Albuera cry<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <i>Fifty-seventh</i>!&nbsp; <i>Die hard</i>!<br />
+Yet saw not how his lads clear the crest,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And, each one confronting five,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The stubborn squadrons rive,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And backward, downward, drive,&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;Death-call&rsquo;d to rest!</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<!-- page 162--><a name="page162"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 162</span>&mdash;O
+proud and sad for thee!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And proud and sad for those<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Who on that stern foreign field<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Not seeking, found repose,<br />
+As for England dear their life they gladly shed!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Yet in death bethought them where,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Not on these hillsides bare,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But within sweet English air<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Their own home-dead</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In a green and sure repose<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Beside God&rsquo;s house are laid:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Then faced the charging foes<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Unmoved, unhelp&rsquo;d, unafraid:&mdash;<br />
+For they knew that God would rate each shatter&rsquo;d limb<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Death-torn for England&rsquo;s sake,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And in Christ&rsquo;s own mercy take<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; On the day when souls shall wake,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Their souls to Him!</p>
+<p>The battle of Inkermann was mainly fought on a ridge of rock which
+projects from the south-eastern angle of Sebastapol: the English centre
+of operations being the ill-fortified line named the &lsquo;Home Ridge.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+The numbers engaged in field-operations, roughly speaking, were 4,000
+English against 40,000 Russians.</p>
+<p><i>The curtain-mist</i>; The battle began about 6 <span class="smcap">a.m.
+</span>under heavy mist and drizzling rain, which lasted for several
+hours.&nbsp; Through this curtain the Russian forces coming down from
+the hill were seen only when near enough to darken the mist by their
+masses.</p>
+<p><i>Egerton</i>; He commanded four companies of the 77th, and charged
+early in the battle with brilliant success;&mdash;his men, about 250,
+scattering 1500 Russians.</p>
+<p><i>The gallant chief</i>; General Soimonoff, killed just after Egerton&rsquo;s
+charge.</p>
+<p><i>With that old Albuera cry</i>; Prominent in the defence of the
+English main base of operations, the Home Ridge, against a weighty Russian
+advance, was Captain Stanley, commanding the 57th.&nbsp; This regiment,
+it was said, at the battle of Albuera had been encouraged by its colonel
+<!-- page 163--><a name="page163"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 163</span>with
+the words, &lsquo;Fifty-seventh, die hard&rsquo;:&mdash;and Stanley,
+having less than 400 against 2000, thought the time had come to remind
+his &lsquo;Die-hards&rsquo; of their traditional gallantry;&mdash;after
+which he himself at once fell mortally wounded.</p>
+<h3>AFTER CAWNPORE</h3>
+<p>June: 1857</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Fourteen<span class="smcap">,
+</span>all told, no more,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pack&rsquo;d close
+within the door<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Of that old idol-shrine:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And at them, as they
+stand,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And from that English
+band,<br />
+The leaden shower went out, and Death proclaim&rsquo;d them<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <i>Mine</i>!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Fourteen against an army; they, no more,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Had &rsquo;scaped Cawnpore.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;With each quick
+volley-flash<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The bullets ping and
+plash:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Yet, though the tropic
+noon<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; With furnace-fury broke<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The sulphur-curling
+smoke,<br />
+Scarr&rsquo;d, sear&rsquo;d, thirst-silenced, hunger-faint, they stood:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And soon<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A dusky wall,&mdash;death sheltering life,&mdash;uprose<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Against their foes.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Behind them
+now is cast<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The horror of the past;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The fort that was no
+fort,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The deep dark-heaving
+flood<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Of foes that broke
+in blood<br />
+On our devoted camp, victims of fiendish sport;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; From that last huddling refuge lured to fly,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;And help so
+nigh!</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<!-- page 164--><a name="page164"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 164</span>Down
+toward the reedy shore<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; That fated remnant pour,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Had Fear and Death beside;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And other spectres yet<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Of darker vision flit,&mdash;<br />
+Old unforgotten wrongs, the harshness and the pride<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of that imperial race which sway&rsquo;d the land<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; By sheer command!</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;O little hands that strain<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; A mother&rsquo;s hand in vain<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; With terror vague and vast:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Parch&rsquo;d eyes that cannot shed<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; One tear upon the head,<br />
+A young child&rsquo;s head, too bright for such fell death to blast!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Ah! sadder captive train ne&rsquo;er filed to doom<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Through vengeful Rome!</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;From Ganges&rsquo; reedy shore<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The death-boats they unmoor,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Stack&rsquo;d high with hopeless hearts;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; A slowly-drifting freight<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Through the red jaws of Fate,<br />
+Death-blazing banks between, and flame-wing&rsquo;d arrow-darts:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Till down the holy stream those cargoes pour<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Their flame and gore.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In feral order slow<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The slaughter-barges go,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Martyrs of heathen scorn:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; While, saved from flood and fire<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; To glut the tyrant&rsquo;s ire,<br />
+The quick and dead in one, from their red shambles borne,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Maiden and child, in that dark grave they throw,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Our well of woe!</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<!-- page 165--><a name="page165"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 165</span>Ah
+spot on which we gaze<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Through Time&rsquo;s all-softening haze,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; In peace, on them at peace<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And taken home to God!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;O whether &rsquo;neath the sod,<br />
+Or sea, or desert sand, what care,&mdash;if that release<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; From this dim shadow-land, through pathways dim,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Bear us to Him!</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But those fourteen, the while,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Wrapt in the present, smile<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; On their grim baffled foe;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Till o&rsquo;er the wall he heaps<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The fuel-pile, and steeps<br />
+With all that burns and blasts;&mdash;and now, perforce, they go<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Hack&rsquo;d down and thinn&rsquo;d, beyond that temple-door<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; But Seven,&mdash;no
+more.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;O Elements at strife<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; With this poor human life,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Stern laws of Nature fair!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; By flame constrain&rsquo;d to fly<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The treacherous stream they try,&mdash;<br />
+And those dark Ganges waves suck down the souls they bear!&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Ah, crowning anguish!&nbsp; Dawn of hope in sight;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Then, final night!</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And now, Four heads, no more,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Life&rsquo;s flotsam flung ashore,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; They lie:&mdash;But not as they<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Who o&rsquo;er a dreadful past<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The heart&rsquo;s-ease sigh may cast!<br />
+Too worn! too tried!&mdash;their lives but given them as a prey!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Whilst all seems now a dream, a nought of nought,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; For which they fought!</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<!-- page 166--><a name="page166"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 166</span>&mdash;O
+stout Fourteen, who bled<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; O&rsquo;erwhelm&rsquo;d, not vanquish&eacute;d!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; In those dark days of blood<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; How many dared, and died,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And others at their side<br />
+Fresh heroes, sprang,&mdash;a race that cannot be subdued!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;Like them who pass&rsquo;d Death&rsquo;s vale, and
+lived;&mdash;the Four<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Saved from Cawnpore!</p>
+<p>The English garrison at Cawnpore, with a large number of sick, women,
+and children, were besieged in their hastily made and weak earthworks
+by Nana Sahib from June 6 to June 25, 1857.&nbsp; Compelled to surrender,
+under promise of safe convoy down the Ganges, on the 27th they were
+massacred by musketry from the banks; the thatch of the river-boats
+being also fired.&nbsp; The survivors were murdered and thrown into
+the well upon Havelock&rsquo;s approach on July 15.</p>
+<p>One boat managed to escape unburnt on June 27.&nbsp; It was chased
+through the 28th and 29th, by which time the crowd on board was reduced
+to fourteen men, one of whom, Mowbray-Thomson, has left a narrative
+equally striking from its vividness and its modesty.&nbsp; Seven escaped
+from the small temple in which they defended themselves; four only finally
+survived to tell the story.</p>
+<p><i>A dusky wall</i>; &lsquo;After a little time they stood behind
+a rampart of black and bloody corpses, and fired, with comparative security,
+over this bulwark:&rsquo; (Kaye: <i>Sepoy War</i>: B. V: ch. ii).</p>
+<h3>MOUNT VERNON</h3>
+<p>October 5: 1860</p>
+<p>Before the hero&rsquo;s grave he stood,<br />
+&mdash;A simple stone of rest, and bare<br />
+To all the blessing of the air,&mdash;<br />
+And Peace came down in sunny flood<br />
+From the blue haunts of heaven, and smiled<br />
+Upon the household reconciled.</p>
+<p><!-- page 167--><a name="page167"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 167</span>&mdash;A
+hundred years have hardly flown<br />
+Since in this hermitage of the West<br />
+&rsquo;Mid happy toil and happy rest,<br />
+Loving and loved among his own,<br />
+His days fulfill&rsquo;d their fruitful round,<br />
+Seeking no move than what they found.</p>
+<p>Sweet byways of the life withdrawn!<br />
+Yet here his country&rsquo;s voice,&mdash;the cry<br />
+Of man for natural liberty,&mdash;<br />
+That great Republic in her dawn,<br />
+The immeasurable Future,&mdash;broke;<br />
+And to his fate the Leader woke.</p>
+<p>Not eager, yet, the blade to bare<br />
+Before the Father-country&rsquo;s eyes,&mdash;<br />
+&mdash;E&rsquo;en if a parent&rsquo;s rights, unwise,<br />
+With that bold Son he grudged to share,<br />
+In manhood strong beyond the sea,<br />
+And ripe to wed with Liberty!</p>
+<p>&mdash;Yet O! when once the die was thrown,<br />
+With what unselfish patient skill,<br />
+Clear-piercing flame of changeless will,<br />
+The one high heart that moved alone<br />
+Sedate through the chaotic strife,&mdash;<br />
+He taught mankind the hero-life!</p>
+<p>As when the God whom Pheidias moulds,<br />
+Clothed in marmoreal calm divine,<br />
+Veils all that strength &rsquo;neath beauty&rsquo;s line,<br />
+All energy in repose enfolds;&mdash;<br />
+So He, in self-effacement great,<br />
+Magnanimous to endure and wait.</p>
+<p>O Fabius of a wider world!<br />
+Master of Fate through self-control<br />
+And utter stainlessness of soul!<br />
+<!-- page 168--><a name="page168"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 168</span>And
+when war&rsquo;s weary sign was furl&rsquo;d,<br />
+Prompt with both hands to welcome in<br />
+The white-wing&rsquo;d Peace he warr&rsquo;d to win!</p>
+<p>Then, to that so long wish&rsquo;d repose!<br />
+The liberal leisure of the farm,<br />
+The garden joy, the wild-wood charm;<br />
+Life ebbing to its perfect close<br />
+Like some white altar-lamp that pales<br />
+And self-consumed its light exhales.</p>
+<p>No wrathful tempest smote its wing<br />
+Against life&rsquo;s tender flickering flame;<br />
+No tropic gloom in terror came;<br />
+Slow waning as a summer-spring<br />
+The soul breathed out herself, and slept,<br />
+And to the end her beauty kept.</p>
+<p>Then, as a mother&rsquo;s love and fears<br />
+Throng round the child, unseen but felt,<br />
+So by his couch his nation knelt,<br />
+Loving and worshipping with her tears:&mdash;<br />
+Tears!&mdash;late amends for all that debt<br />
+Due to the Liberator yet!</p>
+<p>For though the years their golden round<br />
+O&rsquo;er all the lavish region roll,<br />
+And realm on realm, from pole to pole,<br />
+In one beneath thy stars be bound:<br />
+The far-off centuries as they flow,<br />
+No whiter name than this shall know!</p>
+<p>&mdash;O larger England o&rsquo;er the wave,<br />
+Larger, not greater, yet!&mdash;With joy<br />
+Of generous hearts ye hail&rsquo;d the Boy<br />
+Who bow&rsquo;d before the sacred grave,<br />
+With Love&rsquo;s fair freight across the sea<br />
+Sped from the Fatherland to thee!</p>
+<p><!-- page 169--><a name="page169"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 169</span>And
+Freedom on that Empire-throne<br />
+Blest in his Mother&rsquo;s rule revered,<br />
+On popular love a kingdom rear&rsquo;d,<br />
+And rooted in the years unknown,&mdash;<br />
+Land rich in old Experience&rsquo; store<br />
+And holy legacies of yore,</p>
+<p>And youth eternal, ever-new,&mdash;<br />
+From the high heaven look&rsquo;d out:&mdash;and saw<br />
+This other later realm of Law,<br />
+Of that old household first-born true,<br />
+And lord of half a world!&mdash;and smiled<br />
+Upon the nations reconciled.</p>
+<p>The date prefixed is that of the visit which the Prince of Wales
+paid to the tomb of Washington: carrying home thence, as one of the
+most distinguished of his hosts said, &lsquo;an unwritten treaty of
+amity and alliance.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Mount Vernon on the Potomac, named after the Admiral, was the family
+seat of Augustine, father to George Washington, and the residence of
+the latter from 1752.&nbsp; But all his early years also had been spent
+in that neighbourhood, in those country pursuits which formed his ideal
+of life: and thither, on resigning his commission as Commander-in-Chief,
+he retired in 1785; devoting himself to farming and gardening with all
+the strenuousness and devoted passion of a Roman of Vergil&rsquo;s type.&nbsp;
+And there (Dec. 1799) was he buried.</p>
+<p><i>Not eager</i>; When the ill-feeling between England and America
+deepened after 1765, Washington &lsquo;was less eager than some others
+in declaring or declaiming against the mother country;&rsquo; (Mahon:
+<i>Hist</i>. ch. lii).</p>
+<p><i>Ripe to wed with Liberty</i>; See <i>Appendix</i> G.</p>
+<p><i>And to the end</i>; See Petrarch&rsquo;s beautiful lines: <i>Trionfo
+della Morte</i>, cap. I.</p>
+<p><i>Due to the Liberator</i>; Compare the epitaph by Ennius on Scipio:</p>
+<blockquote><p>Hic est ille situs, cui nemo civi&rsquo; neque hostis<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Quivit pro factis reddere opis pretium.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>History, it may be said with reasonable confidence, records no hero
+more unselfish, no one less stained with human error and frailty, than
+George Washington.</p>
+<p><i>The years unknown</i>; It is to Odin, whatever date be thereby
+signified, that our royal genealogy runs back.</p>
+<h3><!-- page 170--><a name="page170"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 170</span>SANDRINGHAM</h3>
+<p>1871</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In the drear November gloom<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And the long December night,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; There were omens of affright,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And prophecies of doom;<br />
+And the golden lamp of life burn&rsquo;d spectre-dim,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Till Love could hardly mark<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The little sapphire spark<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That only made the dark<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; More dark and grim.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;There not around alone<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Watch&rsquo;d sister, brother, wife,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And she who gave him life,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; White as if wrought in stone<br />
+Unheard, invisible, by the bed of death<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Stood eager millions by;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And as the hour drew nigh,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Dreading to see him die,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Held their breath.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Where&rsquo;er in world-wide skies<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The Lion-Banner burns,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A common impulse turns<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; All hearts to where he lies:&mdash;<br />
+For as a babe the heir of that great throne<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Is weak and motionless;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And they feel the deep distress<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; On wife and mother press,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; As &rsquo;twere their own.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;O! not the thought of race<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; From Asian Odin drawn<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <!-- page 171--><a name="page171"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 171</span>In
+History&rsquo;s mythic dawn,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Nor what we downward trace,<br />
+&mdash;Plantagenet, York, Edward, Elizabeth,&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Heroic names approved,&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The blood of the people moved;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But that, &rsquo;mongst those he loved,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; He fought with death.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And if the Reason said<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &lsquo;&rsquo;Gainst Nature&rsquo;s law and death<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Prayer is but idle breath,&rsquo;&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Yet Faith was undismayed,<br />
+Arm&rsquo;d with the deeper insight of the heart:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Nor can the wisest say<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; What other laws may sway<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The world&rsquo;s apparent way,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Known but in part.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Nor knew we on that life<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; What burdens may be cast;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; What issues wide and vast<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Dependent on that strife:&mdash;<br />
+This only:&mdash;&rsquo;Twas the son of those we loved!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That in his Mother&rsquo;s hand<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Peace set her golden wand;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &rsquo;Mid heaving realms, one land<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Law-ruled, unmoved.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;He fought, and we with him!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And other Powers were by,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Courage, and Science high,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Grappling the spectre grim<br />
+On the battle-field of quiet Sandringham:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And force of perfect Love,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And the will of One above,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Chased Death&rsquo;s dark squadrons off,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And overcame.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<!-- page 172--><a name="page172"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 172</span>&mdash;O
+soul, to life restored<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And love, and wider aim<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Than private care can claim,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;And from Death&rsquo;s unsheath&rsquo;d sword!<br />
+By suffering and by safety dearer made:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; O may the life new-found<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Through life be wisdom-crown&rsquo;d,&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Till in the common ground<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Thou too art laid!</p>
+<h3>A DORSET IDYL</h3>
+<p><i>HARCOMBE NEAR LYME</i></p>
+<p>September: 1878</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Before me with one happy heave<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Of golden green the hillside curves,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Where slowly, smoothly, rounding swerves<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The shadow of each perfect tree,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; By slanting shafts
+of eve<br />
+Flame-fringed and bathed in pale transparency.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And that long ridge that crowns the hill<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Stands fir-dark &rsquo;gainst the falling
+rays;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Above, a waft of pearly haze<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Lies on the sapphire field of air,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; So radiant and so still<br />
+As though a star-cloud took its station there.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Up wold and wild the valley goes,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &rsquo;Mid heath and mounded slopes of
+oak,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And light ash-thicket, where the smoke<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Wreathes high in evening&rsquo;s air serene,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Floating in white repose<br />
+O&rsquo;er the blue reek of cottage-hearths unseen.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<!-- page 173--><a name="page173"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 173</span>Another
+landscape at my feet<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Unfolds its nearer grace the while,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Where gorses gleam with golden smile;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Where Inula lifts a russet head<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The shepherd&rsquo;s
+spikenard sweet;<br />
+And closing Centaury points her rosy red.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;One light cicada&rsquo;s simmering cry,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Survivor of the summer heat,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Chimes faint; the robin, shrill and sweet,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Pipes from green holly; whilst from far<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The rookery croaks
+reply,<br />
+Hoarse, deep, as veterans readying for war.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;Grief on a happier future dwells;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The happy present haunts the past;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And those old minstrels who outlast<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Our looser-textured webs of song,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Nursed in Hellenic
+dells,<br />
+Sicilian, or Italian, hither throng.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Why care if Turk and Tartar fume,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Barbarian &rsquo;gainst barbarian set,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Or how our politic prophets fret,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; When on this tapestry-thyme and heath,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Fresh work of Nature&rsquo;s
+loom,<br />
+Thus, thus, we can diffuse ourselves, and breathe</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Autumnal sparkling freshness?&mdash;while<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The page by some bless&rsquo;d miracle
+saved<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; When Goth and Frank &rsquo;gainst Hellas
+raved.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Paints how the wanderer-chief divine,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Snatch&rsquo;d from
+Circaean guile,<br />
+Led by Nausicaa past Ath&eacute;n&eacute;&rsquo;s shrine,</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In that delicious garden sate<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Where summer link&rsquo;d to summer glows,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Grapes ever ripe, and rose on rose;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <!-- page 174--><a name="page174"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 174</span>And
+all the wonders of thy tale<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;O greatest of
+the great&mdash;<br />
+Whose splendour ne&rsquo;er can fade, nor beauty fail!</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or by the city of God above<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; In rose-red meadows, where the day<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Eternal burns, the bless&rsquo;d ones
+stray;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The harp lets loose its silver showers<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; From the dark incense-grove;<br />
+And happiness blooms forth with all her flowers.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;O Theban strain,&mdash;remote and pure,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Voice of the higher soul, that shames<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Our downward, dry, material aims,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The bestial creed of earth-to-earth,&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Owning with insight
+sure<br />
+The signs that speak of Man&rsquo;s celestial birth!</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or white Colonos here through green<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Green Dorset winds his holy vale,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Where the divine deep nightingale<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Heaps note on note and love on love,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; In ivy thick unseen,<br />
+While goddesses with Dionysos rove.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Another music then we hear,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; A cry from the Sicilian dell,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &lsquo;Here &rsquo;mid sweet grapes and
+laurel dwell;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Slips by from wood-girt Aetna&rsquo;s dome<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Snow-cold the stream
+and clear:&mdash;<br />
+Hither to me, come, Galataea, come!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;Voices and dreams long fled and gone!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And other echoes make reply,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The low Maenalian melody<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &lsquo;&rsquo;Twas in our garth, a twelve-year child,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; I saw thee, little
+one,<br />
+Pick the red fruit that to thy fancy smiled,</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<!-- page 175--><a name="page175"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 175</span>&lsquo;Thee
+and thy mother: I, your guide:&rsquo;&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; O sweet magician!&nbsp; Happy heart!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Content with that unrivall&rsquo;d art,&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The soul of grace in music shrined,&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And notes of modest
+pride,<br />
+To sing the life he loved to all mankind!</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;There, shading pine and torrent-song<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Breathe midday slumber, sudden, sweet;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Deep meadows woo the wayward feet;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In giant elm the ring-doves moan;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; There, peace secure
+from wrong,<br />
+The life that keeps its promise, there, alone!</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;O loftier than the wordy strife<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; That floats o&rsquo;er capitals; the
+chase<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Of florid pleasure; the blind race<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of gold for gold by gamblers run,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; This fair Vergilian
+life,<br />
+Where heaven and we and nature are at one!</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;On that deep soil great Rome was sown;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Our England her foundations laid:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Hence, while the nations, change-dismay&rsquo;d,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To tyrant or to quack repair,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; A healthier heart we
+own,<br />
+And the plant Man grows stronger than elsewhere.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Should changeful commerce shun the shore,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And newer, mightier races meet<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; To push us from our empire-seat,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; England will round her call her own,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And as in days of yore<br />
+The sea-girt Isle be Freedom&rsquo;s central throne.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Freedom, fair daughter-wife of Law;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; One bright face on the future cast,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; One reverent fix&rsquo;d upon the past,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <!-- page 176--><a name="page176"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 176</span>And
+that for Hope, for Wisdom this:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; While counsels wild
+and raw<br />
+Fly those keen eyes, and leave the land to bliss:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Dear land, where new is one with old:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Land of green hillside and of plain,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Gray tower and grange and tree-fringed
+lane,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Red crag and silver streamlet sweet,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Wild wood and ruin
+bold,<br />
+And this repose of beauty at my feet:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Fair Vale, for summer day-dreams high,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; For reverie in solitude<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Fashion&rsquo;d in Nature&rsquo;s finest
+mood;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Or, sweeter yet, for fond excess<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Of glee, and vivid
+cry,<br />
+Whilst happy children find more happiness</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Ranging the brambled hollows free<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; For purple feast;&mdash;till, light as
+Hope,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The little footsteps scale the slope;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And from the highest height we view<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Our island-girdling
+sea<br />
+Bar the green valley with a wall of blue.</p>
+<p>The poets whose landscape-pictures are here contrasted with English
+scenery, are Homer, Pindar, Sophocles, Theocritus, and Vergil.</p>
+<h3><!-- page 177--><a name="page177"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 177</span>A
+HOME IN THE PALACE</h3>
+<p>1840-1861</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Thrice fortunate
+he<br />
+Who, in the palace born, has early learn&rsquo;d<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The lore of sweet simplicity:<br />
+From smiling gold his eyes inviolate turn&rsquo;d,<br />
+Turn&rsquo;d unreturning:&mdash;Who the people&rsquo;s cause,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The sovereign-levelling laws,</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Above the throne,<br />
+&mdash;He made for them, not they for him,&mdash;has set;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Life-lavish for his land alone,<br />
+Whether she crown with gratitude, or forget:&mdash;<br />
+He, who in courts beneath the purple weight<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Of precedence moves sedate,</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;By all that
+glare<br />
+Of needful pageantry less stirr&rsquo;d than still&rsquo;d,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Bringing a waft of natural air<br />
+Through halls with pomp and flattering incense fill&rsquo;d;<br />
+And in the central heart&rsquo;s calm secret, waits<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The closure of the gates,</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The music mute,<br />
+The darkling lamps, the festal tables clear:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Then,&mdash;glad as one who from pursuit<br />
+Breathes safe, and lets himself himself appear,&mdash;<br />
+Turns to the fireside jest, the laughing eyes,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The love without disguise,&mdash;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;On home alone,<br />
+The loyal partnership of man with wife,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Building a throne beyond the throne;<br />
+All happiness in that common household life<br />
+By peasant shared with prince,&mdash;when toil and health,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; True parents of true wealth,</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<!-- page 178--><a name="page178"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 178</span>To
+its fair close<br />
+Round the long day, and all are in the nest,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And care relaxes to repose,<br />
+And the blithe restless nursery lulls to rest;<br />
+Prayer at the mother&rsquo;s knee; and on their beds<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; We kiss the shining heads!</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;Thrice
+fortunate he<br />
+Who o&rsquo;er himself thus won his masterdom,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Earning that rare felicity<br />
+E&rsquo;en in the palace walls to find the Home!<br />
+Who shaped his life in calmness, firm and true,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Each day, and all day through,</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;To that high
+goal<br />
+Where self, for England&rsquo;s sake, was self-effaced,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In silence reining-in his soul<br />
+On the strait difficult line by wisdom traced,<br />
+&rsquo;Twixt gulf and siren, avalanche and ravine,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Guarding the golden mean.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Hence, as the
+days<br />
+Went by, with insight time-enrich&rsquo;d and true,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; O&rsquo;er Europe&rsquo;s policy-tangled maze<br />
+He glanced, and touch&rsquo;d the central shining clue:<br />
+And when the tides of party roar&rsquo;d and surged,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &rsquo;Gainst the state-bulwarks urged</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;By factious
+aim<br />
+Masquing beneath some specious patriot cloke,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Or flaunting a time-honour&rsquo;d name,&mdash;<br />
+Athwart the flood he held an even stroke;<br />
+Between extremes on her old compass straight<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Aiding to steer the state.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;With equal
+mind,<br />
+Hence,&mdash;sure of those he loved on earth, and then<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; His loved ones sure again to find,&mdash;<br />
+<!-- page 179--><a name="page179"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 179</span>For
+Christ&rsquo;s and England&rsquo;s cause, Goodwill to men,<br />
+To the end he strove, and put the fever by,&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Ready to live or die.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;And
+if in death<br />
+We were not so alone, who might not quit,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Smiling, this tediousness of breath,<br />
+These bubble joys that flash and burst and flit,&mdash;<br />
+This tragicomedy of life, where scarce<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; We know if it be farce,</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A puppet-sight<br />
+Of nerve-pull&rsquo;d dolls that o&rsquo;er the world dance by,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Or Good in that unequal fight<br />
+With Ill . . . who from such theatre would not fly?<br />
+&mdash;But those dear faces round the bed disarm<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Death of his natural charm!</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;O Prince,
+to Her<br />
+First placed, first honour&rsquo;d in our love and faith,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; True stay, true constant counseller,<br />
+From that first love of boyhood&rsquo;s prime,&mdash;to death!<br />
+O if thy soul on earth permitted gaze<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; In these less-fortunate days</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;When, hour
+by hour,<br />
+The million armaments of the world are set<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Skill-weapon&rsquo;d with new demon-power,<br />
+Mouthing around this little isle, . . . and yet<br />
+On dream-security our fate we cast,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Of all that glory-past</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;With light
+fool-heart<br />
+Oblivious! . . . O in spirit again restored,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Insoul us to the nobler part,<br />
+The chivalrous loyalty of thy life and word!<br />
+Thou, who in Her to whom first love was due,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Didst love her England too,</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<!-- page 180--><a name="page180"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 180</span>If
+earthly care<br />
+In that eternal home, where thou dost wait<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Renewal of the days that were,<br />
+Move thee at all,&mdash;upon the realm estate<br />
+The wisdom of thy virtue, the full store<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Thy life&rsquo;s experience bore!</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;O known when
+lost,<br />
+Lost, yet not fully known, in all thy grace<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of bloom by cruel early frost,<br />
+Best prized and most by Her, to whom thy face<br />
+Was love and life and counsel:&mdash;If this strain<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Renew not all in vain</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The bitter
+cry<br />
+Of yearning for the loss we yet deplore,&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Yet for her heart, who stood too nigh<br />
+For comfort, till God&rsquo;s hour thy face restore.<br />
+Man has no lenitive!&nbsp; He, who wrought the grief, . . .<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Alone commands relief.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;Thou,
+as the rose<br />
+Lies buried in her fragrance, when on earth<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The summer-loosen&rsquo;d blossom flows,<br />
+Art sepulchred and embalm&rsquo;d in native worth:<br />
+While to thy grave, in England&rsquo;s anxious years,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; We bring our useless tears.</p>
+<p><i>Above the throne</i>; &lsquo;He knows that if Princes exist, it
+is for the good of the people. . . . Well for him that he does so,&rsquo;
+was the remark made by an observing foreigner on Prince Albert: (Martin:
+<i>Life of H.R.H. the Prince Consort</i>: ch. xi).</p>
+<p><i>On home alone</i>; &lsquo;She who reigns over us,&rsquo; said
+the then Mr. Disraeli when seconding the Address on the death of the
+Duchess of Kent, (March, 1861), &lsquo;She who reigns over us has elected,
+amid all the splendour of empire, to establish her life on the principle
+of domestic love&rsquo; (Martin: ch. cxi).</p>
+<p><i>Firm and true</i>, &lsquo;Treu und Fest&rsquo; is the motto of
+the Saxe-Coburg family.</p>
+<p><!-- page 181--><a name="page181"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 181</span><i>Goodwill
+to men</i>; A revision of the despatch to the Cabinet of the United
+States, remonstrating on the &lsquo;Trent affair,&rsquo; whilst the
+fatal fever was on him, was the last of Prince Albert&rsquo;s many services
+(Nov. 30, 1861) to England.&nbsp; To the temperate and conciliatory
+tone which he gave to this message, its success in the promotion of
+peace between the two countries was largely due: (Martin: ch. cxvi).</p>
+<h3>ODE</h3>
+<p><i>FOR THE TWENTY-FIRST OF JUNE</i><br />
+1887</p>
+<p>. . . <i>Sunt hic sua praemia laudi</i>,<br />
+<i>Sunt lacrimae rerum</i> . . .</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As when the snowdrop from the snowy ground<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Lifting a maiden face, foretells the flowers<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That lurk and listen, till the chaffinch sound<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Spring&rsquo;s advent with the glistening willow crown&rsquo;d,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Sheathed in their silken bowers:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; E&rsquo;en so the promise of her life appears<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Through those white childhood-years;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;Whether in seaside happiness, and air<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Rosing the fair cheek,&mdash;sand, and spade, and shell,&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Or race with sister-feet, that flash&rsquo;d and fell<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Printing the beach, while the gay comrade-wind<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Play&rsquo;d in the soft light hair:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Or if with sunbeam-smile and kind<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Small hand at cottage-door<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Her simple alms she tender&rsquo;d to the poor:<br />
+Love&rsquo;s healthy happy heart in all her steps was seen,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And God, in life&rsquo;s fresh springtime, bless&rsquo;d
+our Queen.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Lo! the quick months their order&rsquo;d dance
+pursue,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And Spring&rsquo;s bright apple-blossoms flush to fruit;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <!-- page 182--><a name="page182"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 182</span>The
+bay-tree thrives &rsquo;neath Heaven&rsquo;s own gracious dew,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And her young shoots the parent-life renew<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Around the fostering root.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;The Girl from care in youth&rsquo;s sweet sleep
+withdrawn<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Wakes to a crown at dawn!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But Love is at her side, strong, faithful, wise,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To share the world-wide burden of command,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The sceptre&rsquo;s weight in the unlesson&rsquo;d hand;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To aid each nursery inmate,&mdash;each in turn<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Dear pride of watchful eyes,&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To clasp the innocent hands, and learn<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The words of love and grace,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Lifting their souls to the compassionate Face:&mdash;<br />
+While o&rsquo;er the fortunate fold the Shepherd watch&rsquo;d unseen;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And home, in all its beauty, bless&rsquo;d a Queen.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Ah!&nbsp; Happy she, who wedded finds in one<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Wisest and dearest! happy, happy years!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But summer whirlwinds wait on summer&rsquo;s sun;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Where the Five Rivers from Himala run,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; His snow where Everest rears,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Or Alma&rsquo;s echoing crags with war-cry wake<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The wind-vext Euxine lake.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;O Death in myriad forms!&nbsp; O brutal roar<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of battle! throes of race, and crash of thrones!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Imploring hands, and wreck of whitening bones<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In Khyber pass;&mdash;Or woman&rsquo;s stifled cry,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And that dark pit of gore!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;Yet night had light; for He was by,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Her heart, her strength, her shield,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Twin-star in the Throne&rsquo;s radiance self-conceal&rsquo;d;<br />
+Love&rsquo;s hand laid light on hers, guiding the ship unseen&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; For God&rsquo;s best grace in Albert bless&rsquo;d the
+Queen.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<!-- page 183--><a name="page183"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 183</span>But
+at man&rsquo;s side each hour with ambush&rsquo;d sword<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Death hurries, nor for prayer nor love delays;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In God&rsquo;s own time His harvest-sheaves are stored,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &lsquo;For My thoughts are not your thoughts,&rsquo; saith
+the Lord,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &lsquo;Nor are your ways My ways.&rsquo;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; He Who spared not the Son His bitter cup,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The broken heart binds up<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In His fit hour, All-Merciful!&mdash;And she,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The desolate faithful Mother, in the nest<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; By children&rsquo;s love soft-woven, has found rest;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Some constant to her side, if some have flown<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The Angels&rsquo; road, and see<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The Vision of the Eternal Throne:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With them, &rsquo;tis well!&mdash;But thou,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Strong through submission, to His will dost bow,<br />
+Till God renew the home in that far realm unseen,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And bless with all her lost ones England&rsquo;s Queen.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Yet in great Nature&rsquo;s changeful mystic dance<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Joy circles grief, gay dawn outsmiles the night:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis meet our song should build its radiance<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Like some high palace-porch, and walls that glance<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With gold and marble light:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Now fifty suns &rsquo;neath one firm patriot sway<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Have whirl&rsquo;d their shining way.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;Lo Commerce with the golden girdling chain<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That links all nations for the good of each;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; While Science boasts her silent lightning speech<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Swifter than thought; and how her patience rein&rsquo;d<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To post o&rsquo;er earth and main<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The panting white-breath&rsquo;d Titan, chain&rsquo;d<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Bondslave to man:&mdash;and won<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The magic spark o&rsquo;erdazzling star and sun<br />
+<!-- page 184--><a name="page184"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 184</span>From
+its dark cave: for He, the all-seeing Lord unseen<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Enlightening, bless&rsquo;d the years of England&rsquo;s
+Queen.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Freedom of England! from thy sacred source<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Where Alfred arm&rsquo;d in Athelney, welling pure,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With hero-blood dyed in thy widening course,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;What loyaler hand than her&rsquo;s to guide thy
+force<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Down ancient channels sure?<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Honour of England! in what bosom stirs<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Thy soul more quick than her&rsquo;s?<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Yet in her days . . . O greater grief, than when<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In years of woe, the years of happiness<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Flash o&rsquo;er us,&mdash;to behold,&mdash;and no redress,&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Some deed of shame we cannot cure nor stay!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Our best, our man of men,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Martyr&rsquo;d inch-meal by dull delay!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Ah, sacred, hidden grave!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Ah gallant comrade feet, love-wing&rsquo;d to save,<br />
+Too late, too late!&mdash;But Thou, Whose counsels work unseen,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Spare us henceforth such pangs, spare England&rsquo;s Queen</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;O much enduring, much revered!&nbsp; To thee<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Bring sun-dyed millions love more sweet than fame,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And happy isles that star the purple sea<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Homage;&mdash;and children at the mother&rsquo;s knee<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With her&rsquo;s unite thy name;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And faithful hearts, that throb &rsquo;neath palm and pine,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; From East to West, are thine.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; For as some pillar-star o&rsquo;er sea and storm<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Whole fleets to haven guides, so from that height<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; One great example points the path of Right,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And purifies the home; with gracious aid<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Lifting the fallen form.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; See Death by finer skill delay&rsquo;d;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <!-- page 185--><a name="page185"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 185</span>Kind
+hearts to wait on woe,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And feet of Love that in Christ&rsquo;s footsteps go;<br />
+Wild wastes of life reclaim&rsquo;d by Woman&rsquo;s hand unseen:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; All England bless&rsquo;d with England&rsquo;s Empress
+Queen.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And now, as one who through some fruitful field<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Has urged the fifty furrows of the grain,&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Look round with joy, and know thy care will yield<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A thousandfold in its due day reveal&rsquo;d,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The harvest laugh again:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; E&rsquo;en now thy great crown&rsquo;d ancestors on high<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Watch with exultant eye<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Thy hundred Englands o&rsquo;er the broad earth sown,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And Arthur lives anew to hail his heir!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;O then for her and us we chant the prayer,&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Keep Thou this sea-girt citadel of the free<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Safe &rsquo;neath her ancient throne,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Love-link&rsquo;d in loyal unity;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Let eve&rsquo;s calm after-glow<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Arch all the heaven with Hope&rsquo;s wide roseate bow:<br />
+Till in Time&rsquo;s fulness Thou, Almighty Lord unseen,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With glory and life immortal crown the Queen.</p>
+<p>Published (June, 1887) under sanction of the Delegates of the Clarendon
+Press, Oxford; and intended as an humble offering of loyalty and hearty
+good-wishes on the part of the University.</p>
+<h3>ENGLAND ONCE MORE</h3>
+<p>Old if this England be<br />
+The Ship at heart is sound,<br />
+And the fairest she and gallantest<br />
+That ever sail&rsquo;d earth round!<br />
+And children&rsquo;s children in the years<br />
+Far off will live to see<br />
+<!-- page 186--><a name="page186"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 186</span>Her
+silver wings fly round the world,<br />
+Free heralds of the free!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; While now on Him who long has bless&rsquo;d<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To bless her as of yore,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Once more we cry for England,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; England once more!</p>
+<p>They are firm and fine, the masts;<br />
+And the keel is straight and true;<br />
+Her ancient cross of glory<br />
+Rides burning through the blue:&mdash;<br />
+And that red sign o&rsquo;er all the seas<br />
+The nations fear and know,<br />
+And the strong and stubborn hero-souls<br />
+That underneath it go:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; While now on Him who long has bless&rsquo;d<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To bless her as of yore,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Once more we cry for England,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; England once more!</p>
+<p>Prophets of dread and shame,<br />
+There is no place for you,<br />
+Weak-kneed and craven-breasted,<br />
+Amongst this English crew!<br />
+Bluff hearts that cannot learn to yield,<br />
+But as the waves run high,<br />
+And they can almost touch the night,<br />
+Behind it see the sky.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; While now on Him who long has bless&rsquo;d<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To bless her as of yore,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Once more we cry for England,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; England once more!</p>
+<p>As Past in Present hid,<br />
+As old transfused to new,<br />
+Through change she lives unchanging,<br />
+To self and glory true;<br />
+<!-- page 187--><a name="page187"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 187</span>From
+Alfred&rsquo;s and from Edward&rsquo;s day<br />
+Who still has kept the seas,<br />
+To him who on his death-morn spoke<br />
+Her watchword on the breeze!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; While now on Him who long has bless&rsquo;d<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To bless her as of yore,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Once more we cry for England,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; England once more!</p>
+<p>What blasts from East and North,<br />
+What storms that swept the land<br />
+Have borne her from her bearings<br />
+Since Caesar seized the strand!<br />
+Yet that strong loyal heart through all<br />
+Has steer&rsquo;d her sage and free,<br />
+&mdash;Hope&rsquo;s armour&rsquo;d Ark in glooming years,<br />
+And whole world&rsquo;s sanctuary!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; While now on Him who long has bless&rsquo;d<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To bless her as of yore,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Once more we cry for England,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; England once more!</p>
+<p>Old keel, old heart of oak,<br />
+Though round thee roar and chafe<br />
+All storms of life, thy helmsman<br />
+Shall make the haven safe!<br />
+Then with Honour at the head, and Faith,<br />
+And Peace along the wake,<br />
+Law blazon&rsquo;d fair on Freedom&rsquo;s flag,<br />
+Thy stately voyage take:&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; While now on Him who long has bless&rsquo;d<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To bless Thee as of yore,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Once more we cry for England,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; England once more!</p>
+<h2><!-- page 188--><a name="page188"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 188</span>APPENDIX</h2>
+<h3>A: p. 87</h3>
+<p><i>Till the terrible Day unreveal&rsquo;d</i>; Much of course is
+and will probably remain unknown among the details of that fatal and
+fascinating drama, Mary&rsquo;s life.&nbsp; But all hitherto ascertained
+evidence has now, mainly by Mr. Hosack, been sifted so closely and so
+ably that the main turning points in her career seem to have reached
+that twilight certainty beyond which History can rarely hope to go,
+and are placed beyond the reach of reasonable controversy.&nbsp; Such,
+(not to enter upon the Queen&rsquo;s life as Elizabeth&rsquo;s captive),
+is the more than Macchiavellian&mdash;the almost incredible&mdash;perfidy
+of the leading Scottish politicians, united with a hypocrisy more revolting
+still, and enabled to do its wicked work, (with regret we must confess),
+by the shortsighted bigotry of Knox:&mdash;The gradual forgery of the
+letters by which the Queen&rsquo;s death was finally obtained from the
+too-willing hands of Elizabeth&rsquo;s Cabinet:&mdash;The all but legally
+proved innocence of Mary in regard to Darnley&rsquo;s death, and the
+Bothwell marriage.&nbsp; Taking her life as a whole, it may be fairly
+doubted whether any woman has ever been exposed to trials and temptations
+more severe, or has suffered more shamefully from false witness and
+fanatical hatred.&nbsp; But the prejudices which have been hence aroused
+are so strong, such great interests, religious and political, are involved
+in their maintenance, that they will doubtless prevail in the popular
+mind until our literature receives,&mdash;what an age of research and
+of the scientific spirit should at last be prepared to give us,&mdash;a
+tolerably truthful history of the Elizabethan period.&nbsp; (1889)</p>
+<h3>B: p. 102</h3>
+<p><i>Heroes both</i>;&mdash;<i>Each his side</i>;&mdash;In regard to
+the main issue at stake in the Civil War, and the view taken of it throughout
+this book, let me here once for all remark that no competent and impartial
+student of our history can deny a fair cause to each side, whatever
+errors may have been committed by Charles and by the Parliament, or
+however fatal for some fifteen years to liberty and national happiness
+were the excesses and the tyranny into which the victorious party gradually,
+and as it were inevitably, drifted.&nbsp; &lsquo;No one,&rsquo; says
+Ranke (whom I must often quote, because to this distinguished foreigner
+we owe the single, though too brief, narrative of this period in which
+history has been hitherto, treated historically, that is, without judging
+of the events by the light either of their remote results, or of modern
+political party), &lsquo;will make any very heavy political charge against
+Strafford on the score of his government of Ireland, or of the partisan
+attitude which he had taken up in the intestine struggle in England
+in general; for the ideas for which he contended were as much to be
+found in the past history of England as were those which he attacked:&rsquo;
+<!-- page 189--><a name="page189"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 189</span>&mdash;and
+Hampden&rsquo;s conduct may claim analogous justification.&nbsp; If
+the Parliament could appeal to those mediaeval precedents which admitted
+the right of the people through their representatives, to control taxation
+and (more or less) direct national policy, Charles, (and Strafford with
+him), might as lawfully affirm that they too were standing &lsquo;on
+the ancient ways&rsquo;; on the royal supremacy undeniably exercised
+by Henry II or Edward I. by Henry VIII and by Elizabeth.&nbsp; Both
+parties could equally put forward the prosperity of England under these
+opposed modes of government: Patriotism, honour, conscience, were watchwords
+which either might use with truth or abuse with profit.&nbsp; If the
+great struggle be patiently studied, the moral praise and censure so
+freely given, according to a reader&rsquo;s personal bias, will be found
+very rarely justified.&nbsp; There was far, very far, less of tyranny
+or of liberty involved in the contest, up to 1642, than partisans aver.&nbsp;
+To the actual actors (nor, as retrospectively criticized by us) it is
+a fair battle on both sides, not a contest &lsquo;between light and
+darkness.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>We, looking back after two centuries, are of course free to recognize,
+that one effect of the Tudor despotism had been to train Englishmen
+towards ruling themselves;&mdash;we may agree that the time had come
+for Lords and Commons to take their part in the Kingdom.&nbsp; But no
+proof, I think it may be said, can be shown that this great idea, in
+any conscious sense, governed the Parliaments of James and Charles.&nbsp;
+It is we who,&mdash;reviewing our history since the definite establishment
+of the constitutional balance after 1688, and the many blessings the
+land has enjoyed,&mdash;can perceive what in the seventeenth century
+was wholly hidden from Commonwealth and from King.&nbsp; And even if
+in accordance with the common belief, we ascribe English freedom and
+prosperity and good government to the final triumph of the popular side,
+yet deeper consideration should suggest that such retrospective judgments
+are always inevitably made under our human entire ignorance what might
+have been the result had the opposite party prevailed.&nbsp; Who should
+say how often, in case of these long and wide extended struggles,&mdash;political
+and dynastic,&mdash;the effects which we confidently claim as <i>propter
+hoc</i>, are only <i>post hoc</i> in the last reality?</p>
+<p>Waiving however these somewhat remote and what many will judge over-sceptical
+considerations, this is certain, that unless we can purify our judgment
+from reading into the history of the past the long results of time;&mdash;from
+ascribing to the men of the seventeenth century prophetic insight into
+the nineteenth;&mdash;unless, in short, we can free ourselves from the
+chain of present or personal prepossessions;&mdash;no approach can be
+made to a fair or philosophical judgment upon such periods of strife
+and crisis as our Civil War preeminently offers.</p>
+<h3>C: p. 108</h3>
+<p><i>With glory he gilt</i>; Yet to readers, (if such readers there
+be) who can look with an undazzled eye on military success, or hear
+the still small voice of truth through the tempest of rhetoric, Cromwell&rsquo;s
+foreign policy, (excepting the isolated case of his interference with
+the then comparatively feeble powers of Savoy and the Papacy on behalf
+of the persecuted Waldenses), will be far from supporting the credit
+with which politico-theological partisanship has invested it.</p>
+<p>Holland was beyond question the natural ally on political and religious
+grounds of puritan England.&nbsp; But a mischievous war against her
+in 1652-3 was caused by the arrogant restrictions of the Navigation
+<!-- page 190--><a name="page190"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 190</span>Act
+of 1651.&nbsp; The successful English demand in 1653 that the Orange
+family, as connected closely with that of Stuart, should be excluded
+from the Stadtholdership, was in a high degree to the prejudice of the
+United Provinces.</p>
+<p>In 1654 Cromwell was negotiating with France and Spain.&nbsp; From
+the latter he arrogantly asked wholly unreasonable terms, whilst Mazarin,
+on the part of France, offered Dunkirk as a bribe.&nbsp; News opportunely
+arriving that certain Spanish possessions in America were feebly armed,
+Cromwell at once declared war: and now, supplementing unscrupulous policy
+by false theology, announced &lsquo;the Spaniards to be the natural
+and ordained enemies of England, whom to fight was a duty both to country
+and to religion:&rsquo; (Ranke: xii. 6).</p>
+<p>The piratical war which followed, in many ways similar to that which
+the &lsquo;wise Walpole&rsquo; tried to avert in 1739, was hardly less
+impolitic than immoral.&nbsp; It alienated Holland, it sanctioned French
+aggression on Flanders (xii. 7), it ended by giving Mazarin and Lewis
+XIV that supremacy in Western Europe for which England had to pay in
+the wars of William III and Anne; whilst, as soon as it was over, France
+naturally allied herself with Spain, on a basis which might have caused
+the union of the two crowns (xii. 8) and which allowed Spain at once
+to support Charles II.&nbsp; As the result of the Protector&rsquo;s
+&lsquo;spirited policy&rsquo; England thus figured as the catspaw of
+France, and the enemy of European liberty.</p>
+<p>It is satisfactory, however, to find that, in Ranke&rsquo;s judgment,
+the common modern opinion that Cromwell&rsquo;s despotism was favourably
+regarded in England because of his foreign enterprize, is exaggerated.&nbsp;
+Even against the conquest of Jamaica,&mdash;his single signal gain,&mdash;unanswerable
+arguments were popularly urged at the time: (xii. 4, 8)&mdash;But the
+Protectorate, in the light of modern research,&mdash;like the reign
+of Elizabeth,&mdash;still awaits its historian.</p>
+<h3>D: p. 127</h3>
+<p><i>The sky by a veil</i>; &lsquo;A spiritual world,&rsquo; says a
+critic of deep insight, &lsquo;over and above this invisible one, is
+a most important addition to our idea of the universe; but it does not
+of itself touch our moral nature. . . . Its moral effect depends entirely
+upon what we make that world to be.&rsquo;&mdash;Cromwell&rsquo;s religion,
+which may be profitably studied in his letters and speeches, (much better
+known of, than read) reveals itself there as the simple reflex of his
+personal views: it had great power to animate, little or none to regulate
+or control his impulses.&nbsp; He had, indeed, a most real and pervading
+&lsquo;natural turn for the invisible; he thought of the invisible till
+he died; but the cloudy arch only canopied a field of human aim and
+will.&rsquo;</p>
+<p><i>The horrible sacrament</i>; The summary of Cromwell&rsquo;s conduct
+at Drogheda by a writer of so much research, impartiality, and philosophic
+liberality as Mr. Lecky deserves to be well considered.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;The sieges of Drogheda and Wexford, and the massacres that
+accompanied them, deserve to rank in horror with the most atrocious
+exploits of Tilly and Wallenstein, and they made the name of Cromwell
+eternally hated in Ireland.&nbsp; It even now acts as a spell upon the
+Irish mind, and has a powerful and living influence in sustaining the
+hatred both of England and Protestantism.&nbsp; The massacre of Drogheda
+acquired a deeper horror and a special significance from the saintly
+professions and the religious phraseology of its perpetrators, and the
+town <!-- page 191--><a name="page191"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 191</span>where
+it took place is, to the present day, distinguished in Ireland for the
+vehemence of its Catholicism:&rsquo; (<i>Hist. of Eighteenth Cent</i>.
+ch. vi).</p>
+<p><i>Mortal failure</i>; The ever-increasing unsuccess of Cromwell&rsquo;s
+career is forcibly set forth by Ranke (xii. 8).&nbsp; He had &lsquo;crushed
+every enemy,&mdash;the Scottish and the Presbyterian system, the peers
+and the king, the Long Parliament and the Cavalier insurgents,&mdash;but
+to create . . . an organization consistent with the authority which
+had fallen to his own lot, was beyond his power.&nbsp; Even among his
+old&rsquo; Anabaptist and Independent &lsquo;friends, his comrades in
+the field, his colleagues in the establishment of the Commonwealth,
+he encountered the most obstinate resistance. . . . At no time were
+the prisons fuller; the number of political prisoners was estimated
+at 12,000 . . . The failure of his plans soured and distracted him.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+It was, in fact, wholly &lsquo;beyond his power to consolidate a tolerably
+durable political constitution.&rsquo;&mdash;To the disquiet caused
+by constant attempts against Cromwell&rsquo;s life, Ranke adds the death
+of his favourite daughter, Lady Claypole, whose last words of agony
+&lsquo;were of the right of the king, the blood that had been shed,
+the revenge to come.&rsquo;</p>
+<h3>E: p. 146</h3>
+<p><i>Unheirlike heir</i>; Richard Cromwell has received double measure
+of that censure which the world&rsquo;s judgment too readily gives to
+unsuccess, finding favour neither from Royalists nor Cromwellians.&nbsp;
+Macaulay, with more justice, remarks, &lsquo;That he was a good man
+he evinced by proofs more satisfactory than deep groans or long sermons,
+by humility and suavity when he was at the height of human greatness,
+and by cheerful resignation under cruel wrongs and misfortunes.&rsquo;
+. . . &lsquo;He did nothing amiss during his short administration.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>His fall may be traced to several causes: to the fact that the puritan
+party proper, who supported him, the &lsquo;sober men&rsquo; mentioned
+by Baxter &lsquo;that called his father no better than a traitorous
+hypocrite,&rsquo; had not power to resist the fanatic cabal of army
+chiefs: to the necessity he was under of protecting some justly-odious
+confederates of Oliver: his own want of ability or energy to govern,&mdash;a
+point fully recognized during Oliver&rsquo;s supremacy; and to his own
+honourable decision not to &lsquo;have a drop of blood shed on his poor
+account.&rsquo;&nbsp; Yet there is ample evidence to show that Richard,
+had he chosen, might have made a struggle to retain the throne,&mdash;sufficient,
+at least, to have thus deluged the kingdom.</p>
+<p>Richard&rsquo;s life was passed in great quiet after 1660: Charles
+II, according to Clarendon, with a wise and humorous lenity, not thinking
+it &lsquo;necessary to inquire after a man so long forgotten.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+His letters reveal a man of affectionate and honest disposition; he
+uses the Puritan phraseology of the day without leaving a sense of nausea
+in the reader&rsquo;s mind.&nbsp; At Hursley he was buried at a good
+old age in 1712.</p>
+<h3>F: p. 152</h3>
+<p><i>A nation&rsquo;s craven rage</i>; The want of public spirit in
+England shown during the war of 1745-6 is astonishing.&nbsp; &lsquo;England,&rsquo;
+wrote Henry Fox, &lsquo;is for the first comer . . . Had 5,000 [French
+troops] landed in any part of this island a week ago, I verily believe
+the entire conquest of it would not have cost them a battle.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+And other weighty testimonies might be added, in support of Lord Mahon&rsquo;s
+view as to the great <!-- page 192--><a name="page192"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 192</span>probability
+of the Prince&rsquo;s success, had he been allowed by his followers
+to march upon London from Derby.</p>
+<p>This apathy and the panic which followed found their natural issue
+in the sanguinary punishment of the followers of Prince Charles.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;The city and the generality,&rsquo; wrote H. Walpole in August,
+1746, &lsquo;are very angry that so many rebels have been pardoned.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+The vindictive cruelty then shown makes, in truth (if we compare the
+magnitude and duration of the rebellion for which punishment was to
+be exacted), an unsatisfactory contrast to the leniency of 1660.&nbsp;
+But History supplies only too numerous proofs that a century&rsquo;s
+march in civilisation may be always undone at once by the demons of
+Panic or of Party in the hour of their respective triumphs.</p>
+<h3>G: p. 169</h3>
+<p><i>Ripe to wed with Liberty</i>; Looking at the American War of Independence
+without party-passion and distortion, as should now at least be possible
+to Englishmen, the main cause must be acknowledged to lie simply in
+the growth and geographical position of the Colonies, which had brought
+them to the age of natural liberty, and had begun to fit them for its
+exercise:&mdash;facts which it was equally in accordance with nature
+that the Fatherland should fail to perceive.&nbsp; For the causes which
+gradually determined American resistance we must look, (as regards us),
+not to the blundering English legislation after 1760,&mdash;to the formalism
+of Grenville, the subterfuges of Franklin,&mdash;but to the whole course
+of our commercial policy since the Revolution: As regards the Colonies,
+to the extinction of the power of France in America by the Treaty of
+Paris in 1763: (Lecky: ch. v; Mahon: ch. xliii).</p>
+<p>The Stamp Act of 1765 brought home, indeed, to a rapidly-developing
+people the supremacy claimed across the Atlantic; but the obnoxious
+taxation which it imposed, (despite the splendid sophistry of Chatham),
+cannot be shown to differ essentially from the trade restrictions and
+monopolies enacted in long series after 1688, as the result of the predominance
+obtained at the Revolution by the commercial classes in this country,
+and which so far as 1765 the colonies openly recognized as legal.</p>
+<p>Going, however, beyond these minor motives, the true cause was unquestionably
+that the time for separate life, for America to be herself, had come.&nbsp;
+This was a crisis which home-legislation could do little to create or
+to avert: a natural law, which only worked itself out ostensibly by
+political man&oelig;uvres and military operations, so ill-managed as
+to be rarely creditable to either side;&mdash;and, regarded simply as
+a &lsquo;struggle for existence,&rsquo; is, in the eye of impartial
+history, hardly within the scope of praise or censure.</p>
+<p>But it was a neutrally tinted background like this, which could most
+effectually bring into full relief the great qualities of the one great
+man who was prominent in the conflict.</p>
+<p>Printed by Cassell &amp; Company, Limited.&nbsp; La Belle Sauvage,
+London.&nbsp; E.C.</p>
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE VISIONS OF ENGLAND***</p>
+<pre>
+
+
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+</pre></body>
+</html>
diff --git a/17923.txt b/17923.txt
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--- /dev/null
+++ b/17923.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,7272 @@
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Visions of England, by Francis T.
+Palgrave, Edited by Henry Morley
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Visions of England
+ Lyrics on leading men and events in English History
+
+
+Author: Francis T. Palgrave
+
+Editor: Henry Morley
+
+Release Date: March 5, 2006 [eBook #17923]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE VISIONS OF ENGLAND***
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Transcribed from the 1889 Cassell and Company edition by David Price,
+ccx074@coventry.ac.uk
+
+
+
+
+
+THE VISIONS OF ENGLAND: LYRICS OF LEADING MEN AND EVENTS IN ENGLISH
+HISTORY
+
+
+BY
+FRANCIS T. PALGRAVE
+_Professor of Poetry in the University of Oxford_
+_Late Fellow of Exeter College_
+
+TANTA RES EST, UT PAENE VITIO MENTIS TANTUM OPUS INGRESSUS MIHI VIDEAR
+
+CASSELL & COMPANY, LIMITED:
+_LONDON, PARIS, NEW YORK & MELBOURNE_
+1889
+
+
+
+
+By the same Author
+
+
+THE VISIONS OF ENGLAND: Seventy Lyrics on leading Men and Events in
+English History: 8vo. 7/6
+
+LYRICAL POEMS, Four Books: Extra Fcap. 8vo. 6/-
+
+ORIGINAL HYMNS: 18mo. 1/6
+
+* * * * *
+
+_Poetry edited by the same_
+
+THE GOLDEN TREASURY OF ENGLISH LYRICAL POETRY: 18mo. 4/6
+
+THE CHILDREN'S TREASURY OF ENGLISH LYRICAL POETRY, with Notes and
+Glossary: 18mo. 2/6. Or in two parts, 1/- each
+
+SHAKESPEARE'S LYRICS. SONGS FROM THE PLAYS AND SONNETS, with Notes:
+18mo. 4/6
+
+SELECTION FROM R. HERRICK'S LYRICAL POETRY, with Essay and Notes: 18mo.
+4/6
+
+THE POETICAL WORKS OF J. KEATS, reprinted; _literatim_ from the original
+editions, with Notes: 18mo. 4/6
+
+LYRICAL POEMS BY LORD TENNYSON, selected and arranged, with Notes: 18mo.
+4/6
+
+GLEN DESSERAY AND OTHER POEMS, by J. C. Shairp, late Principal of the
+United College, S. Andrews, and Professor of Poetry in the University of
+Oxford. With Essay and Notes. 8vo.
+
+Messrs. MACMILLAN, Bedford St., Covent Garden
+
+* * * * *
+
+_To be published presently_
+
+THE TREASURY OF SACRED SONG, selected from the English Lyrical Poetry of
+Four Centuries, with Notes Explanatory and Biographical
+
+CLARENDON PRESS, OXFORD
+_Aug_. 1889
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION.
+
+
+Again, on behalf of readers of this NATIONAL LIBRARY, I have to thank a
+poet of our day--in this case the Oxford Professor of Poetry--for joining
+his voice to the voices of the past through which our better life is
+quickened for the duties of to-day. Not for his own verse only, but for
+his fine sense also of what is truest in the poets who have gone before,
+the name of Francis Turner Palgrave is familiar to us all. Many a home
+has been made the richer for his gathering of voices of the past into a
+dainty "Golden Treasury of English Songs." Of this work of his own I may
+cite what was said of it in _Macmillan's Magazine_ for October, 1882, by
+a writer of high authority in English Literature, Professor A. W. Ward,
+of Owens College. "A very eminent authority," said Professor Ward, "has
+accorded to Mr. Palgrave's historical insight, praise by the side of
+which all words of mine must be valueless," Canon [now Bishop] Stubbs
+writes:--"I do not think that there is one of the _Visions_ which does
+not carry my thorough consent and sympathy all through."
+
+Here, then, Mr. Palgrave re-issues, for the help of many thousands more,
+his own songs of the memories of the Nation, addressed to a Nation that
+has not yet forfeited the praise of Milton. Milton said of the
+Englishman, "If we look at his native towardliness in the roughcast,
+without breeding, some nation or other may haply be better composed to a
+natural civility and right judgment than he. But if he get the benefit
+once of a wise and well-rectified nurture, I suppose that wherever
+mention is made of countries, manners, or men, the English people, among
+the first that shall be praised, may deserve to be accounted a right
+pious, right honest, and right hardy nation." So much is shown by the
+various utterances in this NATIONAL LIBRARY. So much is shown, in the
+present volume of it, by a poet's vision of the England that has been
+till now, and is what she has been.
+
+H. M.
+
+TO THE NAMES OF
+HENRY HALLAM AND FRANCIS PALGRAVE
+FRIENDS AND FELLOW-LABOURERS IN ENGLISH HISTORY
+FOR FORTY YEARS,
+WHO, DIFFERING OFTEN IN JUDGMENT,
+WERE AT ONE THROUGHOUT LIFE IN DEVOTED LOVE OF
+JUSTICE, TRUTH, AND ENGLAND,
+_IN AFFECTIONATE AND REVERENT REMEMBRANCE_
+THIS BOOK IS INSCRIBED AND DEDICATED
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+As the scheme which the Author has here endeavoured to execute has not,
+so far as he knows, the advantage of any near precedent in any
+literature, he hopes that a few explanatory words may be offered without
+incurring censure for egotism.
+
+Our history is so eminently rich and varied, and at the same time, by the
+fact of our insular position, so stamped with unity, that from days very
+remote it has supplied matter for song. This, among Celts and Angles, at
+first was lyrical. But poetry, for many centuries after the Conquest,
+mainly took the annalistic form, and, despite the ability often shown,
+was hence predoomed to failure. For a nation's history cannot but
+present many dull or confused periods, many men and things intractable by
+poetry, though, perhaps, politically effective and important, which
+cannot be excluded from any narrative aiming at consecutiveness; and, by
+the natural laws of art, these passages, when rendered in verse, in their
+effect become more prosaic than they would be in a prose rendering.
+
+My attempt has therefore been to revert to the earlier and more natural
+conditions of poetry, and to offer,--not a continuous narrative; not
+poems on every critical moment or conspicuous man in our long annals,--but
+single lyrical pictures of such leading or typical characters and scenes
+in English history, and only such, as have seemed amenable to a strictly
+poetical treatment. Poetry, not History, has, hence, been my first and
+last aim; or, perhaps I might define it, History for Poetry's sake. At
+the same time, I have striven to keep throughout as closely to absolute
+historical truth in the design and colouring of the pieces as the
+exigencies of poetry permit:--the result aimed at being to unite the
+actual tone and spirit of the time concerned, with the best estimate
+which has been reached by the research and genius of modern
+investigators. Our island story, freed from the 'falsehood of
+extremes,'--exorcised, above all, from the seducing demon of
+party-spirit, I have thus here done my best to set forth. And as this
+line of endeavour has conducted and constrained me, especially when the
+seventeenth century is concerned, to judgments--supported indeed by
+historians conspicuous for research, ability, and fairness, but often
+remote from the views popularized by the writers of our own day,--upon
+these points a few justificatory notes have been added.
+
+A double aim has hence governed and limited both the selection and the
+treatment of my subjects. The choice has necessarily fallen, often, not
+on simply picturesque incident or unfamiliar character, but on the men
+and things that we think of first, when thinking of the long chronicle of
+England,--or upon such as represent and symbolize the main current of it.
+Themes, however, on which able or popular song is already extant,--notably
+in case of Scotland,--I have in general avoided. In the rendering, my
+desire has been always to rest the poetry of each Vision on its own
+intrinsic interest; to write with a straightforward eye to the object
+alone; not studious of ornament for ornament's sake; allowing the least
+possible overt intrusion of the writer's personality; and, in accordance
+with lyrical law, seeking, as a rule, to fix upon some factual picture
+for each poem.
+
+* * * * *
+
+To define, thus, the scope of what this book attempts, is, in itself, a
+confession of presumptuousness,--the writer's own sense of which is but
+feebly and imperfectly expressed in the words from Vergil's letter to
+Augustus prefixed as my motto. In truth, so rich and so wide are the
+materials, that to scheme a lyrical series which should really paint the
+_Gesta Anglorum_ in their fulness might almost argue 'lack of wit,'
+_vitium mentis_, in much greater powers than mine. No criticism, however
+severe, can add to my own consciousness how far the execution of the
+work, in regard to each of its aims, falls below the plan. Yet I would
+allow myself the hope, great as the deficiencies may be, that the love of
+truth and the love of England are mine by inheritance in a degree
+sufficient to exempt this book, (the labour of several years), from
+infidelity to either:--that the intrinsic worth and weight of my subject
+may commend these songs, both at home, and in the many Englands beyond
+sea, to those who, (despite the inevitably more engrossing attractions of
+the Present, and the emphatic bias of modern culture towards the
+immediate and the tangible), maintain that high and soul-inspiring
+interest which, identifying us with our magnificent Past, and all its
+varied lessons of defeat and victory, offers at the same time,--under the
+guidance from above,--our sole secure guarantee for prosperous and
+healthy progress in the Future.
+
+ The world has cycles in its course, when all
+ That once has been, is acted o'er again;
+
+and only the nation which, at each moment of political or social
+evolution, looks lovingly backward to its own painfully-earned
+experience--_Respiciens_, _Prospiciens_, as Tennyson's own chosen device
+expresses it--has solid reason to hope, that its movement is true
+Advance--that its course is Upward.
+
+* * * * *
+
+It remains only to add, that the book has been carefully revised and
+corrected, and that nineteen pieces published in the original volume of
+1881 are not reprinted in the present issue.
+
+F. T. P.
+_July_, 1889
+
+
+
+
+THE VISIONS OF ENGLAND
+
+
+PRELUDE
+
+
+_CAESAR TO EGBERT_
+
+1
+
+ England, fair England! Empress isle of isles!
+ --Round whom the loving-envious ocean plays,
+ Girdling thy feet with silver and with smiles,
+ Whilst all the nations crowd thy liberal bays;
+ With rushing wheel and heart of fire they come,
+ Or glide and glance like white-wing'd doves that know
+ And seek their proper home:--
+ England! not England yet! but fair as now,
+When first the chalky strand was stirr'd by Roman prow.
+
+2
+
+ On thy dear countenance, great mother-land,
+ Age after age thy sons have set their sign,
+ Moulding the features with successive hand
+ Not always sedulous of beauty's line:--
+ Yet here Man's art in one harmonious aim
+ With Nature's gentle moulding, oft has work'd
+ The perfect whole to frame:
+ Nor does earth's labour'd face elsewhere, like thee,
+Give back her children's heart with such full sympathy
+
+3
+
+ --On marshland rough and self-sprung forest gazed
+ The imperial Roman of the eagle-eye;
+ Log-splinter'd forts on green hill-summits raised,
+ Earth huts and rings that dot the chalk-downs high:--
+ Dark rites of hidden faith in grove and moor;
+ Idols of monstrous build; wheel'd scythes of war;
+ Rock tombs and pillars hoar:
+ Strange races, Finn, Iberian, Belgae, Celt;
+While in the wolds huge bulls and antler'd giants dwelt.
+
+4
+
+ --Another age!--The spell of Rome has past
+ Transforming all our Britain; Ruthless plough,
+ Which plough'd the world, yet o'er the nations cast
+ The seed of arts, and law, and all that now
+ Has ripen'd into commonwealths:--Her hand
+ With network mile-paths binding plain and hill
+ Arterialized the land:
+ The thicket yields: the soil for use is clear;
+Peace with her plastic touch,--field, farm, and grange are here.
+
+5
+
+ Lo, flintwall'd cities, castles stark and square
+ Bastion'd with rocks that rival Nature's own;
+ Red-furnaced baths, trim gardens planted fair
+ With tree and flower the North ne'er yet had known;
+ Long temple-roofs and statues poised on high
+ With golden wings outstretch'd for tiptoe flight,
+ Quivering in summer sky:--
+ The land had rest, while those stern legions lay
+By northern ramparts camp'd, and held the Pict at bay.
+
+6
+
+ Imperious Empire! Thrice-majestic Rome!
+ No later age, as earth's slow centuries glide,
+ Can raze the footprints stamp'd where thou hast come,
+ The ne'er-repeated grandeur of thy stride!
+ --Though now so dense a darkness takes the land,
+ Law, peace, wealth, letters, faith,--all lights are quench'd
+ By violent heathen hand:--
+ Vague warrior kings; names writ in fire and wrong;
+Aurelius, Urien, Ida;--shades of ancient song.
+
+7
+
+ And Thou--O whether born of flame and wave,
+ Or Gorlois' son, or Uther's, blameless lord,
+ True knight, who died for those thou couldst not save
+ When the Round Table brake their plighted word,--
+ The lord of song hath set thee in thy grace
+ And glory, rescued from the phantom world,
+ Before us face to face;
+ No more Avilion bowers the King detain;
+The mystic child returns; the Arthur reigns again!
+
+8
+
+ --Now, as some cloud that hides a mountain bulk
+ Thins to white smoke, and mounts in lighten'd air,
+ And through the veil the gray enormous hulk
+ Burns, and the summit, last, is keen and bare,--
+ From wasted Britain so the gloaming clears;
+ Another birth of time breaks eager out,
+ And England fair appears:--
+ Imperial youth sign'd on her golden brow,
+While the prophetic eyes with hope and promise glow.
+
+9
+
+ Then from the wasted places of the land,
+ Charr'd skeletons of cities, circling walls
+ Of Roman might, and towers that shatter'd stand
+ Of that lost world survivors, forth she calls
+ Her new creation:--O'er the land is wrought
+ The happy villagedom by English tribes
+ From Elbe and Baltic brought;
+ Red kine light up with life the ravaged plain;
+The forest glooms are pierced; the plough-land laughs again.
+
+10
+
+ Each from its little croft the homesteads peep,
+ Green apple-garths around, and hedgeless meads,
+ Smooth-shaven lawns of ever-shifting sheep,
+ Wolds where his dappled crew the swineherd feeds:--
+ Pale gold round pure pale foreheads, and their eyes
+ More dewy blue than speedwell by the brook
+ When Spring's fresh current flies,
+ The free fair maids come barefoot to the fount,
+Or poppy-crown'd with fire, the car of harvest mount.
+
+11
+
+ On the salt stream that rings us, ness and bay,
+ The nation's old sea-soul beats blithe and strong;
+ The black foam-breasters taste Biscayan spray,
+ And where 'neath Polar dawns the narwhals throng:--
+ Free hands, free hearts, for labour and for glee,
+ Or village-moot, when thane with churl unites
+ Beneath the sacred tree;
+ While wisdom tempers force, and bravery leads,
+Till spears beat _Aye_! on shields, and words at once are deeds.
+
+12
+
+ Again with life the ruin'd cities smile,
+ Again from mother-Rome their sacred fire
+ Knowledge and Faith rekindle through the isle,
+ Nigh quench'd by barbarous war and heathen ire:--
+ --No more on Balder's grave let Anglia weep
+ When winter storms entomb the golden year
+ Sunk in Adonis-sleep;
+ Another God has risen, and not in vain!
+The Woden-ash is low, the Cross asserts her reign.
+
+13
+
+ --Land of the most law-loving,--the most free!
+ My dear, dear England! sweet and green as now
+ The flower-illumined garden of the sea,
+ And Nature least impair'd by axe and plough!
+ A laughing land!--Thou seest not in the north
+ How the black Dane and vulture Norseman wait
+ The sign of coming forth,
+ The foul Landeyda flap its raven plume,
+And all the realms once more eclipsed in pagan gloom!
+
+14
+
+ --O race, of many races well compact!
+ As some rich stream that runs in silver down
+ From the White Mount:--his baby steps untrack'd
+ Where clouds and emerald cliffs of crystal frown;
+ Now, alien founts bring tributary flood,
+ Or kindred waters blend their native hue,
+ Some darkening as with blood;
+ These fraught with iron strength and freshening brine,
+And these with lustral waves, to sweeten and refine.
+
+15
+
+ Now calm as strong, and clear as summer air,
+ Blessing and blest of earth and sky, he glides:
+ Now on some rock-ridge rends his bosom fair,
+ And foams with cloudy wrath and hissing tides:
+ Then with full flood of level-gliding force,
+ His discord-blended melody murmurs low
+ Down the long seaward course:--
+ So through Time's mead, great River, greatly glide:
+Whither, thou may'st not know:--but He, who knows, will guide.
+
+St. 3 Sketches Prehistoric England. St. 4 _Mile-paths_; old English name
+for Roman roads. St. 5 _Tree and flower_; such are reported to have been
+naturalized in England by the Romans.--_Northern ramparts_; that of
+Agricola and Lollius Urbicus from Forth to Clyde, and the greater work of
+Hadrian and Severus between Tyne and Solway. St. 6, 7 The Arthurian
+legends,--now revivified for us by Tennyson's magnificent _Idylls of the
+King_,--form the visionary links in our history between the decline of
+the Roman power and the earlier days of the Saxon conquest. St. 9
+_Villagedom_; Angles and Saxons seem at first to have burned the larger
+towns of the Romanized Britons and left them deserted, in favour of
+village-life. St. 11 _Village-moot_: Held on a little hill or round a
+sacred tree: 'the ealdermen spoke, groups of freemen stood round,
+clashing shields in applause, settling matters by loud shouts of _Aye_ or
+_Nay_.' (J. R. Green, _History of the English People_). St. 12 Balder,
+the God of Light, like Adonis in the old Greek story, is a nature-myth,
+figuring the Sun, yearly dying in winter, and yearly restored to life.
+St. 13 _Landeyda_; Name of Danish banner: 'the desolation of the land.'
+
+For further details upon points briefly noticed in this _Prelude_,
+readers are referred to Mr. J. R. Green's _History_, and to Mr. T.
+Wright's _The Celt_, _The Roman_, and _The Saxon_, as sources readily
+accessible.
+
+
+
+THE FIRST AND LAST LAND
+
+
+_AT SENNEN_
+
+Thrice-blest, alone with Nature!--here, where gray
+ Belerium fronts the spray
+Smiting the bastion'd crags through centuries flown,
+ While, 'neath the hissing surge,
+Ocean sends up a deep, deep undertone,
+
+As though his heavy chariot-wheels went round:
+ Nor is there other sound
+Save from the abyss of air, a plaintive note,
+ The seabirds' calling cry,
+As 'gainst the wind with well-poised weight they float,
+
+Or on some white-fringed reef set up their post,
+ And sentinel the coast:--
+Whilst, round each jutting cape, in pillar'd file,
+ The lichen-bearded rocks
+Like hoary giants guard the sacred Isle.
+
+--Happy, alone with Nature thus!--Yet here
+ Dim, primal man is near;--
+The hawk-eyed eager traders, who of yore
+ Through long Biscayan waves
+Star-steer'd adventurous from the Iberic shore
+
+Or the Sidonian, with their fragrant freight
+ Oil-olive, fig, and date;
+Jars of dark sunburnt wine, flax-woven robes,
+ Or Tyrian azure glass
+Wavy with gold, and agate-banded globes:--
+
+Changing for amber-knobs their Eastern ware
+ Or tin-sand silvery fair,
+To temper brazen swords, or rim the shield
+ Of heroes, arm'd for fight:--
+While the rough miners, wondering, gladly yield
+
+The treasured ore; nor Alexander's name
+ Know, nor fair Helen's shame;
+Or in his tent how Peleus' wrathful son
+ Looks toward the sea, nor heeds
+The towers of still-unconquer'd Ilion.
+
+_Belerium_; The name given to the Land's End by Diodorus, the Greek
+historical compiler. He describes the natives as hospitable and
+civilized. They mined tin, which was bought by traders and carried
+through Gaul to the south-east, and may, as suggested here, have been
+used in their armour by the warriors during the Homeric Siege of Troy.
+
+
+
+PAULINUS AND EDWIN
+
+
+627
+
+The black-hair'd gaunt Paulinus
+ By ruddy Edwin stood:--
+'Bow down, O King of Deira,
+ Before the holy Rood!
+Cast forth thy demon idols,
+ And worship Christ our Lord!'
+--But Edwin look'd and ponder'd,
+ And answer'd not a word.
+
+Again the gaunt Paulinus
+ To ruddy Edwin spake:
+'God offers life immortal
+ For His dear Son's own sake!
+Wilt thou not hear his message
+ Who bears the Keys and Sword?'
+--But Edwin look'd and ponder'd,
+ And answer'd not a word.
+
+Rose then a sage old warrior;
+ Was five-score winters old;
+Whose beard from chin to girdle
+ Like one long snow-wreath roll'd:--
+'At Yule-time in our chamber
+ We sit in warmth and light,
+While cavern-black around us
+ Lies the grim mouth of Night.
+
+'Athwart the room a sparrow
+ Darts from the open door:
+Within the happy hearth-light
+ One red flash,--and no more!
+We see it born from darkness,
+ And into darkness go:--
+So is our life, King Edwin!
+ Ah, that it should be so!
+
+'But if this pale Paulinus
+ Have somewhat more to tell;
+Some news of whence and whither,
+ And where the Soul may dwell:--
+If on that outer darkness
+ The sun of Hope may shine;--
+He makes life worth the living!
+ I take his God for mine!'
+
+So spake the wise old warrior;
+ And all about him cried
+'Paulinus' God hath conquer'd!
+ And he shall he our guide:--
+For he makes life worth living,
+ Who brings this message plain,--
+When our brief days are over,
+ That we shall live again.'
+
+Paulinus was one of the four missionaries sent form Rome by Gregory the
+Great in 601. The marriage of Edwin, King of Northumbria, with
+Ethelburga, sister to Eadbald of Kent, opened Paulinus' way to northern
+England. Bede, born less than fifty years after, has given an admirable
+narrative of Edwin's conversion: which is very completely told in
+Bright's _Early English Church History_, B. IV.
+
+Deira, (from old-Welsh _deifr_, waters), then comprised Eastern Yorkshire
+from Tees to Humber. Goodmanham, where the meeting described was held,
+is some 23 miles from York.
+
+
+
+ALFRED THE GREAT
+
+
+ 849-901
+
+1
+
+The fair-hair'd boy is at his mother's knee,
+ A many-colour'd page before them spread,
+ Gay summer harvest-field of gold and red,
+With lines and staves of ancient minstrelsy.
+But through her eyes alone the child can see,
+ From her sweet lips partake the words of song,
+ And looks as one who feels a hidden wrong,
+Or gazes on some feat of gramarye.
+'When thou canst use it, thine the book!' she cried:
+He blush'd, and clasp'd it to his breast with pride:--
+ 'Unkingly task!' his comrades cry; In vain;
+All work ennobles nobleness, all art,
+He sees; Head governs hand; and in his heart
+ All knowledge for his province he has ta'en.
+
+2
+
+Few the bright days, and brief the fruitful rest,
+ As summer-clouds that o'er the valley flit:--
+ To other tasks his genius he must fit;
+The Dane is in the land, uneasy guest!
+--O sacred Athelney, from pagan quest
+ Secure, sole haven for the faithful boy
+ Waiting God's issue with heroic joy
+And unrelaxing purpose in the breast!
+The Dragon and the Raven, inch by inch,
+For England fight; nor Dane nor Saxon flinch;
+ Then Alfred strikes his blow; the realm is free:--
+He, changing at the font his foe to friend,
+Yields for the time, to gain the far-off end,
+ By moderation doubling victory.
+
+O much-vex'd life, for us too short, too dear!
+ The laggard body lame behind the soul;
+ Pain, that ne'er marr'd the mind's serene control;
+Breathing on earth heaven's aether atmosphere,
+God with thee, and the love that casts out fear!
+ A soul in life's salt ocean guarding sure
+ The freshness of youth's fountain sweet and pure,
+And to all natural impulse crystal-clear:
+To service or command, to low and high
+Equal at once in magnanimity,
+ The Great by right divine thou only art!
+Fair star, that crowns the front of England's morn,
+Royal with Nature's royalty inborn,
+ And English to the very heart of heart!
+
+_The fair-hair'd boy_: There is a singular unanimity among historians in
+regard to this 'darling of the English,' whose life has been vividly
+sketched by Freeman (_Conquest_, ch. ii); by Green (_English People_, B.
+I: ch. iii); and, earlier, by my Father in his short _History of the
+Anglo-Saxons_, ch. vi-viii.
+
+_Changing at the font_: Alfred was godfather to Guthrun the Dane, when
+baptized after his defeat at Ethandune in 878.
+
+
+
+A DANISH BARROW
+
+
+_ON THE EAST DEVON COAST_
+
+Lie still, old Dane, below thy heap!
+ --A sturdy-back and sturdy-limb,
+ Whoe'er he was, I warrant him
+Upon whose mound the single sheep
+ Browses and tinkles in the sun,
+ Within the narrow vale alone.
+
+Lie still, old Dane! This restful scene
+ Suits well thy centuries of sleep:
+ The soft brown roots above thee creep,
+The lotus flaunts his ruddy sheen,
+ And,--vain memento of the spot,--
+ The turquoise-eyed forget-me-not.
+
+Lie still!--Thy mother-land herself
+ Would know thee not again: no more
+ The Raven from the northern shore
+Hails the bold crew to push for pelf,
+ Through fire and blood and slaughter'd kings,
+ 'Neath the black terror of his wings.
+
+And thou,--thy very name is lost!
+ The peasant only knows that here
+ Bold Alfred scoop'd thy flinty bier,
+And pray'd a foeman's prayer, and tost
+ His auburn, head, and said 'One more
+ Of England's foes guards England's shore,'
+
+And turn'd and pass'd to other feats,
+ And left thee in thine iron robe,
+ To circle with the circling globe,
+While Time's corrosive dewdrop eats
+ The giant warrior to a crust
+ Of earth in earth, and rust in rust.
+
+So lie: and let the children play
+ And sit like flowers upon thy grave,
+ And crown with flowers,--that hardly have
+A briefer blooming-tide than they;--
+ By hurrying years borne on to rest,
+ As thou, within the Mother's breast.
+
+
+
+HASTINGS
+
+
+October 14: 1066
+
+'Gyrth, is it dawn in the sky that I see? or is all the sky blood?
+Heavy and sore was the fight in the North: yet we fought for the good.
+O but--Brother 'gainst brother!--'twas hard!--Now I come with a will
+To baste the false bastard of France, the hide of the tanyard and mill!
+ Now on the razor-edge lies
+ England the priceless, the prize!
+God aiding, the Raven at Stamford we smote;
+One stroke more for the land here I strike and devote!'
+
+Red with fresh breath on her lips came the dawn; and Harold uprose;
+Kneels as man before God; then takes his long pole-axe, and goes
+Where round their woven wall, tough ash-palisado, they crowd;
+Mightily cleaves and binds, to his comrades crying aloud
+ 'Englishmen stalwart and true,
+ But one word has Harold for you!
+When from the field the false foreigners run,
+Stand firm in your castle, and all will be won!
+
+'Now, with God o'er us, and Holy Rood, arm!'--And he ran for his spear:
+But Gyrth held him back, 'mong his brothers Gyrth the most honour'd, most
+dear:
+'Go not, Harold! thine oath is against thee! the Saints look askance:
+I am not king; let me lead them, me only: mine be the chance!'
+ --'No! The leader must lead!
+ Better that Harold should bleed!
+To the souls I appeal, not the dust of the tomb:--
+King chosen of Edward and England, I come!'
+
+Over Heathland surge banners and lances, three armies; William the last,
+Clenching his mace; Rome's gonfanon round him Rome's majesty cast:
+O'er his Bretons Fergant, o'er the hireling squadrons Montgomery lords,
+Jerkin'd archers, and mail-clads, and horsemen with pennons and swords:--
+ --England, in threefold array,
+ Anchor, and hold them at bay,
+Firm set in your own wooden walls! and the wave
+Of high-crested Frenchmen will break on their grave.
+
+So to the palisade on! There, Harold and Leofwine and Gyrth
+Stand like a triple Thor, true brethren in arms as in birth:
+And above the fierce standards strain at their poles as they flare on the
+gale;
+One, the old Dragon of Wessex, and one, a Warrior in mail.
+ 'God Almighty!' they cry!
+ 'Haro!' the Northmen reply:--
+As when eagles are gather'd and loud o'er the prey,
+Shout! for 'tis England the prize of the fray!
+
+And as when two lightning-clouds tilt, between them an arrowy sleet
+Hisses and darts; till the challenging thunders are heard, and they meet;
+Across fly javelins and serpents of flame: green earth and blue sky
+Blurr'd in the blind tornado:--so now the battle goes high.
+ Shearing through helmet and limb
+ Glaive-steel and battle-axe grim:
+As the flash of the reaper in summer's high wheat,
+King Harold mows horseman and horse at his feet.
+
+O vainly the whirlwind of France up the turf to the palisade swept:
+Shoulder to shoulder the Englishmen stand, and the shield-wall is kept:--
+As, in a summer to be, when England and she yet again
+Strove for the sovranty, firm stood our squares, through the pitiless
+rain
+ Death rain'd o'er them all day;
+ --Happier, not braver than they
+Who on Senlac e'en yet their still garrison keep,
+Sleeping a long Marathonian sleep!
+
+'Madmen, why turn?' cried the Duke,--for the horsemen recoil from the
+slope;
+'Behold me! I live!'--and he lifted the ventayle; 'before you is hope:
+Death, not safety, behind!'--and he spurs to the centre once more,
+Lion-like leaps on the standard and Harold: but Gyrth is before!
+ 'Down! He is down!' is the shout:
+ 'On with the axes! Out, Out!'
+--He rises again; the mace circles its stroke;
+Then falls as the thunderbolt falls on the oak.
+
+--Gyrth is crush'd, and Leofwine is crush'd; yet the shields hold their
+wall:
+'Edith alone of my dear ones is left me, and dearest of all!
+Edith has said she would seek me to-day when the battle is done;
+Her love more precious alone than kingdoms and victory won;
+ O for the sweetness of home!
+ O for the kindness to come!'
+Then around him again the wild war-dragons roar,
+And he drinks the red wine-cup of battle once more.
+
+--'Anyhow from their rampart to lure them, to shatter the bucklers and
+wall,
+Acting a flight,' in his craft thought William, and sign'd to recall
+His left battle:--O countrymen! slow to be roused! roused, always, as
+then,
+Reckless of life or death, bent only to quit you like men!--
+ As bolts from the bow-string they go,
+ Whirl them and hurl them below,
+Where the deep foss yawns for the foe in his course,
+Piled up and brimming with horseman and horse.
+
+As when October's sun, long caught in a curtain of gray,
+With a flood of impatient crimson breaks out, at the dying of day,
+And trees and green fields, the hills and the skies, are all steep'd in
+the stain;--
+So o'er the English one hope flamed forth, one moment,--in vain!
+ As hail when the corn-fields are deep,
+ Down the fierce arrow-points sweep:
+Now the basnets of France o'er the palisade frown;
+The shield-fort is shatter'd; the Dragon is down.
+
+O then there was dashing and dinting of axe and of broad-sword and spear:
+Blood crying out to blood: and Hatred that casteth out fear!
+Loud where the fight is the loudest, the slaughter-breath hot in the air,
+O what a cry was that!--the cry of a nation's despair!
+ --Hew down the best of the land!
+ Down them with mace and with brand!
+The fell foreign arrow has crash'd to the brain;
+England with Harold the Englishman slain!
+
+Yet they fought on for their England! of ineffaceable fame
+Worthy, and stood to the death, though the greedy sword, like a flame,
+Bit and bit yet again in the solid ranks, and the dead
+Heap where they die, and hills of foemen about them are spread:--
+ --Hew down the heart of the land,
+ There, to a man, where they stand!
+Till night with her blackness uncrimsons the stain,
+And the merciful shroud overshadows our slain.
+
+Heroes unburied, unwept!--But a wan gray thing in the night
+Like a marsh-wisp flits to and fro through the blood-lake, the steam of
+the fight;
+Turning the bodies, exploring the features with delicate touch;
+Stumbling as one that finds nothing: but now!--as one finding too much:
+ Love through mid-midnight will see:
+ Edith the fair! It is he!
+Clasp him once more, the heroic, the dear!
+Harold was England: and Harold lies here.
+
+_The hide of the tanyard_; See the story of Arlette or Herleva, the
+tanner's daughter, mother to William 'the Bastard.'
+
+_At Stamford_; At Stamford Bridge, over the Derwent, Harold defeated his
+brother Tostig and Harold Hardrada, Sep 25, 1066.
+
+_Your castle_; Harold's triple palisade upon the hill of battle is so
+described by the chronicler, Henry of Huntingdon.
+
+_Rome's gonfanon_; The consecrated banner, sent to William from Rome.
+
+_The fierce standards_; These were planted on the spot chosen by the
+Conqueror for the high-altar of the Abbey of Battle. The _Warrior_ was
+Harold's 'personal ensign.'
+
+_In a summer to be_; June 18, 1815.
+
+_The ventayle_; Used here for the _nasale_ or nose-piece shown in the
+Bayeux Tapestry.
+
+
+
+DEATH IN THE FOREST
+
+
+August 2: 1100
+
+Where the greenwood is greenest
+At gloaming of day,
+Where the twelve-antler'd stag
+Faces boldest at bay;
+Where the solitude deepens,
+Till almost you hear
+The blood-beat of the heart
+As the quarry slips near;
+His comrades outridden
+With scorn in the race,
+The Red King is hallooing
+His bounds to the chase.
+
+ What though the Wild Hunt
+Like a whirlwind of hell
+Yestereve ran the forest,
+With baying and yell:--
+In his cups the Red heathen
+Mocks God to the face;
+--'In the devil's name, shoot;
+Tyrrell, ho!--to the chase!'
+
+--Now with worms for his courtiers
+He lies in the narrow
+Cold couch of the chancel!
+--But whence was the arrow?
+
+The dread vision of Serlo
+That call'd him to die,
+The weird sacrilege terror
+Of sleep, have gone by.
+The blood of young Richard
+Cries on him in vain,
+In the heart of the Lindwood
+By arbalest slain.
+And he plunges alone
+In the Serpent-glade gloom,
+As one whom the Furies
+Hound headlong to doom.
+
+ His sin goes before him,
+The lust and the pride;
+And the curses of England
+Breathe hot at his side.
+And the desecrate walls
+Of the Evil-wood shrine
+Lo, he passes--unheeding
+Dark vision and sign:--
+
+--Now with worms for his courtiers
+He lies in the narrow
+Cold couch of the chancel:
+--But whence was the arrow?
+
+Then a shudder of death
+Flicker'd fast through the wood:--
+And they found the Red King
+Red-gilt in his blood.
+What wells up in his throat?
+Is it cursing, or prayer?
+Was it Henry, or Tyrrell,
+Or demon, who there
+Has dyed the fell tyrant
+Twice crimson in gore,
+While the soul disincarnate
+Hunts on to hell-door?
+
+ --Ah! friendless in death!
+Rude forest-hands fling
+On the charcoaler's wain
+What but now was the king!
+And through the long Minster
+The carcass they bear,
+And huddle it down
+Without priest, without prayer:--
+
+Now with worms for his courtiers
+He lies in the narrow
+Cold couch of the chancel:
+--But whence was the arrow?
+
+_In his cups_; Rufus, it is said, was 'fey,' as the old phrase has it, on
+the day of his death. He feasted long and high, and then chose out two
+cross-bow shafts, presenting them to Tyrrell with the exclamation given
+above.
+
+_Serlo_; He was Abbot of Gloucester, and had sent to Rufus the narrative
+of an ominous dream, reported in the Monastery.
+
+_The true dreams_; On his last night Rufus 'laid himself down to sleep,
+but not in peace; the attendants were startled by the King's voice--a
+bitter cry--a cry for help--a cry for deliverance--he had been suddenly
+awakened by a dreadful dream, as of exquisite anguish befalling him in
+that ruined church, at the foot of the Malwood rampart.' Palgrave:
+_Hist. of Normandy and of England_, B. IV: ch. xii.
+
+_Young Richard_; Son to Robert Courthose, and hunting, as his uncle's
+guest, in the New Forest in May 1100, was mysteriously slain by a heavy
+bolt from a Norman Arbalest.
+
+_The Evil-wood walls_; 'Amongst the sixty churches which had been
+'ruined,' my Father remarks, in his notice of the New Forest, 'the
+sanctuary below the mystic Malwood was peculiarly remarkable. . . . You
+reach the Malwood easily from the Leafy Lodge in the favourite deer-walk,
+the Lind-hurst, the Dragon's wood.'
+
+_Through the long Minster_; Winchester. Rufus, with much hesitation, was
+buried in the chancel as a king; but no religious service or ceremonial
+was celebrated:--'All men thought that prayers were hopeless.'
+
+
+
+EDITH OF ENGLAND
+
+
+1100
+
+Through sapling shades of summer green,
+ By glade and height and hollow,
+Where Rufus rode the stag to bay,
+King Henry spurs a jocund way,
+ Another chase to follow.
+But when he came to Romsey gate
+ The doors are open'd free,
+And through the gate like sunshine streams
+ A maiden company:--
+One girdled with the vervain-red,
+ And three in sendal gray,
+And touch the trembling rebeck-strings
+ To their soft roundelay;--
+
+--The bravest knight may fail in fight;
+ The red rust edge the sword;
+The king his crown in dust lay down;
+ But Love is always Lord!
+
+King Henry at her feet flings down,
+ His helmet ringing loudly:--
+His kisses worship Edith's hand;
+'Wilt thou be Queen of all the land?'
+ --O red she blush'd and proudly!
+Red as the crimson girdle bound
+ Beneath her gracious breast;
+Red as the silken scarf that flames
+ Above his lion-crest.
+She lifts and casts the cloister-veil
+ All on the cloister-floor:--
+The novice maids of Romsey smile,
+ And think of love once more.
+
+'Well, well, to blush!' the Abbess cried,
+ 'The veil and vow deriding
+That rescued thee, in baby days,
+From insolence of Norman gaze,
+ In pure and holy hiding.
+--O royal child of South and North,
+ Malcolm and Margaret,
+The promised bride of Heaven art thou,
+ And Heaven will not forget!
+What recks it, if an alien King
+ Encoronet thy brow,
+Or if the false Italian priest
+ Pretend to loose the vow?'
+
+O then to white the red rose went
+ On Edith's cheek abiding!
+With even glance she answer'd meek
+'I leave the life I did not seek,
+ In holy Church confiding':--
+Then Love smiled true on Henry's face,
+ And Anselm join'd the hands
+That in one race two races bound
+ By everlasting bands.
+So Love is Lord, and Alfred's blood
+ Returns the land to sway;
+And all her joyous maidens join
+ In their soft roundelay:
+
+--For though the knight may fail in fight,
+ The red rust edge the sword,
+The king his crown in dust lay down,
+ Yet Love is always Lord!
+
+Edith, (who, after marriage, took the name Matilda in compliment to
+Henry's mother), daughter to Malcolm King of Scotland by Margaret,
+granddaughter of Edmund Ironside, had been brought up by her aunt
+Christina, and placed in Romsey Abbey for security against Norman
+violence. But she had always refused to take the vows, and was hence, in
+opposition to her aunt's wish, declared canonically free to marry by
+Anselm; called here an _Italian priest_, as born at Aosta. Henry had
+been long attached to the Princess, and married her shortly after his
+accession.
+
+
+
+A CRUSADER'S TOMB
+
+
+1230
+
+Unnamed, unknown:--his hands across his breast
+ Set in sepulchral rest,
+In yon low cave-like niche the warrior lies,
+ --A shrine within a shrine,--
+Full of gray peace, while day to darkness dies.
+
+Then the forgotten dead at midnight come
+ And throng their chieftain's tomb,
+Murmuring the toils o'er which they toil'd, alive,
+ The feats of sword and love;
+And all the air thrills like a summer hive.
+
+--How so, thou say'st!--This is the poet's right!
+ He looks with larger sight
+Than they who hedge their view by present things,
+ The small, parochial world
+Of sight and touch: and what he sees, he sings.
+
+The steel-shell'd host, that, gleaming as it turns,
+ Like autumn lightning burns,
+A moment's azure, the fresh flags that glance
+ As cornflowers o'er the corn,
+Till war's stern step show like a gala dance,
+
+He also sees; and pierces to the heart,
+ Scanning the genuine part
+Each Red-Cross pilgrim plays: Some, gold-enticed;
+ By love or lust or fame
+Urged; or who yearn to kiss the grave of Christ
+
+And find their own, life-wearied:--Motley band!
+ O! ere they quit the Land
+How maim'd, how marr'd, how changed from all that pride
+ In which so late they left
+Orwell or Thames, with sails out-swelling wide
+
+And music tuneable with the timing oar
+ Clear heard from shore to shore;
+All Europe streaming to the mystic East!
+ --Now on their sun-smit ranks
+The dusky squadrons close in vulture-feast,
+
+And that fierce Day-star's blazing ball their sight
+ Sears with excess of light;
+Or through dun sand-clouds the blue scimitar's edge
+ Slopes down like fire from heaven,
+Mowing them as the thatcher mows the sedge.
+
+Then many a heart remember'd, as the skies
+ Grew dark on dying eyes,
+Sweet England; her fresh fields and gardens trim;
+ Her tree-embower'd halls;
+And the one face that was the world to him.
+
+--And one who fought his fight and held his way,
+ Through life's long latter day
+Moving among the green, green English meads,
+ Ere in this niche he took
+His rest, oft 'mid his kinsfolk told the deeds
+
+Of that gay passage through the Midland sea;
+ Cyprus and Sicily;
+And how the Lion-Heart o'er the Moslem host
+ Triumph'd in Ascalon
+Or Acre, by the tideless Tyrian coast,
+
+Yet never saw the vast Imperial dome,
+ Nor the thrice-holy Tomb:--
+--As that great vision of the hidden Grail
+ By bravest knights of old
+Unseen:--seen only of pure Parcivale.
+
+The 'Thud Crusade,' 1189-1193, is the subject of this poem. Richard
+Coeur de Lion carried his followers by way of Sicily and Cyprus: making a
+transient conquest of the latter. In the Holy Land the siege of Acre
+consumed the time and strength of the Crusaders. They suffered terribly
+in the wilderness of Mount Carmel, and when at last preparing to march on
+Jerusalem (1192) were recalled to Ascalon. Richard now advanced to
+Bethany, but was unable to reach the Holy City. The tale is that while
+riding with a party of knights one of them called out, 'This way, my
+lord, and you will see Jerusalem.' But Richard hid his face and said,
+'Alas!--they who are not worthy to win the Holy City are not worthy to
+behold it.'
+
+_The vast Imperial dome_; The Church of the Holy Sepulchre was built by
+the Emperor Constantine; A.D. 326-335.
+
+_The hidden Grail_; This vision forms the subject of one of Tennyson's
+noblest _Idylls_.
+
+
+
+A BALLAD OF EVESHAM
+
+
+August 4: 1265
+
+Earl Simon on the Abbey tower
+In summer sunshine stood,
+While helm and lance o'er Greenhill heights
+Come glinting through the wood.
+'My son!' he cried, 'I know his flag
+Amongst a thousand glancing':--
+Fond father! no!--'tis Edward stern
+In royal strength advancing.
+
+The Prince fell on him like a hawk
+At Al'ster yester-eve,
+And flaunts his captured banner now
+And flaunts but to deceive:--
+--Look round! for Mortimer is by,
+And guards the rearward river:--
+The hour that parted sire and son
+Has parted them for ever!
+
+'Young Simon's dead,' he thinks, and look'd
+Upon his living son:
+'Now God have mercy on our souls,
+Our bodies are undone!
+But, Hugh and Henry, ye can fly
+Before their bowmen smite us--
+They come on well! But 'tis from me
+They learn'd the skill to fight us.'
+
+--'For England's cause, and England's laws,
+With you we fight and fall!'
+--'Together, then, and die like men,
+And Heaven has room for all!'
+--Then, face to face, and limb to limb,
+And sword with sword inwoven,
+That stubborn courage of the race
+On Evesham field was proven
+
+O happy hills! O summer sky
+Above the valley bent!
+Your peacefulness rebukes the rage
+Of blood on blood intent!
+No thought was then for death or life
+Through that long dreadful hour,
+While Simon 'mid his faithful few
+Stood like an iron tower,
+
+'Gainst which the winds and waves are hurl'd
+In vain, unmoved, foursquare;
+And round him raged the insatiate swords
+Of Edward and De Clare:
+And round him in the narrow combe
+His white-cross comrades rally,
+While ghastly gashings, cloud the beck
+And crimson all the valley,
+
+And triple sword-thrusts meet his sword,
+And thrice the charge he foils,
+Though now in threefold flood the foe
+Round those devoted boils:
+And still the light of England's cause
+And England's love was o'er him,
+Until he saw his gallant boy
+Go down in blood before him:--
+
+He hove his huge two-handed blade,
+He cried ''Tis time to die!'
+And smote around him like a flail,
+And clear'd a space to lie:--
+'Thank God!'--no more;--nor now could life
+From loved and lost divide him:--
+And night fell o'er De Montfort dead,
+And England wept beside him.
+
+In the words given here to Simon (and, indeed, in the bulk of my
+narrative) I have almost literally followed Prothero's _Life_. The
+struggle, like other critical conflicts in the days of unprofessional
+war, was very brief.
+
+
+
+THE DIRGE OF LLYWELYN
+
+
+December 10: 1282
+
+Llanyis on Irfon, thine oaks in the drear
+Red eve of December are wind-swept and sere,
+Where a king by the stream in his agony lies,
+And the life of a land ebbs away as he dies.
+
+Caradoc, thy sceptre for centuries kept,
+Shall it pass like the ripple, unhonour'd, unwept:
+Unknowing the lance, and the victim unknown,
+Far from Aberffraw's halls and Eryri the lone!
+
+O dark day of winter and Cambria's shame,
+To the treason of Builth when from Gwynedd he came,
+And Walwyn and Frankton and Mortimer fell
+Closed round unawares by the fold in the dell!
+
+--As who, where the shadow beneath him is thrown,
+By some well in Saharan high noontide alone
+Sits under the palm-tree, nor hears the low breath
+Of the russet-maned foe panting hot for his death;
+
+So Llywelyn,--unarm'd, unaware:--Is it she,
+Bright star of his morning, when Gwynedd was free,
+Fair bride, the long sought, taken early, goes by?
+In the heart of the breeze the lost Eleanor's sigh?
+
+Or the one little daughter's sweet face with a gleam
+Of glamour looks out, as the dream in a dream?
+Or for childhood's first sunshine and calm does he yearn,
+As the days of Maesmynan in memory return?
+
+Or,--dear to the heart's-blood as first-love or wife,--
+The mountains whose freedom was one with his life,
+Gray farms and green vales of that ancient domain,
+The thousand-years' kingdom, he dreams of again?
+
+Or is it the rage of stark Edward; the base
+Unkingly revenge on a kinglier race;
+The wrong idly wrought on the patriot dead;
+The dark castle of doom; the scorn-diadem'd head?
+
+--Lo, where Rhodri and Owain await thee!--The foe
+Slips nearing in silence: one flash--and one blow!
+And the ripple that passes wafts down to the Wye
+The last prayer of Llywelyn, the nation's last sigh.
+
+But Llanynis yet sees the white rivulet gleam,
+And the leaf of December fall sere on the stream;
+While Irfon his dirge whispers on through the combe,
+And the purple-topt hills gather round in their gloom.
+
+_Where a king_; The war in which Llywelyn fell was the inevitable result
+of the growing power of England under Edward I; and, considering the vast
+preponderance of weight against the Welsh Prince it could not have ended
+but in the conquest of Wales. Yet its issue, as told here, was
+determined as if by chance.
+
+_Aberffraw_; in Anglesea: the residence of the royal line of Gywnedd from
+the time of Rhodri Mawr onwards.
+
+_Eryri_; the Eagle's rock is a name for Snowdon. The bird has been seen
+in the neighbourhood within late years.
+
+_Is it she_; Eleanor, daughter to Simon de Montfort. After some years of
+betrothal and impediment arising from the jealousy of Edward I, she and
+Llywelyn were married in 1278. But after only two years of happiness,
+Eleanor died, leaving one child, Catharine or Gwenllian.
+
+_Maesmynan_; by Caerwys in Flintshire; where Llywelyn lived retiredly in
+youth.
+
+_The thousand-years' kingdom_; The descent of the royal house of North
+Wales is legendarily traced from Caradoc-Caractacus. But the accepted
+genealogy of the Princes of Gwynedd begins with Cunedda Wledig
+(Paramount) cir. 400: ending in 1282 with Llywelyn son of Gruffydd.
+
+_The scorn-diadem'd head_; On finding whom he had slain, Frankton carried
+Llywelyn's head to Edward at Rhuddlan, who, with a barbarity unworthy of
+himself, set it over the Tower of London, wreathed in mockery of a
+prediction (ascribed to Merlin) upon the coronation of a Welsh Prince in
+London.
+
+_Rhodri and Owain_; Rhodri Mawr, (843), who united under his supremacy
+the other Welsh principalities, Powys and Dinefawr; Owain Gwynedd,
+(1137),--are among the most conspicuous of Llywelyn's royal predecessors.
+
+
+
+THE REJOICING OF THE LAND
+
+
+1295
+
+So the land had rest! and the cloud of that heart-sore struggle and pain
+Rose from her ancient hills, and peace shone o'er her again,
+Sunlike chasing the plagues wherewith the land was defiled;
+And the leprosy fled, and her flesh came again, as the flesh of a child.
+--They were stern and stark, the three children of Rolf, the first from
+Anjou:
+For their own sake loving the land, mayhap, but loving her true;
+France the wife, and England the handmaid; yet over the realm
+Their eyes were in every place, their hands gripp'd firm on the helm.
+Villein and earl, the cowl and the plume, they were bridled alike;
+One law for all, but arm'd law,--not swifter to aid than to strike.
+Lo, in the twilight transept, the holy places of God,
+Not with sunset the steps of the altar are dyed, but with scarlet of
+blood!
+Clang of iron-shod feet, and sheep for their shepherd who cry;
+Curses and swords that flash, and the victim proffer'd to die!
+--Bare thy own back to the smiter, O king, at the shrine of the dead:
+Thy friend thou hast slain in thy folly; the blood of the Saint on thy
+head:
+Proud and priestly, thou say'st;--yet tender and faithful and pure;
+True man, and so, true saint;--the crown of his martyrdom sure:--
+As friend with his friend, he could brave thee and warn; thou hast
+silenced the voice,
+Ne'er to be heard again:--nor again will Henry rejoice!
+Green Erin may yield her, fair Scotland submit; but his sunshine is o'er;
+The tooth of the serpent, the child of his bosom, has smote him so sore:--
+Like a wolf from the hounds he dragg'd off to his lair, not turning to
+bay:--
+Crying 'shame on a conquer'd king!'--the grim ghost fled sullen away.
+--Then, as in gray Autumn the heavens are pour'd on the rifted hillside,
+When the Rain-stars mistily gleam, and torrents leap white in their
+pride,
+And the valley is all one lake, and the late, unharvested shocks
+Are rapt to the sea, the dwellings of man, the red kine and the flocks,--
+O'er England the ramparts of law, the old landmarks of liberty fell,
+As the brothers in blood and in lust, twin horror begotten of hell,
+Suck'd all the life of the land to themselves, like Lofoden in flood,
+One in his pride, in his subtlety one, mocking England and God.
+Then tyranny's draught--once only--we drank to the dregs!--and the stain
+Went crimson and black through the soul of the land, for all time, not in
+vain!
+We bore the bluff many-wived king, rough rival and victor of Rome;
+We bore the stern despot-protector, whose dawning and sunset were gloom;
+For they temper'd the self of the tyrant with love of the land,
+Some touch of the heart, some remorse, refraining the grip of the hand.
+But John's was blackness of darkness, a day of vileness and shame;
+Shrieks of the tortured, and silence, and outrage the mouth cannot name.
+--O that cry of the helpless, the weak that writhe under the foe,
+Wrong man-wrought upon man, dumb unwritten annals of woe!
+Cry that goes upward from earth as she rolls through the peace of the
+skies
+'How long? Hast thou forgotten, O God!' . . . and silence replies!
+Silence:--and then was the answer;--the light o'er Windsor that broke,
+The Meadow of Law--true Avalon where the true Arthur awoke!
+--Not thou, whose name, as a seed o'er the world, plume-wafted on air,
+Britons on each side sea,--Caerlleon and Cumbria,--share,
+Joy of a downtrod race, dear hope of freedom to-be,
+Dream of poetic hearts, whom the vision only can see! . . .
+For thine were the fairy knights, fair ideals of beauty and song;
+But ours, in the ways of men, walk'd sober, and stumbling, and strong;--
+Stumbling as who in peril and twilight their pathway trace out,
+Hard to trace, and untried, and the foe above and about;
+For the Charter of Freedom, the voice of the land in her Council secure
+All doing, all daring,--and, e'en when defeated, of victory sure!
+Langton, our Galahad, first, stamp'd Leader by Rome unaware,
+Pembroke and Mowbray, Fitzwarine, Fitzalan, Fitzwalter, De Clare:--
+--O fair temple of Freedom and Law!--the foundations ye laid:--
+But again came the storm, and the might of darkness and wrong was
+array'd,
+A warfare of years; and the battle raged, and new heroes arose
+From a soil that is fertile in manhood's men, and scatter'd the foes,
+And set in their place the bright pillars of Order, Liberty's shrine,
+O'er the land far-seen, as o'er Athens the home of Athena divine.
+--So the land had rest:--and the cloud of that heart-sore struggle and
+pain
+Sped from her ancient hills, and peace shone o'er her again,
+Sunlike chasing the plagues wherewith the land was defiled:
+And the leprosy fled, and her flesh came again, as the flesh of a child.
+For lo! the crown'd Statesman of Law, Justinian himself of his realm,
+Edward, since Alfred our wisest of all who have watch'd by the helm!
+He who yet preaches in silence his life-word, the light of his way,
+From his marble unadorn'd chest, in the heart of the West Minster gray,
+_Keep thy Faith_ . . . In the great town-twilight, this city of gloom,
+--O how unlike that blithe London he look'd on!--I look on his tomb,
+In the circle of kings, round the shrine, where the air is heavy with
+fame,
+Dust of our moulder'd chieftains, and splendour shrunk to a name.
+Silent synod august, ye that tried the delight and the pain,
+Trials and snares of a throne, was the legend written in vain?
+Speak, for ye know, crown'd shadows! who down each narrow and strait
+As ye might, once guided,--a perilous passage,--the keel of the State,
+Fourth Henry, fourth Edward, Elizabeth, Charles,--now ye rest from your
+toil,
+Was it best, when by truth and compass ye steer'd, or by statecraft and
+guile?
+Or is it so hard, that steering of States, that as men who throw in
+With party their life, honour soils his own ermine, a lie is no sin? . . .
+--Not so, great Edward, with thee,--not so!--For he learn'd in his youth
+The step straightforward and sure, the proud, bright bearing of truth:--
+Arm'd against Simon at Evesham, yet not less, striking for Law,--
+Ages of temperate freedom, a vision of order, he saw!--
+--Vision of opulent years, a murmur of welfare and peace:
+Orchard golden-globed, plain waving in golden increase;
+Hopfields fairer than vineyards, green laughing tendrils and bine;
+Woodland misty in sunlight, and meadow sunny with kine;--
+Havens of heaving blue, where the keels of Guienne and the Hanse
+Jostle and creak by the quay, and the mast goes up like a lance,
+Gay with the pennons of peace, and, blazon'd with Adria's dyes,
+Purple and orange, the sails like a sunset burn in the skies.
+Bloodless conquests of commerce, that nation with nation unite!
+Hand clasp'd frankly in hand, not steel-clad buffets in fight:
+On the deck strange accents and shouting; rough furcowl'd men of the
+north,
+Genoa's brown-neck'd sons, and whom swarthy Smyrna sends forth:
+Freights of the south; drugs potent o'er death from the basilisk won,
+Odorous Phoenix-nest, and spice of a sunnier sun:--
+Butts of Malvasian nectar, Messene's vintage of old,
+Cyprian webs, damask of Arabia mazy with gold:
+Sendal and Samite and Tarsien, and sardstones ruddy as wine,
+Graved by Athenian diamond with forms of beauty divine.
+To the quay from the gabled alleys, the huddled ravines of the town,
+Twilights of jutting lattice and beam, the Guild-merchants come down,
+Cheapening the gifts of the south, the sea-borne alien bales,
+For the snow-bright fleeces of Leom'ster, the wealth of Devonian vales;
+While above them, the cavernous gates, on which knight-robbers have gazed
+Hopeless, in peace look down, their harrows of iron upraised;
+And Dustyfoot enters at will with his gay Autolycus load,
+And the maidens are flocking as doves when they fling the light grain on
+the road.
+Low on the riverain mead, where the dull clay-cottages cling
+To the tall town-ward and the towers, as nests of the martin in spring,
+Where the year-long fever lurks, and gray leprosy burrows secure,
+Are the wattled huts of the Friars, the long, white Church of the poor:
+--Haven of wearied eyelids; of hearts that care not to live;
+Shadow and silence of prayer; the peace which the world cannot give!
+Tapers hazily gloaming through fragrance the censers outpour;
+Chant ever rising and rippling in sweetness, as waves on the shore;
+Casements of woven stone, with more than the rainbow bedyed;
+Beauty of holiness! Spell yet unbroken by riches and pride!
+--Ah! could it be so for ever!--the good aye better'd by Time:--
+First-Faith, first-Wisdom, first-Love,--to the end be true to their
+prime! . .
+Far rises the storm o'er horizons unseen, that will lay them in dust,
+Crashings of plunder'd cloisters, and royal insatiate lust:--
+Far, unseen, unheard!--Meanwhile the great Minster on high
+Like a stream of music, aspiring, harmonious, springs to the sky:--
+Story on story ascending their buttress'd beauty unfold,
+Till the highest height is attain'd, and the Cross shines star-like in
+gold,
+Set as a meteor in heaven; a sign of health and release:--
+And the land rejoices below, and the heart-song of England is Peace.
+
+This date has been chosen as representing at once the culminating point
+in the reign of Edward, and of Mediaevalism in England. The sound, the
+fascinating elements of that period rapidly decline after the thirteenth
+century in Church and State, in art and in learning.
+
+'In the person of the great Edward,' says Freeman, 'the work of
+reconciliation is completed. Norman and Englishman have become one under
+the best and greatest of our later Kings, the first who, since the Norman
+entered our land, . . . followed a purely English policy.'
+
+_The three children_; William I and II, and Henry I.
+
+_The transept_; of Canterbury Cathedral, after Becket's death named the
+'Martyrdom.'
+
+_Nor again_; See the _Early Plantagenets_, by Bishop Stubbs: one of the
+very few masterpieces among the shoal of little books on great subjects
+in which a declining literature is fertile.
+
+_Britons on each side sea_; Armorica and Cornwall, Wales and Strathclyde,
+all share in the great Arthurian legend.
+
+_Justinian_; 'Edward,' says Dr. Stubbs, 'is the great lawgiver, the great
+politician, the great organiser of the mediaeval English polity:' (_Early
+Plantagenets_).
+
+_Keep thy Faith_; 'Pactum serva' may be still seen inscribed on the huge
+stone coffin of Edward I.
+
+_The keels of Guienne . . . Adria's dyes_; The ships of Gascony, of the
+Hanse Towns, of Genoa, of Venice, are enumerated amongst those which now
+traded with England.
+
+_Malvasian nectar_; 'Malvoisie,' the sweet wine of the Southern Morea,
+gained its name from Monemvasia, or Napoli di Malvasia, its port of
+shipment.
+
+_Sendal_; A thin rich silk. _Samite_; A very rich stuff, sometimes
+wholly of silk, often crimson, interwoven with gold and silver thread,
+and embroidered. _Tarsien_; Silken stuff from Tartary.
+
+_Athenian diamond_; A few very fine early gems ascribed to Athens, are
+executed wholly with diamond-point.
+
+_The snow-bright fleeces_; Those of Leominster were very long famous.
+
+_Devonian vales_; The ancient mining region west of Tavistock.
+
+_Dustyfoot_; Old name for pedlar.
+
+
+
+CRECY
+
+
+August 26: 1346
+
+ At Crecy by Somme in Ponthieu
+ High up on a windy hill
+ A mill stands out like a tower;
+ King Edward stands on the mill.
+ The plain is seething below
+ As Vesuvius seethes with flame,
+ But O! not with fire, but gore,
+ Earth incarnadined o'er,
+ Crimson with shame and with fame!--
+To the King run the messengers, crying
+'Thy Son is hard-press'd to the dying!'
+ --'Let alone: for to-day will be written in story
+ To the great world's end, and for ever:
+ So let the boy have the glory.'
+
+ Erin and Gwalia there
+ With England are one against France;
+ Outfacing the oriflamme red
+ The red dragons of Merlin advance:--
+ As harvest in autumn renew'd
+ The lances bend o'er the fields;
+ Snow-thick our arrow-heads white
+ Level the foe as they light;
+ Knighthood to yeomanry yields:--
+Proud heart, the King watches, as higher
+Goes the blaze of the battle, and nigher:--
+ 'To-day is a day will be written in story
+ To the great world's end, and for ever!
+ Let the boy alone have the glory.'
+
+ Harold at Senlac-on-Sea
+ By Norman arrow laid low,--
+ When the shield-wall was breach'd by the shaft,
+ --Thou art avenged by the bow!
+ Chivalry! name of romance!
+ Thou art henceforth but a name!
+ Weapon that none can withstand,
+ Yew in the Englishman's hand,
+ Flight-shaft unerring in aim!
+As a lightning-struck forest the foemen
+Shiver down to the stroke of the bowmen:--
+ --'O to-day is a day will be written in story
+ To the great world's end, and for ever!
+ So, let the boy have the glory.'
+
+ Pride of Liguria's shore
+ Genoa wrestles in vain;
+ Vainly Bohemia's King
+ Kinglike is laid with the slain.
+ The Blood-lake is wiped-out in blood,
+ The shame of the centuries o'er;
+ Where the pride of the Norman had sway
+ The lions lord over the fray,
+ The legions of France are no more:--
+--The Prince to his father kneels lowly;
+--'His is the battle! his wholly!
+ For to-day is a day will be written in story
+ To the great world's end, and for ever:--
+ So, let him have the spurs, and the glory!'
+
+_Erin and Gwalia_; Half of Edward's army consisted of light armed footmen
+from Ireland and Wales--the latter under their old Dragon-flag.
+
+_Chivalry_; The feudal idea of an army, resting 'on the superiority of
+the horseman to the footman, of the mounted noble to the unmounted
+churl,' may be said to have been ruined by this battle: (_Green_, B. IV:
+ch. iii).
+
+_Liguria_; 15,000 cross-bowmen from Genoa were in Philip's army.
+
+_The Blood-lake_; Senlac; Hastings.
+
+
+
+THE BLACK SEATS
+
+
+1348-9
+
+ Blue and ever more blue
+ The sky of that summer's spring:
+ No cloud from dawning to night:
+ The lidless eyeball of light
+ Glared: nor could e'en in darkness the dew
+ Her pearls on the meadow-grass string.
+ As a face of a hundred years,
+ Mummied and scarr'd, for the heart
+ Is long dry at the fountain of tears,
+ Green earth lay brown-faced and torn,
+ Scarr'd and hard and forlorn.
+ And as that foul monster of Lerna
+ Whom Heracles slew in his might,
+ But this one slaying, not slain,
+ From the marshes, poisonous, white,
+ Crawl'd out a plague-mist and sheeted the plain,
+ A hydra of hell and of night.
+ --Whence upon men has that horror past?
+ From Cathaya westward it stole to Byzance,--
+ The City of Flowers,--the vineyards of France;--
+ O'er the salt-sea ramparts of England, last,
+ Reeking and rank, a serpent's breath:--
+What is this, men cry in their fear, what is this that cometh?
+ 'Tis the Black Death, they whisper:
+ The black black Death!
+
+ The heart of man at the name
+ To a ball of ice shrinks in,
+ With hope, surrendering life:--
+ The husband looks on the wife,
+ Reading the tokens of doom in the frame,
+ The pest-boil hid in the skin,
+ And flees and leaves her to die.
+ Fear-sick, the mother beholds
+ In her child's pure crystalline eye
+ A dull shining, a sign of despair.
+ Lo, the heavens are poison, not air;
+ And they fall as when lambs in the pasture
+ With a moan that is hardly a moan,
+ Drop, whole flocks, where they stand;
+ And the mother lays her, alone,
+ Slain by the touch of her nursing hand,
+ Where the household before her is strown.
+ --Earth, Earth, open and cover thy dead!
+ For they are smitten and fall who bear
+ The corpse to the grave with a prayerless prayer,
+ And thousands are crush'd in the common bed:--
+ --Is it Hell that breathes with an adder's breath?
+ Is it the day of doom, men cry, the Judge that cometh?
+ --'Tis the Black Death, God help us!
+ The black black Death.
+
+ Maid Alice and maid Margaret
+ In the fields have built them a bower
+ Of reedmace and rushes fine,
+ Fenced with sharp albespyne;
+ Pretty maids hid in the nest; and yet
+ Yours is one death, and one hour!
+ Priest and peasant and lord
+ By the swift, soft stroke of the air,
+ By a silent invisible sword,
+ In plough-field or banquet, fall:
+ The watchers are flat on the wall:--
+ Through city and village and valley
+ The sweet-voiced herald of prayer
+ Is dumb in the towers; the throng
+ To the shrine pace barefoot; and where
+ Blazed out from the choir a glory of song,
+ God's altar is lightless and bare.
+ Is there no pity in earth or sky?
+ The burden of England, who shall say?
+ Half the giant oak is riven away,
+ And the green leaves yearn for the leaves that die.
+ Will the whole world drink of the dragon's breath?
+It is the cup, men cry, the cup of God's fury that cometh!
+ 'Tis the Black Death, Lord help us!
+ The black black Death.
+
+ In England is heard a moan,
+ A bitter lament and a sore,
+ Rachel lamenting her dead,
+ And will not be comforted
+ For the little faces for ever gone,
+ The feet from the silent floor.
+ And a cry goes up from the land,
+ Take from us in mercy, O God,
+ Take from us the weight of Thy hand,
+ The cup and the wormwood of woe!
+ 'Neath the terrible barbs of Thy bow
+ This England, this once Thy beloved,
+ Is water'd with life-blood for rain;
+ The bones of her children are white,
+ As flints on the Golgotha plain;
+ Not slain as warriors by warriors in fight,
+ By the arrows of Heaven slain.
+ We have sinn'd: we lift up our souls to Thee,
+ O Lord God eternal on high:
+ Thou who gavest Thyself to die,
+ Saviour, save! to Thy feet we flee:--
+ Snatch from the hell and the Enemy's breath,
+From the Prince of the Air, from the terror by night that cometh:--
+ From the Black Death, Christ save us!
+ The black black Death!
+
+_That foul monster_; The Lernaean Hydra of Greek legend.
+
+_From the marshes_; The drought which preceded the plague in England, and
+may have predisposed to its reception, was followed by mist, in which the
+people fancied they saw the disease palpably advancing.
+
+_From Cathaya_; The plague was heard of in Central Asia in 1333; it
+reached Constantinople in 1347.
+
+_The City of Flowers_; Florence, where the ravages of the plague were
+immortalized in the _Decamerone_ of Boccaccio.
+
+_The pest boil_; Seems to have been the enlarged and discharging gland by
+which the specific blood-poison of the plague relieved itself. A 'muddy
+glistening' of the eye is noticed as one of the symptoms.
+
+_The common bed_; More than 50,000 are said to have been buried on the
+site of the Charter House.
+
+_Albespyne_; Hawthorn.
+
+_Half the giant oak_; 'Of the three or four millions who then formed the
+population of England, more than one-half were swept away': (_Green_, B.
+IV: ch. iii).
+
+
+
+THE PILGRIM AND THE PLOUGHMAN
+
+
+1382
+
+It is a dream, I know:--Yet on the past
+Of this dear England if in thought we gaze,
+About her seems a constant sunshine cast;
+In summer calm we see and golden haze
+The little London of Plantagenet days;
+Quaint labyrinthine knot of toppling lanes,
+And thorny spires aflame with starlike vanes.
+
+Our silver Thames all yet unspoil'd and clear;
+The many-buttress'd bridge that stems the tide;
+Black-timber'd wharves; arcaded walls, that rear
+Long, golden-crested roofs of civic pride:--
+While flaunting galliots by the gardens glide,
+And on Spring's frolic air the May-song swells,
+Mix'd with the music of a thousand bells.
+
+Beyond the bridge a mazy forest swims,
+Great spars and sails and flame-tongued flags on high,
+Wedged round the quay, a-throng with ruddy limbs
+And faces bronzed beneath another sky:
+And 'mid the press sits one with aspect shy
+And downcast eyes of watching, and, the while,
+The deep observance of an inward smile.
+
+In hooded mantle gray he smiled and sate,
+With ink-horn at his knees and scroll and pen.
+And took the toll and register'd the freight,
+'Mid noise of clattering cranes and strife of men:
+And all that moved and spoke was in his ken,
+With lines and hues like Nature's own design'd
+Deep in the magic mirror of his mind.
+
+Thence oft, returning homeward, on the book,--
+His of Certaldo, or the bard whose lays
+Were lost to love in Scythia,--he would look
+Till his fix'd eyes the dancing letters daze:
+Then forth to the near fields, and feed his gaze
+On one fair flower in starry myriads spread,
+And in her graciousness be comforted:--
+
+Then, joyous with a poet's joy, to draw
+With genial touch, and strokes of patient skill,
+The very image of each thing he saw:--
+He limn'd the man all round, for good or ill,
+Having both sighs and laughter at his will;
+Life as it went he grasp'd in vision true,
+Yet stood outside the scene his pencil drew.
+
+--Man's inner passions in their conscience-strife,
+The conflicts of the heart against the heart,
+The mother yearning o'er the infant's life,
+The maiden wrong'd by wealth and lecherous art,
+The leper's loathsome cell from man apart,
+War's hell of lust and fire, the village-woe,
+The tinsel chivalry veiling shame below,--
+
+Not his to draw,--to see, perhaps:--Our eyes
+Hold bias with our humour:--His, to paint
+With Nature's freshness, what before him lies:
+The knave, the fool; the frolicsome, the quaint:
+His the broad jest, the laugh without restraint,
+The ready tears, the spirit lightly moved;
+Loving the world, and by the world beloved.
+
+So forth fared Chaucer on his pilgrimage
+Through England's humours; in immortal song
+Bodying the form and pressure of his age,
+Tints gay as pure, and delicate as strong;
+Still to the Tabard the blithe travellers throng,
+Seen in his mind so vividly, that we
+Know them more clearly than the men we see.
+
+Fair France, bright Italy, those numbers train'd;
+First in his pages Nature wedding Art
+Of all our sons of song; yet he remain'd
+True English of the English at his heart:--
+He stood between two worlds, yet had no part
+In that new order of the dawning day
+Which swept the masque of chivalry away.
+
+O Poet of romance and courtly glee
+And downcast eager glance that shuns the sky,
+Above, about, are signs thou canst not see,
+Portents in heaven and earth!--And one goes by
+With other than thy prosperous, laughing eye,
+Framing the rough web of his rueful lays,
+The sorrow and the sin--with bitter gaze
+
+As down the Strand he stalks, a sable shade
+Of death, while, jingling like the elfin train,
+In silver samite knight and dame and maid
+Ride to the tourney on the barrier'd plain;
+And he must bow in humble mute disdain,
+And that worst woe of baffled souls endure,
+To see the evil that they may not cure.
+
+For on sweet Malvern Hill one morn he lay,
+Drowsed by the music of the constant stream:--
+Loud sang the cuckoo, cuckoo!--for the May
+Breathed summer: summer floating like a dream
+From the far fields of childhood, with a gleam
+Of alien freshness on her forehead fair,
+And Heaven itself within the common air.
+
+Then on the mead in vision Langland saw
+A pilgrim-throng; not missal-bright as those
+Whom Chaucer's hand surpass'd itself to draw,
+Gay as the lark, and brilliant as the rose;--
+But such as dungeon foul or spital shows,
+Or the serf's fever-den, or field of fight,
+When festering sunbeams on the wounded smite.
+
+No sainted shrine the motley wanderers seek,
+Pilgrims of life upon the field of scorn,
+Mocking and mock'd; with plague and hunger weak,
+And haggard faces bleach'd as those who mourn,
+And footsteps redden'd with the trodden thorn;
+Blind stretching hands that grope for truth in vain,
+Across a twilight demon-haunted plain.
+
+A land whose children toil and rot like beasts,
+Robbers and robb'd by turns, the dreamer sees:--
+Land of poor-grinding lords and faithless priests,
+Where wisdom starves and folly thrones at ease
+'Mid lavishness and lusts and knaveries;
+Times out of joint, a universe of lies,
+Till Love divine appear in Ploughman's guise
+
+To burn the gilded tares and save the land,
+Risen from the grave and walking earth again:--
+--And as he dream'd and kiss'd the nail-pierced hand,
+A hundred towers their Easter voices rain
+In silver showers o'er hill and vale and plain,
+And the air throbb'd with sweetness, and he woke
+And all the dream in light and music broke.
+
+--He look'd around, and saw the world he left
+When to that visionary realm of song
+His spirit fled from bonds of flesh bereft;
+And on the vision he lay musing long,
+As o'er his soul rude minstrel-echoes throng,
+Old measures half-disused; and grasp'd his pen,
+And drew his cottage-Christ for homely men.
+
+Thus Langland also took his pilgrimage;
+Rough lone knight-errant on uncourtly ways,
+And wrong and woe were charter'd on his page,
+With some horizon-glimpse of sweeter days.
+And on the land the message of his lays
+Smote like the strong North-wind, and cleansed the sky
+With wholesome blast and bitter clarion-cry,
+
+Summoning the people in the Ploughman's name.
+--So fought his fight, and pass'd unknown away;
+Seeking no other praise, no sculptured fame
+Nor laureate honours for his artless lay,
+Nor in the Minster laid with high array;--
+But where the May-thorn gleams, the grasses wave,
+And the wind sighs o'er a forgotten grave.
+
+Langland, whom I have put here in contrast with Chaucer, is said to have
+lived between 1332 and 1400. His _Vision of Piers the Plowman_ (who is
+partially identified with our blessed Saviour), with some added poems,
+forms an allegory on life in England, in Church and State, as it appeared
+to him during the dislocated and corrupt age which followed the
+superficial glories of Edward the Third's earlier years.
+
+_Took the toll_; Amongst other official employments, Chaucer was
+Comptroller of the Customs in the Port of London. See his _House of
+Fame_; and the beautiful picture of his walks at dawning in the daisy-
+meadows: Prologue to the _Legend of Good Women_.
+
+_His of Certaldo, . . . in Scythia_; Boccaccio:--and Ovid, who died in
+exile at Tomi:--to both of whom Chaucer is greatly indebted for the
+substance of his tales.
+
+_Picture-like_; 'It is chiefly as a comic poet, and a minute observer of
+manners and circumstances, that Chaucer excels. In serious and moral
+poetry he is frequently languid and diffuse, but he springs like Antaeus
+from the earth when his subject changes to coarse satire or merry
+narrative' (Hallam, _Mid. Ages_: Ch. IX: Pt. iii).
+
+_The Tabard_; Inn in Southwark whence the pilgrims to Canterbury start.
+
+_Down the Strand_; It is thus that Langland describes himself and his
+feelings of dissatisfaction with the world.
+
+_That worst woe_; Literature, even ancient literature, has no phrase more
+deeply felt and pathetic than the words which the Persian nobleman at the
+feast in Thebes before Plataea addressed to Thersander of
+Orchomenus:--[Greek text]: (_Herodotus_, IX: xvi).
+
+_One morn he lay_; The _Vision_ opens with a picture of the poet asleep
+on Malvern Hill: the last of the added poems closing as he wakes with the
+Easter chimes.
+
+_Old measures_; Langland's metre 'is more uncouth than that of his
+predecessors' (Hallam, _Mid. Ag_. Ch. IX: Pt. iii).
+
+_In the Minster_; Chaucer was buried at the entrance of S. Benet's Chapel
+in Westminster Abbey.
+
+
+
+JEANNE D'ARC
+
+
+1424
+
+So many stars in heaven,--
+Flowers in the meadow that shine;
+--This little one of Domremy,
+What special grace is thine?
+By the fairy beech and the fountain
+What but a child with thy brothers?
+Among the maids of the valley
+Art more than one among others?
+
+Chosen darling of Heaven,
+Yet at heart wast only a child!
+And for thee the wild things of Nature
+Sot aside their nature wild:--
+The brown-eyed fawn of the forest
+Came silently glancing upon thee;
+The squirrel slipp'd down from the fir,
+And nestled his gentleness on thee.
+
+_Angelus_ bell and _Ave_,
+Like voices they follow the maid
+As she follows her sheep in the valley
+From the dawn to the folding shade:--
+For the world that we cannot see
+Is the world of her earthly seeing;
+From the air of the hills of God
+She draws her breath and her being.
+
+Dances by beech tree and fountain,
+They know her no longer:--apart
+Sitting with thought and with vision
+In the silent shrine of the heart.
+And a voice henceforth and for ever
+Within, without her, is sighing
+'Pity for France, O pity,
+France the beloved, the dying!'
+
+--Now between church-wall and cottage
+What comes in the blinding light,
+--Rainbow plumes and armour,
+Face as the sun in his height . . .
+'Angel that pierced the red dragon,
+Pity for France, O pity!
+Holy one, thou shalt save her,
+Vineyard and village and city!'
+
+Poor sweet child of Domremy,
+In thine innocence only strong,
+Thou seest not the treason before thee,
+The gibe and the curse of the throng,--
+The furnace-pile in the market
+That licks out its flames to take thee;--
+For He who loves thee in heaven
+On earth will not forsake thee!
+
+Poor sweet maid of Domremy,
+In thine innocence secure,
+Heed not what men say of thee,
+The buffoon and his jest impure!
+Nor care if thy name, young martyr,
+Be the star of thy country's story:--
+Mid the white-robed host of the heavens
+Thou hast more than glory!
+
+_Angel that pierced_; 'She _had pity_, to use the phrase for ever on her
+lip, _on the fair realm of France_. She saw visions; St. Michael
+appeared to her in a flood of blinding light': (_Green_, B. IV: ch. vi).
+
+_The buffoon_; Voltaire.
+
+
+
+TOWTON FIELD
+
+
+Palm Sunday: 1461
+
+Love, Who from the throne above
+Cam'st to teach the law of love,
+Who Thy peaceful triumph hast
+Led o'er palms before Thee cast,
+E'en in highest heaven Thine eyes
+Turn from this day's sacrifice!
+Slaughter whence no victor host
+Can the palms of triumph boast;
+Blood on blood in rivers spilt,--
+English blood by English guilt!
+
+ From the gracious Minster-towers
+ Of York the priests behold afar
+ The field of Towton shimmer like a star
+ With light of lance and helm; while both the powers
+ Misnamed from the fair rose, with one fell blow,
+ --In snow-dazed, blinding air
+ Mass'd on the burnside bare,--
+Each army, as one man, drove at the opposing foe.
+
+ Ne'er since then, and ne'er before,
+ On England's fields with English hands
+ Have met for death such myriad myriad bands,
+ Such wolf-like fury, and such greed of gore:--
+ No natural kindly touch, no check of shame:
+ And no such bestial rage
+ Blots our long story's page;
+Such lewd remorseless swords, such selfishness of aim
+
+ --Gracious Prince of Peace! Yet Thou
+ May'st look and bless with lenient eyes
+ When trodden races 'gainst their tyrant rise,
+ And the bent back no more will deign to bow:
+ Or when they crush some old anarchic feud,
+ And found the throne anew
+ On Law to Freedom true,
+Cleansing the land they love from guilt of blood by blood.
+
+ Nor did Heaven unmoved behold
+ When Hellas, for her birthright free
+ Dappling with gore the dark Saronian sea,
+ The Persian wave back, past Abydos, roll'd:--
+ But in this murderous match of chief 'gainst chief
+ No chivalry had part,
+ No impulse of the heart;
+Nor any sigh for Right triumphant breathes relief.
+
+ --Midday comes: and no release,
+ No carnage-pause to blow on blow!
+ While through the choir the palm-wreathed children go,
+ And gay hosannas hail the Prince of Peace:--
+ And evening falls, and from the Minster height
+ They see the wan Ouse stream
+ Blood-dark with slaughter gleam,
+And hear the demon-struggle shrieking through the night.
+
+Love, o'er palms in triumph strown
+Passing, through the crowd alone,--
+Silent 'mid the exulting cry,--
+At Jerusalem to die:
+Thou, foreknowing all, didst know
+How Thy blood in vain would flow!
+How our madness oft would prove
+Recreant to the law of love:
+Wrongs that men from men endure
+Doing Thee to death once more!
+
+'On the 29th of March 1461 the two armies encountered one another at
+Towton Field, near Tadcaster. In the numbers engaged, as well as in the
+terrible obstinacy of the struggle, no such battle had been seen in
+England since the field of Senlac. The two armies together numbered
+nearly 120,000 men': (_Green_, B. IV: ch. vi).
+
+_Saronian sea_; Scene of the battle of Salamis, B.C. 480.
+
+_They see the wan Ouse stream_; Mr. R. Wilton, of Londesborough, has
+kindly pointed out to me that _Wharfe_, which from a brook received the
+bloodshed of Towton, does not discharge into _Ouse_ until about ten miles
+south of York. The _gleam_ is, therefore, visionary: (1889).
+
+
+
+GROCYN AT OXFORD
+
+
+_THE ENGLISH RENAISSANCE_
+
+1491
+
+ As she who in some village-child unknown,
+ With rustic grace and fantasy bedeck'd
+ And in her simple loveliness alone,
+ A sister finds;--and the long years' neglect
+ Effaces with warm love and nursing care,
+ And takes her heart to heart,
+And in her treasured treasures bids her freely share,
+
+ And robes with radiance new, new strength and grace:--
+ Hellas and England! thus it was with ye!
+ Though distanced far by centuries and by space,
+ Sisters in soul by Nature's own decree.
+ And if on Athens in her glory-day
+ The younger might not look,
+Her living soul came back, and reinfused our clay.
+
+ --It was not wholly lost, that better light,
+ Not in the darkest darkness of our day;
+ From cell to cell, e'en through the Danish night,
+ The torch ran on its firefly fitful way;
+ And blazed anew with him who in the vale
+ Of fair Aosta saw
+The careless reaper-bands, and pass'd the heavens' high pale,
+
+ And supp'd with God, in vision! Or with him,
+ Earliest and greatest of his name, who gave
+ His life to Nature, in her caverns dim
+ Tracking her soul, through poverty to the grave,
+ And left his Great Work to the barbarous age
+ That, in its folly-love,
+With wizard-fame defamed his and sweet Vergil's page.
+
+ But systems have their day, and die, or change
+ Transform'd to new: Not now from cloister-cell
+ And desk-bow'd priest, breathes out that impulse strange
+ 'Neath which the world of feudal Europe fell:--
+ Throes of new birth, new life; while men despair'd
+ Or triumph'd in their pride,
+As in their eyes the torch of learning fiercely flared.
+
+ For now the cry of Homer's clarion first
+ And Plato's golden tongue on English ears
+ And souls aflame for that new doctrine burst,
+ As Grocyn taught, when, after studious years,
+ He came from Arno to the liberal walls
+ That welcomed me in youth,
+And nursed in Grecian lore, long native to her halls.
+
+ O voice that spann'd the gulf of vanish'd years,
+ Evoking shapes of old from night to light,
+ Lo at thy spell a long-lost world appears,
+ Where Rome and Hellas break upon our sight:--
+ The Gothic gloom divides; a glory burns
+ Behind the clouds of Time,
+And all that wonder-past in beauty's glow returns.
+
+ --For when the Northern floods that lash'd and curl'd
+ Around the granite fragments of great Rome
+ Outspread Colossus-like athwart the world,
+ Foam'd down, and the new nations found their home,
+ That earlier Europe, law and arts and arms,
+ Fell into far-off shade,
+Or lay like some fair maid sleep-sunk in magic charms.
+
+ And as in lands once flourishing, now forlorn,
+ And desolate capitals, the traveller sees
+ Wild tribes, in ruins from the ruins torn
+ Hutted like beasts 'mid marble palaces,
+ Unknowing what those relics mean, and whose
+ The goblets gold-enchased
+And images of the gods the broken vaults disclose;
+
+ So in the Mid-age from the Past of Man
+ The Present was disparted; and they stood
+ As on some island, sever'd from the plan
+ Of the great world, and the sea's twilight flood
+ Around them, and the monsters of the unknown;
+ Blind fancy mix'd with fact;
+Faith in the things unseen sustaining them alone.
+
+ Age of extremes and contrasts!--where the good
+ Was more than human in its tenderness
+ Of chivalry;--Beauty's self the prize of blood,
+ And evil raging round with wild excess
+ Of more than brutal:--A disjointed time!
+ Doubt with Hypocrisy pair'd,
+And purest Faith by folly, childlike, led to crime.
+
+ O Florentine, O Master, who alone
+ From thy loved Vergil till our Shakespeare came
+ Didst climb the long steps to the imperial throne,
+ With what immortal dyes of angry flame
+ Hast blazon'd out the vileness of the day!
+ What tints of perfect love
+Rosier than summer rose, etherealize thy lay!
+
+ --Now, as in some new land when night is deep
+ The pilgrim halts, nor knows what round him lies
+ And wakes with dawn, and finds him on the steep,
+ While plains beneath and unguess'd summits rise,
+ And stately rivers widening to the sea,
+ Cities of men and towers,
+Abash'd for very joy, and gazing fearfully;--
+
+ New worlds, new wisdom, a new birth of things
+ On Europe shine, and men know where they stand:
+ The sea his western portal open flings,
+ And bold Sebastian strikes the flowery land:
+ Soon, heaven its secret yields; the golden sun
+ Enthrones him in the midst,
+And round his throne man and the planets humbly run.
+
+ New learning all! yet fresh from fountains old,
+ Hellenic inspiration, pure and deep:
+ Strange treasures of Byzantine hoards unroll'd,
+ And mouldering volumes from monastic sleep,
+ Reclad with life by more than magic art:
+ Till that old world renew'd
+His youth, and in the past the present own'd its part.
+
+ --O vision that ye saw, and hardly saw,
+ Ye who in Alfred's path at Oxford trod,
+ Or in our London train'd by studious law
+ The little-ones of Christ to Him and God,
+ Colet and Grocyn!--Though the world forget
+ The labours of your love,
+In loving hearts your names live in their fragrance yet.
+
+ O vision that our happier eyes have seen!
+ For not till peace came with Elizabeth
+ Did those fair maids of holy Hippocrene
+ Cross the wan waves and draw a northern breath:
+ Though some far-echoed strain on Tuscan lyres
+ Our Chaucer caught, and sang
+Like her who sings ere dawn has lit his Eastern fires;--
+
+ Herald of that first splendour, when the sky
+ Was topaz-clear with hope, and life-blood-red
+ With thoughts of mighty poets, lavishly
+ Round all the fifty years' horizon shed:--
+ Now in our glades the Aglaian Graces gleam,
+ Around our fountains throng,
+And change Ilissus' banks for Thames and Avon stream.
+
+ Daughters of Zeus and bright Eurynome,
+ She whose blue waters pave the Aegaean plain,
+ Children of all surrounding sky and sea,
+ A larger ocean claims you, not in vain!
+ Ye who to Helicon from Thessalia wide
+ Wander'd when earth was young,
+Come from Libethrion, come; our love, our joy, our pride!
+
+ Ah! since your gray Pierian ilex-groves
+ Felt the despoiling tread of barbarous feet,
+ This land, o'er all, the Delian leader loves;
+ Here is your favourite home, your genuine seat:--
+ In these green western isles renew the throne
+ Where Grace by Wisdom shines;
+--We welcome with full hearts, and claim you for our own!
+
+If, looking at England, one point may be singled out in that long
+movement, generalized under the name of the Renaissance, as critical, it
+is the introduction of the Greek and Latin literature:--which has
+remained ever since conspicuously the most powerful and enlarging
+element, the most effectively educational, among all blanches of human
+study.
+
+_In the vale Of fair Aosta_; See Anselm's youthful vision of the gleaners
+and the palace of heaven (Green: _History_, B. II: ch. ii).
+
+_His Great Work_; Roger Bacon's so-named _Opus Majus_: 'At once,' says
+Whewell, 'the Encyclopaedia and the Novum Organum of the thirteenth
+century.' Like Vergil, Bacon passed at one time for a magician.
+
+_That new doctrine_; Grocyn was perhaps the first Englishman who studied
+Greek under Chalcondylas the Byzantine at Florence; certainly the first
+who lectured on Greek in England. This was in the Hall of Exeter
+College, Oxford, in 1491. To him Erasmus (1499) came to study the
+language.--See the brilliant account of the revival of learning in Green,
+_Hist_. B. V: ch. ii.
+
+_Master, who alone_; See _The Poet's Euthanasia_.
+
+_Sebastian_; Cabot, who, in 1497, sailed from Bristol, and reached
+Florida.
+
+_The golden sun_; Refers to Copernicus; whose solar system was, however,
+not published till 1543.
+
+_The little-ones_; Colet, Dean of S. Paul's, founded the school in 1510.
+'The bent of its founder's mind was shown by the image of the Child Jesus
+over the master's chair, with the words _Hear ye Him_ graven beneath it'
+(Green: B. V: ch. iv).
+
+_Fifty years_; Between 1570 and 1620 lies almost all the glorious
+production of our so-called Elizabethan period.
+
+_From Libethrion_;--_Nymphae, noster amor, Libethrides_! . . . What a
+music is there in the least little fragment of Vergil's exquisite art!
+
+
+
+MARGARET TUDOR
+
+
+_PROTHALAMION_
+
+1503
+
+Love who art above us all,
+Guard the treasure on her way,
+Flower of England, fair and tall,
+Maiden-wise and maiden-gay,
+As her northward path she goes;
+Daughter of the double rose.
+
+Look with twofold grace on her
+Who from twofold root has grown,
+Flower of York and Lancaster,
+Now to grace another throne,
+Rose in Scotland's garden set,--
+Britain's only Margaret.
+
+Exile-child from childhood's bower,
+Pledge and bond of Henry's faith,
+James, take home our English flower,
+Guard from touch of scorn and skaith;
+Bearing, in her slender hands,
+Palms of peace to hostile lands.
+
+Safe by southern smiling shires,
+Many a city, many a shrine;
+By the newly kindled fires
+Of the black Northumbrian mine;
+Border clans in ambush set;
+Carry thou fair Margaret.
+
+--Land of heath and hill and linn,
+Land of mountain-freedom wild,
+She in heart to thee is kin,
+Tudor's daughter, Gwynedd's child!
+In her lively lifeblood share
+Gwenllian and Angharad fair.
+
+East and West, from Dee to Yare,
+Now in equal bonds are wed:
+Peace her new-found flower shall wear,
+Rose that dapples white with red;
+North and South, dissever'd yet,
+Join in this fair Margaret!
+
+Ocean round our Britain roll'd,
+Sapphire ring without a flaw,
+When wilt thou one realm enfold,
+One in freedom, one in law?
+Will that ancient feud be sped,
+Brothers' blood by brothers shed?
+
+--Land with freedom's struggle sore,
+Land to whom thy children cling
+With a lover's love and more,
+Take the gentle gift we bring!
+Pearl in thy crown royal set;
+Scotland's other Margaret.
+
+Margaret Tudor, daughter to Henry VII, married in 1502 to James IV, and
+afterwards to Lord Angus, was thus great-grandmother on both sides to
+James I of England.
+
+_Gwynedd's child_; The Tudors intermarried with the old royal family of
+North Wales, in whose pedigree occur the girl-names Gwenllian and
+Angharad.
+
+_Other Margaret_; Sister to Edgar the Etheling, and wife to Malcolm. Her
+life and character are in contrast to the unhappy and unsatisfactory
+career of Margaret Tudor, whom I have here only treated as at once
+representing and uniting England, Scotland, and Wales.
+
+
+
+LONDON BRIDGE
+
+
+July 6: 1535
+
+The midnight moaning stream
+Draws down its glassy surface through the bridge
+That o'er the current casts a tower'd ridge,
+Dark sky-line forms fantastic as a dream;
+And cresset watch-lights on the bridge-gate gleam,
+Where 'neath the star-lit dome gaunt masts upbuoy
+No flag of festive joy,
+But blanching spectral heads;--their heads, who died
+Victims to tyrant-pride,
+Martyrs of Faith and Freedom in the day
+Of shame and flame and brutal selfish sway.
+
+And one in black array
+Veiling her Rizpah-misery, to the gate
+Comes, and with gold and moving speech sedate
+Buys down the thing aloft, and bears away
+Snatch'd from the withering wind and ravens' prey:
+And as a mother's eyes, joy-soften'd, shed
+Tears o'er her young child's head,
+Golden and sweet, from evil saved; so she
+O'er this, sad-smilingly,
+Mangled and gray, unwarm'd by human breath,
+Clasping death's relic with love passing death.
+
+So clasping now! and so
+When death clasps her in turn! e'en in the grave
+Nursing the precious head she could not save,
+Tho' through each drop her life-blood yearn'd to flow
+If but for him she might to scaffold go:--
+And O! as from that Hall, with innocent gore
+Sacred from roof to floor,
+To that grim other place of blood he went--
+What cry of agony rent
+The twilight,--cry as of an Angel's pain,--
+_My father, O my father_! . . . and in vain!
+
+Then, as on those who lie
+Cast out from bliss, the days of joy come back,
+And all the soul with wormwood sweetness rack,
+So in that trance of dreadful ecstasy
+The vision of her girlhood glinted by:--
+And how the father through their garden stray'd,
+And, child with children, play'd,
+And teased the rabbit-hutch, and fed the dove
+Before him from above
+Alighting,--in his visitation sweet,
+Led on by little hands, and eager feet.
+
+Hence among those he stands,
+Elect ones, ever in whose ears the word
+_He that offends these little ones_ . . . is heard,
+With love and kisses smiling-out commands,
+And all the tender hearts within his hands;
+Seeing, in every child that goes, a flower
+From Eden's nursery bower,
+A little stray from Heaven, for reverence here
+Sent down, and comfort dear:
+All care well paid-for by one pure caress,
+And life made happy in their happiness.
+
+He too, in deeper lore
+Than woman's in those early days, or yet,--
+Train'd step by step his youthful Margaret;
+The wonders of that amaranthine store
+Which Hellas and Hesperia evermore
+Lavish, to strengthen and refine the race:--
+For, in his large embrace,
+The light of faith with that new light combined
+To purify the mind:--
+A crystal soul, a heart without disguise,
+All wisdom's lover, and through love, all-wise.
+
+--O face she ne'er will see,--
+Gray eyes, and careless hair, and mobile lips
+From which the shaft of kindly satire slips
+Healing its wound with human sympathy;
+The heart-deep smile; the tear-concealing glee!
+O well-known furrows of the reverend brow!
+Familiar voice, that now
+She will not hear nor answer any more,--
+Till on the better shore
+Where love completes the love in life begun,
+And smooths and knits our ravell'd skein in one!
+
+Blest soul, who through life's course
+Didst keep the young child's heart unstain'd and whole,
+To find again the cradle at the goal,
+Like some fair stream returning to its source;--
+Ill fall'n on days of falsehood, greed, and force!
+Base days, that win the plaudits of the base,
+Writ to their own disgrace,
+With casuist sneer o'erglossing works of blood,
+Miscalling evil, good;
+Before some despot-hero falsely named
+Grovelling in shameful worship unashamed.
+
+--But they of the great race
+Look equably, not caring much, on foe
+And fame and misesteem of man below;
+And with forgiving radiance on their face,
+And eyes that aim beyond the bourn of space,
+Seeing the invisible, glory-clad, go up
+And drink the absinthine cup,
+Fill'd nectar-deep by the dear love of Him
+Slain at Jerusalem
+To free them from a tyrant worse than this,
+Changing brief anguish for the heart of bliss.
+
+_Envoy_
+
+--O moaning stream of Time,
+Heavy with hate and sin and wrong and woe
+As ocean-ward dost go,
+Thou also hast thy treasures!--Life, sublime
+In its own sweet simplicity:--life for love:
+Heroic martyr-death:--
+Man sees them not: but they are seen above.
+
+_One in black array_; Sir T. More's daughter, Margaret Roper.
+
+_That Hall_; Westminster, where More was tried: _That other place_; Tower
+Hill.
+
+_The vision of her girlhood_; More taught his own children, and was like
+a child with them. He 'would take grave scholars and statesmen into the
+garden to see his girls' rabbit-hutches. . . . _I have given you kisses
+enough_, he wrote to his little ones, _but stripes hardly ever_': (Green,
+B. V: ch. ii).
+
+_The wonders_; See first note to _Grocyn at Oxford_.
+
+_In his large embrace_; More may be said to have represented the highest
+aim and effort of the 'new learning' in England. He is the flower of our
+Renaissance in genius, wisdom, and beauty of nature. 'When ever,' says
+Erasmus in a famous passage, 'did Nature mould a character more gentle,
+endearing, and happy, than Thomas More's?'
+
+
+
+AT FOUNTAINS
+
+
+1539-1862
+
+Blest hour, as on green happy slopes I lie,
+ Gray walls around and high,
+While long-ranged arches lessen on the view,
+ And one high gracious curve
+Of shaftless window frames the limpid blue.
+
+--God's altar erst, where wind-set rowan now
+ Waves its green-finger'd bough,
+And the brown tiny creeper mounts the bole
+ With curious eye alert,
+And beak that tries each insect-haunted hole,
+
+And lives her gentle life from nest to nest,
+ And dies undispossess'd:
+Whilst all the air is quick with noise of birds
+ Where once the chant went up;
+Now musical with a song more sweet than words.
+
+Sky-roof'd and bare and deep in dewy sod,
+ Still 'tis the house of God!
+Beauty by desolation unsubdued:--
+ And all the past is here,
+Thronging with thought this holy solitude.
+
+I see the taper-stars, the altars gay;
+ And those who crouch and pray;
+The white-robed crowd in close monastic stole,
+ Who hither fled the world
+To find the world again within the soul.
+
+Yet here the pang of Love's defeat, the pride
+ Of life unsatisfied,
+Might win repose or anodyne; here the weak,
+ Armour'd against themselves,
+Exchange true guiding for obedience meek.
+
+Through day, through night, here, in the fragrant air,
+ Their hours are struck by prayer;
+Freed from the bonds of freedom, the distress
+ Of choice, on life's storm-sea
+They gaze unharm'd, and know their happiness.
+
+Till o'er this rock of refuge, deem'd secure,
+ --This palace of the poor,
+Ascetic luxury, wealth too frankly shown,--
+ The royal robber swept
+His lustful eye, and seized the prey his own.
+
+--Ah, calm of Nature! Now thou hold'st again
+ Thy sweet and silent reign!
+And, as our feverish years their orbit roll,
+ This pure and cloister'd peace
+In its old healing virtue bathes the soul.
+
+1539 is the year when the greater monasteries, amongst which Fountains in
+Yorkshire held a prominent place, were confiscated and ruined by Henry
+VIII.
+
+_The tiny creeper_; Certhia Familiaris; the smallest of our birds after
+the wren. It belongs to a class nearly related to the woodpecker.
+
+_White-robed_; The colour of the Cistercian order, to which Fountains
+belonged.
+
+
+
+SIR HUGH WILLOUGHBY
+
+
+1553-4
+
+ Two ships upon the steel-blue Arctic seas
+ When day was long and night itself was day,
+ Forged heavily before the South West breeze
+ As to the steadfast star they curved their way;
+ Two specks of man, two only signs of life,
+Where with all breathing things white Death keeps endless strife.
+
+ The Northern Cape is sunk: and to the crew
+ This zone of sea, with ice-floes wedged and rough,
+ Domed by its own pure height of tender blue,
+ Seems like a world from the great world cut off:
+ While, round the horizon clasp'd, a ring of white,
+Snow-blink from snows unseen, walls them with angry light.
+
+ Now that long day compact of many days
+ Breaks up and wanes; and equal night beholds
+ Their hapless driftage past uncharted bays,
+ And in her chilling, killing arms enfolds:
+ While the near stars a thousand arrowy darts
+Bend from their diamond eyes, as the low sun departs.
+
+ Or the weird Northern Dawn in idle play
+ Mocks their sad souls, now trickling down the sky
+ In many-quivering lines of golden spray,
+ Then blazing out, an Iris-arch on high,
+ With fiery lances fill'd and feathery bars,
+And sheeny veils that hide or half-reveal the stars.
+
+ A silent spectacle! Yet sounds, 'tis said,
+ On their forlornness broke; a hissing cry
+ Of mockery and wild laugh, as, overhead,
+ Those blight fantastic squadrons flaunted by:--
+ And that false dawn, long nickering, died away,
+And the Sun came not forth, and Heaven withheld the day.
+
+ O King Hyperion, o'er the Delphic dale
+ Reigning meanwhile in glory, Ocean know
+ Thine absence, and outstretch'd an icy veil,
+ A marble pavement, o'er his waters blue;
+ Past the Varangian fiord and Zembla hoar,
+And from Petsora north to dark Arzina's shore:--
+
+ An iron ridge o'erhung with toppling snow
+ And giant beards of icicled cascade:--
+ Where, frost-imprison'd as the long mouths go,
+ The _Good Hope_ and her mate-ship lay embay'd;
+ And those brave crews knew that all hope was gone;
+England be seen no more; no more the living sun.
+
+ A store that daily lessens 'neath their eyes;
+ A little dole of light and fire and food:--
+ While Night upon them like a vampyre lies
+ Bleaching the frame and thinning out the blood;
+ And through the ships the frost-bit timbers groan,
+And the Guloine prowls round, with dull heart-curdling moan.
+
+ Then sometimes on the soul, far off, how far!
+ Came back the shouting crowds, the cannon-roar,
+ The latticed palace glittering like a star,
+ The buoyant Thames, the green, sweet English shore,
+ The heartful prayers, the fireside blaze and bliss,
+The little faces bright, and woman's last, last kiss.
+
+ --O yet, for all their misery, happy souls!
+ Happy in faith and love and fortitude:--
+ For you, one thought of England dear controls
+ All shrinking of the flesh at death so rude!
+ Though long at rest in that far Arctic grave,
+True sailor hero hearts, van of our bravest brave.
+
+ And one by one the North King's searching lance
+ Touch'd, and they stiffen'd at their task, and died;
+ And their stout leader glanced a farewell glance;
+ 'God is as close by sea as land,' he cried,
+ 'In His own light not nearer than this gloom,'--
+And look'd as one who o'er the mountains sees his home.
+
+ Home!--happy sound of vanish'd happiness!
+ --But when the unwilling sun crept up again,
+ And loosed the sea from winter and duresse,
+ The seal-wrapt race that roams the Lapland main
+ Saw in Arzina, wondering, fearing more,
+The tatter'd ships, in snows entomb'd and vaulted o'er:
+
+ And clomb the decks, and found the gallant crew,
+ As forms congeal'd to stone, where frozen fate
+ Took each man in his turn, and gently slew:--
+ Nor knew the heroic chieftain, as he sate,
+ English through every fibre, in his place,
+The smile of duty done upon the steadfast face.
+
+Sir Hugh Willoughby, in the _Bona Esperanza_, with two other vessels,
+sailed May 10, 1553, saluting the palace of Greenwich is they passed. By
+September 18 he, with one consort, reached the harbour of Arzina, where
+all perished early in 1554. His will, dated in January of that year, was
+found when the ships were discovered by the Russians soon after.
+
+Willoughby has been taken here as the representative of the great age of
+British naval adventure and exploration.
+
+_Arzina_ is placed near the western headland of the White Sea, east of
+the Waranger Fiord, and west of Nova Zembla and the mouth of the
+Petchora.
+
+
+
+CROSSING SOLWAY
+
+
+May 16: 1568
+
+Blow from the North, thou bitter North wind,
+Blow over the western bay,
+Where Nith and Eden and Esk run in
+And fight with the salt sea spray,
+And the sun shines high through the sailing sky
+In the freshness of blue Mid-may.
+
+Blow North-North-West, and hollow the sails
+Of a Queen who slips over the sea
+As a hare from the hounds; and her covert afar;
+And now she can only flee;
+And death before and the sisterly shore
+That smiles perfidiously.
+
+O Mid-may freshness about her cheek
+And piercing her poor attire,
+The sting of defeat thou canst not allay,
+The fever of heart and the fire,
+The death-despair for the days that were,
+And famine of vain desire!
+
+--On Holyrood stairs an iron-heel'd clank
+Came up in the gloaming hour:
+And iron fingers have bursten the bar
+Of the palace innermost bower:
+And fiend-like on her the Douglas and Ker
+And spectral Ruthven glower.
+
+She hears the shriek as the Morton horde
+Hurry the victim beneath;
+And she feels their dead man's grasp on her skirt
+In the frenzy-terror of death;
+And the dastard King at her bosom cling
+With a serpent's poison-breath.
+
+O fair girl Queen, well weep for the friend
+To his faith too faithful and thee;
+For a brother's hypocrite tears; for the flight
+To the Castle set by the sea;--
+Where thy father's tomb lay and gaped in the gloom
+'Twere better for thee to be!
+
+O better at rest where the crooning dove
+May sing requiem o'er thy bed,
+Sweet Robin aflame with love's sign on his breast
+With quick light footstep tread;
+While over the sod the Birds of God
+Their guardian feathers outspread!
+
+Too womanly sweet, too womanly frail,
+Alone in thy faith and thy need;
+In the homeless home, in the poisonous air
+Of spite and libel and greed;
+Mid perfidy's net thy pathway is set,
+And thy feet in the pitfalls bleed.
+
+--O lightnings, not lightnings of Heaven, that flare
+Through the desolate House in the Field!
+Craft that the Fiend had envied in vain;
+Till the terrible Day unreveal'd,--
+Till the Angels rejoice at the Verdict-voice,
+And Mary's pardon is seal'd!
+
+As a bird from the mesh of the fowler freed
+With wild wing shatters the air,
+From shelter to shelter, betray'd, she flees,
+Or lured to some treacherous lair,
+And the vulture-cry of the enemy nigh,
+And the heavens dark with despair!
+
+Bright lily of France, by the storm stricken low,
+A sunbeam thou seest through the shade
+Where Order and Peace are throned 'neath the smile
+Of a royal sisterly Maid:--
+For hope in the breast of the girl has her nest,
+Ever trusting, and ever betray'd.
+
+Brave womanly heart that, beholding the shore,
+Beholds her own grave unaware,--
+Though the days to come their shame should unveil
+Yet onward she still would dare!
+Though the meadows smile with statesmanly guile,
+And the cuckoo's call is a snare!
+
+Turn aside, O Queen, from the cruel land,
+From the greedy shore turn away;
+From shame upon shame:--But most shame for those
+On their passionate captive who play
+With a subtle net, hope enwoven with threat,
+Hung out to tempt her astray!
+
+Poor scape-goat of crimes, where,--her part what it may,--
+So tortured, so hunted to die,
+Foul age of deceit and of hate,--on her head
+Least stains of gore-guiltiness lie;
+To the hearts of the just her blood from the dust
+Not in vain for mercy will cry.
+
+Poor scape-goat of nations and faiths in their strife
+So cruel,--and thou so fair!
+Poor girl!--so, best, in her misery named,--
+Discrown'd of two kingdoms, and bare;
+Not first nor last on this one was cast
+The burden that others should share.
+
+--When the race is convened at the great assize
+And the last long trumpet-call,
+If Woman 'gainst Man, in her just appeal,
+At the feet of the Judge should fall,
+O the cause were secure;--the sentence sure!
+--But she will forgive him all!--
+
+O keen heart-hunger for days that were;
+Last look at a vanishing shore!
+In two short words all bitterness summ'd,
+That _Has been_ and _Nevermore_!
+Nor with one caress will Mary bless,
+Nor look on the babe she bore!
+
+Blow, bitter wind, with a cry of death,
+Blow over the western bay:
+The sunshine is gone from the desolate girl,
+And before is the doomster-day,
+And the saw-dust red with the heart's-blood shed
+In the shambles of Fotheringay.
+
+Mary of Scotland is one of the five or six figures in our history who
+rouse an undying personal interest. Volumes have been and will be
+written on her:--yet if we put aside the distorting mists of national and
+political and theological partisanship, the common laws of human nature
+will give an easy clue to her conduct and that of her enemies.
+
+Her flight from Scotland, as the turning-point in Mary's unhappy and
+pathetic career, has been here chosen for the moment whence to survey it.
+
+_On Holyrood stairs_; Riccio was murdered on March 9, 1566. Mary's
+exclamation when she heard of his death next day, _No more tears_; _I
+will think upon a revenge_, is the sufficient explanation,--in a great
+degree should be the sufficient justification, with those who still hold
+her an accomplice in the death of Darnley and the marriage with
+Bothwell,--(considering the then lawless state of Scotland, the
+complicity of the leading nobles, the hopelessness of justice)--of her
+later conduct whilst Queen.
+
+_The friend_; In Riccio's murder the main determinant was his efficiency
+in aiding Mary towards a Roman Catholic reaction, which might have
+deprived a large body of powerful nobles of the church lands. The death
+of Riccio (Mary's most faithful friend) prevented this: the death of
+Darnley became necessary to secure the position gained.
+
+_A brother's hypocrite tears_; Murray, in whose interest Riccio was
+murdered, and whose privity to the murder (as afterwards to that of
+Darnley) is reasonably, though indirectly, proved, affected to shed tears
+on seeing his sister. Next day she learned the details of the plot, and
+her half-brother's share in it.
+
+_The flight_; Mary then fled by a secret passage from Holyrood Palace
+through the Abbey Church, the royal tombs which had been broken open by
+the revolutionary mob of 1559.
+
+_The Castle_; Dunbar.
+
+_Till the terrible Day unreveal'd_; See _Appendix_ A.
+
+
+
+SIDNEY AT ZUTPHEN
+
+
+October 2: 1586
+
+1
+
+ Where Guelderland outspreads
+ Her green wide water-meads
+ Laced by the silver of the parted Rhine;
+ Where round the horizon low
+ The waving millsails go,
+ And poplar avenues stretch their pillar'd line;
+ That morn a clinging mist uncurl'd
+Its folds o'er South-Fen town, and blotted out the world.
+
+2
+
+ There, as the gray dawn broke,
+ Cloked by that ghost-white cloke,
+ The fifty knights of England sat in steel;
+ Each man all ear, for eye
+ Could not his nearest spy;
+ And in the mirk's dim hiding heart they feel,
+ --Feel more than hear,--the signal sound
+Of tramp and hoof and wheel, and guns that bruise the ground.
+
+3
+
+--Sudden, the mist gathers up like a curtain, the theatre clear;
+Stage of unequal conflict, and triumph purchased too dear!
+Half our boot treasures of gallanthood there, with axe and with glaive,
+One against ten,--what of that?--We are ready for glory or grave!
+There, Spain and her thousands nearing, with lightning-tongued weapons of
+war;--
+Ebro's swarthy sons, and the bands from Epirus afar;
+Crescia, Gonzaga, del Vasto,--world-famous names of affright,
+Veterans of iron and blood, insatiate engines of fight:--
+But ours were Norris and Essex and Stanley and Willoughby grim,
+And the waning Dudley star, and the star that will never be dim,
+Star of Philip the peerless,--and now at height of his noon,
+Astrophel!--not for thyself but for England extinguish'd too soon!
+
+4
+
+Red walls of Zutphen behind; before them, Spain in her might:--
+O! 'tis not war, but a game of heroic boyish delight!
+For on, like a bolt-head of steel, go the fifty, dividing their way,
+Through and over the brown mail-shirts,--Farnese's choicest array;
+Over and through, and the curtel-axe flashes, the plumes in their pride
+Sink like the larch to the hewer, a death-mown avenue wide:
+While the foe in his stubbornness flanks them and bars them, with
+merciless aim
+Shooting from musket and saker a scornful death-tongue of flame.
+As in an autumn afar, the Six Hundred in Chersonese hew'd
+Their road through a host, for their England and honour's sake wasting
+their blood,
+Foolishness wiser than wisdom!--So these, since Azincourt morn,
+First showing the world the calm open-eyed rashness of Englishmen born!
+
+5
+
+Foes ere the cloud went up, black Norris and Stanley in one
+Pledge iron hands and kiss swords, each his mate's, in the face of the
+sun,
+Warm with the generous wine of the battle; and Willoughby's might
+To the turf bore Crescia, and lifted again,--knight honouring knight;
+All in the hurry and turmoil:--where North, half-booted and rough,
+Launch'd on the struggle, and Sidney struck onward, his cuisses thrown
+off,
+Rash over-courage of poet and youth!--while the memories, how
+At the joust long syne She look'd on, as he triumph'd, were hot on his
+brow,
+'Stella! mine own, my own star!'--and he sigh'd:--and towards him a flame
+Shot its red signal; a shriek!--and the viewless messenger came;
+Found the unguarded gap, the approach left bare to the prey,
+Where through the limb to the life the death-stroke shatter'd a way.
+
+6
+
+ --Astrophel! England's pride!
+ O stroke that, when he died,
+ Smote through the realm,--our best, our fairest ta'en!
+ For now the wound accurst
+ Lights up death's fury-thirst;--
+ Yet the allaying cup, in all that pain,
+ Untouch'd, untasted he gives o'er
+To one who lay, and watch'd with eyes that craved it more:--
+
+7
+
+ 'Take it,' he said, ''tis thine;
+ Thy need is more than mine';--
+ And smiled as one who looks through death to life:
+ --Then pass'd, true heart and brave,
+ Leal from birth to grave:--
+ For that curse-laden roar of mortal strife,
+ With God's own peace ineffable fill'd,--
+In that eternal Love all earthly passion still'd.
+
+In 1585 Elizabeth, who was then aiding the United Provinces in their
+resistance to Spain, sent Sir Philip Sidney (born 1554) as governor of
+the fortress of Flushing in Zealand. The Earl of Leicester, chosen by
+the Queen's unhappy partiality to command the English force, named Sidney
+(his nephew) General of the horse. He marched thence to Zutphen in
+Guelderland, a town besieged by the Spaniards, in hopes of destroying a
+strong reinforcement which they were bringing in aid of the besiegers.
+The details of the rash and heroic charge which followed may be read in
+Motley's _History of the United Netherlands_, ch. ix.
+
+St. 1 _Guelderland_; in this province the Rhine divides before entering
+the sea: 'gliding through a vast plain.'--_South-Fen_; Zutphen, on the
+Yssel (Rhine).
+
+St. 3 _The bands from Epirus_; Crescia, the Epirote chief, commanded a
+body of Albanian cavalry.--_The waning Dudley star_; Leicester, who was
+near the end of his miserable career.--_Astrophel_; Sidney celebrated his
+love for Penelope Devereux, Lady Rich, in the series of Sonnets and
+Lyrics named _Astrophel and Stella_:--posthumously published in
+1591.--After, or with Shakespeare's Sonnets, this series seems to me to
+offer the most powerful picture of the passion of love in the whole range
+of our poetry.
+
+St. 4 _Saker_; early name for field-piece.--_The Six Hundred_; The Crimea
+in ancient days was named _Chersonesus Taurica_.
+
+St. 5 _Black Norris_; had been at variance with Sir W. Stanley before the
+engagement. Morris was one of twelve gallant brothers, whose complexion
+followed that of their mother, named by Elizabeth 'her own
+crow.'--_North_; was lying bedrid from a wound in the leg, but could not
+resist volunteering at Zutphen, and rode up 'with one boot on and one
+boot off.'--_Cuisses_;
+
+ I saw young Harry, with his beaver on,
+ His cuisses on his thighs: (_Henry IV_, Part I: A. iv: S. i):--
+
+Sidney flung off his 'in a fit of chivalrous extravagance.'--_At the
+joust_; In Sonnets 41 and 53 of _Astrophel and Stella_ Sidney describes
+how the sudden sight of his lady-love dazzled him as he rode in certain
+tournaments. In Son. 69 he cries:
+
+ I, I, O, I, may say that she is mine.
+
+
+
+ELIZABETH AT TILBURY
+
+
+September: 1588
+
+ Let them come, come never so proudly,
+ O'er the green waves as giants ride;
+ Silver clarions menacing loudly,
+ 'All the Spains' on their banners wide;
+ High on deck of the gilded galleys
+ Our light sailers they scorn below:--
+ We will scatter them, plague, and shatter them,
+ Till their flag hauls down to their foe!
+ For our oath we swear
+ By the name we bear,
+By England's Queen, and England free and fair,--
+Her's ever and her's still, come life, come death:--
+ God save Elizabeth!
+
+ Sidonia, Recalde, and Leyva
+ Watch from their Castles in swarthy scorn,
+ Lords and Princes by Philip's favour;--
+ We by birthright are noble born!
+ Freemen born of the blood of freemen,
+ Sons of Crecy and Flodden are we!
+ We shall sunder them, fire, and plunder them,--
+ English boats on an English sea!
+ And our oath we swear,
+ By the name we bear,
+By England's Queen, and England free and fair,--
+Her's ever and her's still, come life, come death!
+ God save Elizabeth!
+
+ Drake and Frobisher, Hawkins, and Howard,
+ Raleigh, Cavendish, Cecil, and Brooke,
+ Hang like wasps by the flagships tower'd,
+ Sting their way through the thrice-piled oak:--
+ Let them range their seven-mile crescent,
+ Giant galleons, canvas wide!
+ Ours will harry them, board, and carry them,
+ Plucking the plumes of the Spanish pride.
+ For our oath we swear
+ By the name we bear,
+By England's Queen, and England free and fair,--
+Her's ever and her's still, come life, come death!
+ God save Elizabeth!
+
+ --Hath God risen in wrath and scatter'd?
+ Have His tempests smote them in scorn?
+ Past the Orcades, dumb and tatter'd,
+ 'Mong sea-beasts do they drift forlorn?
+ We were as lions hungry for battle;
+ God has made our battle His own!
+ God has scatter'd them, sunk, and shatter'd them:
+ Give the glory to Him alone!
+ While our oath we swear,
+ By the name we bear,
+By England's Queen, and England free and fair,--
+Her's ever and her's still, come life, come death!
+ God save Elizabeth!
+
+
+
+AT BEMERTON
+
+
+1630-1633
+
+Sick with the strife of tongues, the blustering hate
+Of frantic Party raving o'er the realm,
+Sonorous insincerities of debate,
+And jealous factions snatching at the helm,
+And Out o'er-bidding In with graceless strife,
+Selling the State for votes:--O happy fields,
+I cried, where Herbert, by the world misprized,
+ Found in his day the life
+That no unrest or disappointment yields,
+Vergilian vision here best realized!
+
+His memory is Peace: and peace is here;--
+The eternal lullaby of the level brook,
+With bird-like chirpings mingled, glassy-clear;
+The narrow pathway to the yew-clipp'd nook;
+Trim lawn, familiar to the pensive feet;
+The long gray walls he raised:--A household nest
+Where Hope and firm-eyed Faith and heavenly Love
+ Made human love more sweet;
+While,--earth's rare visitant from the choirs above,--
+Urania's holy steps the cottage blest.
+
+Peace there:--and peace upon the house of God,
+The little road-side church that room-like stands
+Crouching entrench'd in slopes of daisy sod,
+And duly deck'd by Herbert-honouring hands:--
+Cell of detachment! Shrine to which the heart
+Withdraws, and all the roar of life is still;
+Then sinks into herself, and finds a shrine
+ Within the shrine apart:
+Alone with God, as on the Arabian hill
+Man knelt in vision to the All-divine!
+
+--Thrice happy they,--and know their happiness,--
+Who read the soul's star-orbit Heaven-ward clear;
+Not roving comet-like through doubt and guess,
+But 'neath their feet tread nescient pride and fear;
+Scan the unseen with sober certainty,
+God's hill above Himalah;--Love green earth
+With deeper, truer love, because the blue
+ Of Heaven around they see;--
+Who in the death-gasp hail man's second birth,
+And yield their loved ones with a brief adieu!
+
+--Thee, too, esteem I happy in thy death,
+Poet! while yet peace was, and thou might'st live
+Unvex'd in thy sweet reasonable faith,
+The gracious creed that knows how to forgive:--
+Not narrowing God to self,--the common bane
+Of sects, each man his own small oracle;
+Not losing innerness in external rite;
+ A worship pure and plain,
+Yet liberal to man's heaven-imbreathed delight
+In all that sound can hint, or beauty tell.
+
+A golden moderation!--which the wise
+Then highest rate, when fury-factions roar,
+And folly's choicest fools the most despise:--
+--O happy Poet! laid in peace before
+Rival intolerants each 'gainst other flamed,
+And flames were slaked in blood, and all the grace
+Of life before that sad illiterate gloom
+ Puritan, fled ashamed:
+While, as the red moon lifts her turbid face,
+Titanic features on the horizon loom!
+
+George Herbert's brief career as a parish priest was passed at Bemerton,
+a pretty village near Salisbury in the vale of the Avon. His parsonage,
+with its garden running down to the stream, and the little church across
+the road in which he lies buried, remain comparatively unchanged (March
+26, 1880) since he lived and mused and wrote his Poems within these
+precincts. The justly-famous _Temple_ was published shortly after his
+death by his friend Nicholas Ferrar.
+
+_Arabian hill_; Mount Sinai.
+
+_Titanic features_; See _A Churchyard in Oxfordshire_, st. iii.
+
+
+
+PRINCESS ANNE
+
+
+November 5: 1640
+
+Harsh words have been utter'd and written on her, Henrietta the Queen:
+She was young in a difficult part, on a cruel and difficult scene:--
+Was it strange she should fail? that the King overmuch should bow down to
+her will?
+--So of old with the women, God bless them!--it was, so will ever be
+still!
+Rash in counsel and rash in courage, she aided and marr'd
+The shifting tides of the fight, the star of the Stuarts ill-starr'd.
+In her the false Florentine blood,--in him the bad strain of the Guise;
+Suspicion against her and hate, all that malice can forge and devise;--
+As a bird by the fowlers o'ernetted, she shuffles and changes her ground;
+No wile unlawful in war, and the foe unscrupulous round!
+Woman-like overbelieving Herself and the Cause and the Man,
+Fights with two-edged intrigue, suicidal, plan upon plan;
+Till the law of this world had its way, and she fled,--like a frigate
+unsail'd,
+Unmasted, unflagg'd,--to her land; and the strength of the stronger
+prevail'd.
+
+ But it was not thus, not thus, in the years of thy springtide, O
+Queen,
+When thy children came in their beauty, and all their future unseen:
+When the kingdom had wealth and peace, one smile o'er the face of the
+land:
+England, too happy, if thou could'st thy happiness understand!
+As those over Etna who slumber, and under them rankles the fire.
+At her side was the gallant King, her first-love, her girlhood's desire,
+And around her, best jewels and dearest to brighten the steps of the
+throne,
+Three golden heads, three fair little maids, in their nursery shone.
+'As the mother, so be the daughters,' they say:--nor could mother wish
+more
+For her own, than men saw in the Queen's, ere the rosebud-dawning was
+o'er,
+Heart-wise and head-wise, a joy to behold, as they knelt for her kiss,--
+Best crown of a woman's life, her true vocation and bliss!--
+But the flowers were pale and frail, and the mother watch'd them with
+dread,
+As the sunbeams play'd round the room on each gay, glistening head.
+
+ Anne in that garden of childhood grew nearest Elizabeth: she
+Tenderly tended and loved her, a babe with a babe on her knee:
+Slight and white from the cradle was Anne; a floweret born
+Rathe, out of season, a rose that peep'd out when the hedge was in thorn.
+'Why should it be so with us?' thought Elizabeth oft; for in her
+The soul 'gainst the body protesting, was but more keenly astir:
+'As saplings stunted by forest around o'ershading, we two:
+What work for our life, my mother,' she said, 'is left us to do?
+Or is't from the evil to come, the days without pleasure, that God
+In mercy would spare us, over our childhood outstretching the rod?'
+--So she, from her innocent heart; in all things seeing the best
+With the wholesome spirit of childhood; to God submitting the rest:
+Not seeing the desolate years, the dungeon of Carisbrook drear;
+Eyes dry-glazed with fever, and none to lend even a tear!
+Now, all her heart to the little one goes; for, day upon day,
+As a rosebud in canker, she pales and pines, and the cough has its way.
+And the gardens of Richmond on Thames, the fine blythe air of the vale
+Stay not the waning pulse, and the masters of science fail.
+Then the little footsteps are faint, and a child may take her with ease;
+As the flowers a babe flings down she is spread on Elizabeth's knees,
+Slipping back to the cradle-life, in her wasting weakness and pain:
+And the sister prays and smiles and watches the sister in vain.
+
+ So she watch'd by the bed all night, and the lights were yellow and
+low,
+And a cold blue blink shimmer'd up from the park that was sheeted in
+snow:
+And the frost of the passing hour, when souls from the body divide,
+The Sarsar-wind of the dawn, crept into the palace, and sigh'd.
+And the child just turn'd her head towards Elizabeth there as she lay,
+And her little hands came together in haste, as though she would pray;
+And the words wrestled in her for speech that the fever-dry mouth cannot
+frame,
+And the strife of the soul on the delicate brow was written in flame:
+And Elizabeth call'd 'O Father, why does she look at me so?
+Will it soon be better for Anne? her face is all in a glow':--
+But with womanly speed and heed is the mother beside her, and slips
+Her arm 'neath the failing head, and moistens the rose of the lips,
+Pale and sweet as the wild rose of June, and whispers to pray
+To the Father in heaven, 'the one she likes best, my baby, to say':
+And the soul hover'd yet o'er the lips, as a dove when her pinions are
+spread,
+And the light of the after-life came again in her eyes, and she said;
+'For my long prayer it is not time; for my short one I think I have
+breath;
+_Lighten mine eyes, O Lord, that I sleep not the sleep of death_.'
+--O! into life, fair child, as she pray'd, her innocence slept!
+'It is better for her,' they said:--and knelt, and kiss'd her, and wept.
+
+_In her_; Henrietta's mother was by birth Mary de' Medici; the
+great-grandmother of Charles was Mary of Guise.
+
+'With Charles I,' says Ranke, 'nothing was more seductive than secrecy.
+The contradictions in his conduct entangled him in embarrassments, in
+which his declarations, if always true in the sense he privately gave
+them, were only a hair's-breadth removed from actual, and even from
+intentional, untruth.'--Whether traceable to descent, or to the evil
+influence of Buckingham and the intriguing atmosphere of the Spanish
+marriage-negotiations, this defect in political honesty is,
+unquestionably, the one serious blot on the character of Charles I.--Yet,
+whilst noting it, candid students will regretfully confess that the
+career of Elizabeth and her counsellors is defaced by shades of bad
+faith, darker and more numerous.
+
+_When the kingdom_; See Clarendon's description of England during this
+period, 'enjoying the greatest calm and the fullest measure of felicity
+that any people in any age for so long time together have been blessed
+with.'
+
+_Three golden heads_; Mary, the second child of Charles and Henrietta,
+was born Nov. 4, 1631: Elizabeth, Dec. 28, 1635: Anne, Mar. 17, 1637. The
+last two were feeble from infancy. Consumption soon showed itself in
+Anne, and her short life, passed at Richmond, closed in November, 1640.
+For her last words, we are indebted to Fuller, who adds: 'This done, the
+little lamb gave up the ghost.'
+
+The affection and care of the royal parents is well attested. 'Their
+arrival,' when visiting the nursery, 'was the signal of a general
+rejoicing.'
+
+In the latter portion of this piece I have ventured, it will be seen, on
+an ideal treatment. The main facts, and the words of the dear child, are
+historical:--for the details I appeal to any mother who has suffered
+similar loss whether they could have been much otherwise.
+
+_Not seeing_; See the _Captive Child_.
+
+_The frost_; It is noticed that death, the _Sarsar-wind_ of Southey's
+_Thalaba_, often occurs at the turn between night and day, when the
+atmosphere is wont to be at the coldest.
+
+
+
+AFTER CHALGROVE FIGHT
+
+
+June 18: 1643
+
+ Flags crape-smother'd and arms reversed,
+ With one sad volley lay him to rest:
+ Lay him to rest where he may not see
+ This England he loved like a lover accursed
+ By lawlessness masking as liberty,
+ By the despot in Freedom's panoply drest:--
+Bury him, ere he be made duplicity's tool and slave,
+Where he cannot see the land that he could not save!
+ Bury him, bury him, bury him
+ With his face downward!
+
+ Chalgrove! Name of patriot pain!
+ O'er thy fresh fields that summer pass'd
+ The brand of war's red furnace blast,
+ Till heaven's soft tears wash'd out the blackening stain;--
+ Wash'd out and wept;--But could not so restore
+ England's gallant son:
+ Ere the fray was done
+The stately head bow'd down; shatter'd; his warfare o'er.
+
+ Bending to the saddle-bow
+ With leaden arm that idle hangs,
+ Faint with the lancing torture-pangs,
+ He drops the rein; he lets the battle go:--
+ There, where the wife of his first love he woo'd
+ Turning for retreat;--
+ Memories bitter-sweet
+Through death's fast-rising mist in youth's own light renew'd.
+
+ Then, as those who drown, perchance,
+ And all their years, a waking dream,
+ Flash pictured by in lightning gleam,
+ His childhood home appears, the mother's glance,
+ The hearth-side smile; the fragrance of the fields:
+ --Now, war's iron knell
+ Wakes the hounds of hell,
+Whilst o'er the realm her scourge the rushing Fury wields!
+
+ Doth he now the day lament
+ When those who stemm'd despotic might
+ O'erstrode the bounds of law and right,
+ And through the land the torch of ruin sent?
+ Or that great rival statesman as he stood
+ Lion-faced and grim,
+ Hath he sight of him,
+Strafford--the meteor-axe--the fateful Hill of Blood?
+
+ --Heroes both! by passion led,
+ In days perplex'd 'tween new and old,
+ Each at his will the realm to mould;
+ This, basing sovereignty on the single head,
+ This, on the many voices of the Hall:--
+ Each for his own creed
+ Prompt to die at need:
+His side of England's shield each saw, and took for all.
+
+ Heroes both! For Order one
+ And one for Freedom dying!--We
+ May judge more justly both, than ye
+ Could, each, his brother, ere the strife was done!
+ --O Goddess of that even scale and weight,
+ In whose awful eyes
+ Truest mercy lies,
+This hero-dirge to thee I vow and dedicate!
+
+ --Slanting now,--the foe is by,--
+ Through Hazeley mead the warrior goes,
+ And hardly fords the brook that flows
+ Bearing to Thame its cool, sweet, summer-cry.
+ Here take thy rest; here bind the broken heart!
+ By death's mercy-doom
+ Hid from ills to come,
+Great soul, and greatly vex'd, Hampden!--in peace depart!
+
+In the heart of the fields he loved and the hills,
+ Look your last, and lay him to rest,
+ With the faded flower, the wither'd grass;
+ Where the blood-face of war and the myriad ills
+ Of England dear like phantoms pass
+ And touch not the soul that is with the Blest.
+Bury him in the night and peace of the holy grave,
+Where he cannot see the land that he could not save!
+ Bury him, bury him, bury him
+ With his face downward!
+
+John Hampden met his death at Chalgrove in an attempt to check the raids
+which Prince Rupert was making from Oxford. Struck at the onset in the
+shoulder by two carabine balls, he rode off before the action was ended
+by Hazeley towards Thame, finding it impossible to reach Pyrton, the home
+of his father-in-law. The body was carried to his own house amid the
+woods and hills of the Chiltern country, and buried in the church close
+by.
+
+_With his face downward_; This was the dying request of some high-minded
+Spaniard of old, unwilling, even in the grave, as it were, to look on the
+misfortunes of his country.
+
+_O'erstrode the bounds_; 'After every allowance has been made,' says
+Hallam, speaking of the Long Parliament from a date so early as August,
+1641, 'he must bring very heated passions to the records of those times,
+who does not perceive in the conduct of that body a series of glaring
+violations, not only of positive and constitutional, but of those higher
+principles which are paramount to all immediate policy': (_Const. Hist_.
+ch. ix).
+
+_The axe_; A clear and impartial sketch of Stafford's trial will be found
+in Ranke (B. viii): who deals dispassionately and historically with an
+event much obscured by declamation in popular narratives. Even in
+Hallam's hand the balance seems here to waver a little.
+
+_Heroes both_;--_Each his side_; See _Appendix_ B.
+
+
+
+A CHURCHYARD IN OXFORDSHIRE
+
+
+September: 1643
+
+Sweet air and fresh; glades yet unsear'd by hand
+Of Midas-finger'd Autumn, massy-green;
+Bird-haunted nooks between,
+Where feathery ferns, a fairy palmglove, stand,
+An English-Eastern band:--
+While e'en the stealthy squirrel o'er the grass
+Beside me to the beech-clump dares to pass:--
+In this still precinct of the happy dead,
+The sanctuary of silence,--Blessed they!
+I cried, who 'neath the gray
+Peace of God's house, each in his mounded bed
+Sleep safe, nor reck how the great world runs on;
+Peasant with noble here alike unknown.
+
+Unknown, unnamed beneath one turf they sleep,
+Beneath one sky, one heaven-uplifted sign
+Of love assured, divine:
+While o'er each mound the quiet mosses creep,
+The silent dew-pearls weep:
+--Fit haven-home for thee, O gentlest heart
+Of Falkland! all unmeet to find thy part
+In those tempestuous times of canker'd hate
+When Wisdom's finest touch, and, by her side,
+Forbearance generous-eyed
+To fix the delicate balance of the State
+Were needed;--King or Nation, which should hold
+Supreme supremacy o'er the kingdoms old.
+
+--God's heroes, who? . . . Not most, or likeliest, he
+Whom iron will cramps to one narrow road,
+Driving him like a goad
+Till all his heart decrees seem God's decree;
+That worst hypocrisy
+When self cheats self, and conscience at the wheel
+Herself is steer'd by passion's blindfold zeal;
+A nether-world archangel! Through whose eyes
+Flame the red mandates of remorseless might;
+A gloom of lurid light
+That holds no commerce with the crystal skies;
+Like those rank fires that o'er the fen-land flee,
+Or on the mast-head sign the wrath to be.
+
+As o'er that ancient weird Arlesian plain
+Where Zeus hail'd boulder-stones on the giant crew,
+And changed to stone, or slew,
+No bud may burgeon in Spring's gracious rain,
+No blade of grass or grain:
+--So bare, so scourged, a prey to chaos cast
+The wisest despot leaves his realm at last!
+Though for the land he toil'd with iron will,
+Earnest to reach persuasion's goal through power,
+The fruit without the flower!
+And pray'd and wrestled to charm good from ill;
+Waking perchance, or not, in death,--to find
+Man fights a losing fight who fights mankind!
+
+And as who in the Theban avenue,
+Sphinx ranged by Sphinx, goes awestruck, nor may read
+That ancient awful creed
+Closed in their granite calm:--so dim the clue,
+So tangled, tracking through
+That labyrinthine soul which, day by day
+Changing, yet kept one long imperious way:
+Strong in his weakness; confident, yet forlorn;
+Waning and waxing; diamond-keen, or dull,
+As that star Wonderful,
+Mira, for ever, dying and reborn:--
+Blissful or baleful, yet a Power throughout,
+Throned in dim altitude o'er the common rout.
+
+Alas, great Chief! The pity of it!--For he
+Lay on his unlamented bier; his life
+Wreck'd on that futile strife
+To wed things alien by heaven's decree,
+Sword-sway with liberty:--
+Coercing, not protecting;--for the Cause
+Smiting with iron heel on England's laws:
+--Intolerant tolerance! Soul that could not trust
+Its finer instincts; self-compell'd to run
+The blood-path once begun,
+And murder mercy with a sad 'I must!'
+Great lion-heart by guile and coarseness marr'd;
+By his own heat a hero warp'd and scarr'd.
+
+Despot despite himself!--And when the cry
+Moan'd up from England, dungeon'd in that drear
+Sectarian atmosphere,
+With glory he gilt her chains; in Spanish sky
+Flaunting the Red Cross high;--
+Wars, just or unjust, ill or well design'd,
+Urged with the will that masters weak mankind.
+--God's hammer Thou!--not hero!--Forged to break
+The land,--salve wounds with wounds, heal force by force;
+Sword-surgeon keen and coarse:--
+To all who worship power for power's own sake,--
+Strength for itself,--Success, the vulgar test,--
+Fit idol of bent knee, and servile breast!
+
+--O in the party plaudits of the crowd
+Glorious, if this be glory!--o'er that shout
+A small still voice breathes out
+With subtle sweetness silencing the loud
+Hoarse vaunting of the proud,--
+A song of exaltation for the vale,
+And how the mountain from his height shall fail!
+How God's true heroes, since this earth began,
+Go sackcloth-clad through scourge and sword and scorn,
+Crown'd with the bleeding thorn,
+Down-trampled by man's heel as foes to man,
+And whispering _Eli_, _Eli_! as they die,--
+Martyrs of truth and Saint Humility.
+
+These conquer in their fall: Persuasion flies
+Wing'd, from their grave: The hearts of men are turn'd
+To worship what they burn'd:
+Owning the sway of Love's long-suffering eyes,
+Love's sweet self-sacrifice;
+The might of gentleness; the subduing force
+Of wisdom on her mid-way measured course
+Gliding;--not torrent-like with fury spilt,
+Impetuous, o'er Himalah's rifted side,
+To ravage blind and wide,
+And leave a lifeless wreck of parching silt;--
+Gliding by thorpe and tower and grange and lea
+In tranquil transit to the eternal sea.
+
+--Children of Light!--If, in the slow-paced course
+Of vital change, your work seem incomplete,
+Your conquest-hour defeat,
+Won by mild compromise, by the invisible force
+That owns no earthly source;
+Yet to all time your gifts to man endure,
+God being with you, and the victory sure!
+For though o'er Gods the Giants in the course
+May lord it, Strength o'er Beauty; yet the Soul
+Immortal, clasps the goal;
+Fair Wisdom triumphs by her inborn force:
+--Thus far on earth! . . . But, ah!--from mortal sight
+The crowning glory veils itself in light!
+
+_Envoy_
+
+--Seal'd of that holy band,
+Rest here, beneath the foot-fall hushing sod,
+Wrapt in the peace of God,
+While summer burns above thee; while the land
+Disrobes; till pitying snow
+Cover her bareness; till fresh Spring-winds blow,
+And the sun-circle rounds itself again:--
+Whilst England cries in vain
+For thy wise temperance, Lucius!--But thine ear
+The violent-impotent fever-restless cry,
+The faction-yells of triumph, will not hear:
+--Only the thrush on high
+And wood-dove's moaning sweetness make reply.
+
+Lucius Cary, second Viscount Falkland, may perhaps be defined as at once
+the most poetically chivalrous and the most philosophically moderate
+amongst all who took part in the pre-restoration struggles. He was
+killed in the royal army at the first battle of Newbury, Sep. 20, 1643,
+aged but 33 years, and buried, without mark or memorial, in the church of
+Great Tew (North Oxfordshire), the manor of which he owned.
+
+_English Eastern_; The common brake-fern and its allies seem to betray
+tropical sympathies by their late appearance and sensitiveness to
+autumnal frost.
+
+_That Arlesian plain_; Now named the _Crau_. It lies between Aries and
+the sea--a bare and malarious tract of great size covered with shingle
+and boulders. Aeschylus describes it as a 'snow-shower of round stones,'
+which Zeus rained down in aid of Heracles, who was contending with the
+Ligurians.
+
+_Mira_; A star in the _Whale_, conspicuous for its singular and rapid
+changes of apparent size.
+
+_The Cause_; After passing through several phases this word, in
+Cromwell's mouth, with the common logic of tyranny, became simply a
+synonym for personal rule.
+
+_Smiting with iron heel_; The terrorism of the Protector's government,
+and the almost universal hatred which it inspired, are powerfully painted
+by Hallam. 'To govern according to law may sometimes be an usurper's
+wish, but can seldom be in his power. The protector abandoned all
+thought of it. . . . All illusion was now (1655) gone, as to the
+pretended benefits of the civil war. It had ended in a despotism,
+compared to which all the illegal practices of former kings, all that had
+cost Charles his life and crown, appeared as dust in the balance.'
+
+_The blood-path_; The trials under which Gerard and Vowel were executed
+in 1654, Slingsby and Hewit in 1658, are the most flagrant instances of
+Cromwell's perversion of justice, and contempt for the old liberties of
+England. But they do not stand alone.
+
+_Guile and coarseness_; 'A certain coarse good nature and affability that
+covered the want of conscience, honour, and humanity: quick in passion,
+but not vindictive, and averse to unnecessary crimes,' is the deliberate
+summing-up of Hallam,--in the love of liberty inferior to none of our
+historians, and eminent above all for courageous
+impartiality,--_iustissimus unus_.
+
+_With glory he gilt_; See _Appendix_ C.
+
+_Success, the vulgar test_; See Matthew Arnold's finely discriminative
+_Essay_ on Falkland.
+
+
+
+MARSTON MOOR
+
+
+July 2: 1644
+
+O, summer-high that day the sun
+His chariot drove o'er Marston wold:
+A rippling sea of amber wheat
+That floods the moorland vale with gold.
+
+With harvest light the valley laughs,
+The sheaves in mellow sunshine sleep;
+--Too rathe the crop, too red the swathes
+Ere night the scythe of Death shall reap!
+
+Then thick and fast o'er all the moor
+The crimson'd sabre-lightnings fly;
+And thick and fast the death-bolts dash,
+And thunder-peals to peals reply.
+
+Where Evening arched her fiery dome
+Went up the roar of mortal foes:--
+Then o'er a deathly peace the moon
+In silver silence sailing rose.
+
+Sweet hour, when heaven is nearest home,
+And children's kisses close the day!
+O disaccord with nature's calm,
+Unholy requiem of the fray!
+
+White maiden Queen that sail'st above,
+Thy dew-tears on the fallen fling,--
+The blighted wreaths of civil strife,
+The war that can no triumph bring!
+
+--O pale with that deep pain of those
+Who cannot save, yet must foresee,--
+Surveying all the ills to flow
+From that too-victor victory;
+
+When 'gainst the unwisely guided King
+The dark self-centred Captain stood,
+And law and right and peace went down
+In that red sea of brothers' blood;--
+
+O long, long, long the years, fair Maid,
+Before thy patient eye shall view
+The shrine of England's law restored,
+Her homes their native peace renew!
+
+_That day_; The actual fight lay between 7 and 9 p.m.
+
+_Too-victor victory_; At Naseby, says Hallam,--and the remark, (though
+Charles was not personally present), is equally true of Marston
+Moor--'Fairfax and Cromwell triumphed, not only over the king and the
+monarchy, but over the parliament and the nation.'
+
+_Unwisely guided_; 'Never would it have been wiser, in Rupert,' remarks
+Ranke, 'to avoid a decisive battle than at that moment. But he held that
+the king's letter not only empowered, but instructed him to fight.'
+
+_Red sea_; 'The slaughter was deadly, for Cromwell had forbidden quarter
+being given': (Ranke, ix: 3).
+
+
+
+THE FUGITIVE KING
+
+
+August 7: 1645
+
+Cold blue cloud on the hill-tops,
+Cold buffets of hill-side rain:--
+As a bird that they hunt on the mountains,
+The king, he turns from Rhos lane:
+A writing of doom on his forehead,
+His eyes wan-wistful and dim;
+For his comrades seeking a shelter:
+But earth has no shelter for him!
+
+Gray silvery gleam of armour,
+White ghost of a wandering king!
+No sound but the iron-shod footfall
+And the bridle-chains as they ring:
+Save where the tears of heaven,
+Shed thick o'er the loyal hills,
+Rush down in the hoarse-tongued torrent,
+A roar of approaching ills.
+
+But now with a sweeping curtain,
+In solid wall comes the rain,
+And the troop draw bridle and hide them
+In the bush by the stream-side plain.
+King Charles smiled sadly and gently;
+''Tis the Beggar's Bush,' said he;
+'For I of England am beggar'd,
+And her poorest may pity me.'
+
+--O safe in the fadeless fir-tree
+The squirrel may nestle and hide;
+And in God's own dwelling the sparrow
+Safe with her nestlings abide:--
+But he goes homeless and friendless,
+And manlike abides his doom;
+For he knows a king has no refuge
+Betwixt the throne and the tomb.
+
+And the purple-robed braes of Alban,
+The glory of stream and of plain,
+The Holyrood halls of his birthright
+Charles ne'er will look on again:--
+And the land he loved well, not wisely,
+Will almost grudge him a grave:
+Then weep, too late, in her folly,
+The dark Dictator's slave!
+
+This incident occurred during the attempt made by Charles, in the dark
+final days of his struggle, to march from South Wales with the hope of
+joining Montrose in Scotland. He appears to have halted for the night of
+Aug. 6, 1645, at Old Radnor and 'the name of _Rails Yat_, (Royal gate)
+still points out the spot where, on the following morning, he left the
+Rhos Lane for the road which brought him to shelter at Beggar's Bush': a
+name which is reported to be still preserved.
+
+
+
+THE CAPTIVE CHILD
+
+
+September 8: 1650
+
+Child in girlhood's early grace,
+Pale white rose of royal race,
+Flower of France, and England's flower,
+What dost here at twilight hour
+Captive bird in castle-hold,
+Picture-fair and calm and cold,
+Cold and still as marble stone
+In gray Carisbrook alone?
+--Fold thy limbs and take thy rest,
+Nestling of the silent nest!
+
+Ah fair girl! So still and meek,
+One wan hand beneath her cheek,
+One on the holy texts that tell
+Of God's love ineffable;--
+Last dear gift her father gave
+When, before to-morrow's grave,
+By no unmanly grief unmann'd,
+To his little orphan band
+In that stress of anguish sore
+He bade farewell evermore.
+
+Doom'd, unhappy King! Had he
+Known the pangs in store for thee,
+Known the coarse fanatic rage
+That,--despite her flower-soft age,
+Maidenhood's first blooming fair,--
+Fever-struck in the imprison'd air
+As rosebud on the dust-hill thrown
+Cast a child to die alone,--
+He had shed, with his last breath,
+Bitterer tears than tears of death!
+
+As in her infant hour she took
+In her hand the pictured book
+Where Christ beneath the scourger bow'd,
+Crying 'O poor man!' aloud,
+And in baby tender pain
+Kiss'd the page, and kiss'd again,
+While the happy father smiled
+On his sweet warm-hearted child;
+--So now to him, in Carisbrook lone,
+All her tenderness has flown.
+
+Oft with a child's faithful heart
+She has seen him act his part;
+Nothing in his life so well
+Gracing him as when he fell;
+Seen him greet his bitter doom
+As the mercy-message Home;
+Seen the scaffold and the shame,
+The red shower that fell like flame;
+Till the whole heart within her died,
+Dying in fancy by his side.
+
+--Statue-still and statue-fair
+Now the low wind may lift her hair,
+Motionless in lip and limb;
+E'en the fearful mouse may skim
+O'er the window-sill, nor stir
+From the crumb at sight of her;
+Through the lattice unheard float
+Summer blackbird's evening note;--
+E'en the sullen foe would bless
+That pale utter gentleness.
+
+--Eyes of heaven, that pass and peep,
+Do not question, if she sleep!
+She has no abiding here,
+She is past the starry sphere;
+Kneeling with the children sweet
+At the palm-wreathed altar's feet;
+--Innocents who died like thee,
+Heaven-ward through man's cruelty,
+To the love-smiles of their Lord
+Borne through pain and fire and sword.
+
+Elizabeth, second daughter of Charles I. and Henrietta Maria, was born on
+Innocents' Day, 1635. The incident accounted in Stanza iv occurred in
+1637. She had been taken on a visit to Hampton Court to her mother, who
+wished her to be present at her own vesper-service, when Elizabeth, not
+yet two years old, became very restless. To quiet her a book of devotion
+was shown to her.' The King, when the Queen drew his attention, said,
+'She begins young!'
+
+This tale is told by Mrs. Green, in her excellent _Princesses of
+England_, (London, 1853),--a book deserving to be better known,--on the
+authority of the Envoy Con.
+
+The first grief of a very happy and promising childhood may have been the
+loss of her sister Anne in 1640. But by 1642, the evils of the time
+began to press upon Princess Elizabeth; her mother's departure from
+England, followed by her own capture by order of the Parliament; her
+confinement under conditions of varying severity; and the final farewell
+to her father, Jan. 29, 1649.
+
+From that time her life was overshadowed by the sadness of her father's
+death, her own isolation, and her increasing feebleness of health. She
+seems to have been a singularly winning and intelligent girl, and she
+hence found or inspired affection in several of the guardians
+successively appointed to take charge of her. But if she had not been
+thus marked by beauty of nature, our indignant disgust would hardly be
+less at the brutal treatment inflicted by the Puritan-Independent
+authorities upon this child:--at the refusal of her prayer to be sent to
+her elder sister Mary, in Holland; at the captivity in Carisbrook; at the
+isolation in which she was left to die.--Yet it is not she who most
+merits pity!
+
+In this poem, written before the plan of the book had been formed, I find
+that some slight deviation from the best authorities has been made.
+Elizabeth's young brother Henry, Duke of Gloster, shared her prison: and
+although her own physician, Mayerne, had been dismissed, yet some medical
+attendance was supplied.--Henry Vaughan has described the patience of the
+young sufferer in two lovely lines:
+
+ Thou didst not murmur, nor revile,
+ And drank'st thy wormwood with a smile.
+
+ --_Olor Iscanus_; 1651.
+
+
+
+THE WRECK OF THE ADMIRAL
+
+
+_A TALE OF PRINCE RUPERT_
+
+September 30: 1651
+
+Seventy league from Terceira they lay
+ In the mid Atlantic straining;
+And inch upon inch as she settles they know
+ The leak on the Admiral gaining.
+
+Below them 'tis death rushes greedily in;
+ But their signal unheeded is waving,
+For the shouts by their billow-toss'd consort unheard
+ Are lost in the tempest's wild raving.
+
+For Maurice in vain o'er the bulwark leant forth,
+ While Rupert to rescue was crying;
+And the voice of farewell on his face is flung back
+ With the scud on the billow-top flying!
+
+But no time was for tears, save for duty no thought,
+ When brother is parting from brother;
+For Rupert the brave and his high-hearted crew,
+ They must die, as they lived, by each other.
+
+Unregarded the boat, for none care from their post
+ To steal off while the Prince is beside them,
+All, all, side by side with his comrades to share
+ Till the death-plunge at last shall divide them.
+
+Ah, sharp in his bosom meanwhile is the smart,
+ He alone for his king is contending!
+And the brightness and blaze of his youth in its prime
+ Must here in mid-waves have their ending!
+
+--The seas they break over, the seas they press in
+ From fo'csle to binnacle streaming;
+And a ripple runs over the Admiral's deck,
+ With blue cold witch-fire gleaming.
+
+O then in a noble rebellion they rise;
+ They may die, but the Prince shall o'erlive them!
+With a loving rough force to the boat he is thrust,
+ And he must be saved and forgive them!
+
+Now their flame-pikes they lift, the last signal for life,
+ Flaring wild in the wild rack above them:--
+And each breast has one prayer for the Mercy on high,
+ And one for the far-off who love them.
+
+O high-beating hearts that are still'd in the deep
+ Unknown treasure-caverns of Ocean!
+There, where storms cannot vex, the three hundred are laid
+ In their silent heroic devotion.
+
+Rupert, nephew to Charles through his sister Elizabeth, wife to the
+Elector Palatine, after the ruin of his uncle's cause, carried on the
+struggle at sea. The incident here treated occurred on one of his last
+voyages, when cruising in the Atlantic near the Canaries: it is told at
+full length in E. Warburton's narrative of Rupert's life.
+
+_Brother is parting from brother_; Maurice, a year younger than
+himself,--then in the companion ship _Swallow_, in which Rupert, by the
+devoted determination of his comrades, was ultimately saved. Maurice was
+not long after drowned in the West Indies.
+
+_Flame-pikes_; Two 'fire-pikes,' it is stated, were burned as a signal
+just before the flag-ship sank. Three hundred and thirty-three was the
+estimate of the number drowned.
+
+
+
+THE RETURN OF LAW
+
+
+1660
+
+At last the long darkness of anarchy lifts, and the dawn o'er the gray
+In rosy pulsation floods; the tremulous amber of day:
+In the golden umbrage of spring-tide, the dewy delight of the sward,
+The liquid voices awake, the new morn with music reward.
+Peace in her car goes up; a rainbow curves for her road;
+Law and fair Order before her, the reinless coursers of God;--
+Round her the gracious maids in circling majesty shine;
+They are rich in blossoms and blessings, the Hours, the white, the
+divine!
+
+Hands in sisterly hands they unite, eye calling on eye;
+Smiles more speaking than words, as the pageant sweeps o'er the sky.
+Plenty is with them, and Commerce; all gifts of all lands from her horn
+Raining on England profuse; and, clad in the beams of the morn,
+Her warrior-guardian of old the red standard rears in its might;
+And the Love-star trembles above, and passes, light into light.
+
+Many the marvels of earth, the more marvellous wonders on high,
+Worlds past number on worlds, blank lightless abysses of sky;
+But thou art the wonder of wonders, O Man! Thy impalpable soul,
+Atom of consciousness, measuring the Infinite, grasping the whole:
+Then, on the trivialest transiencies fix'd, or plucking for fruit
+Dead-sea apples and ashes of sin, more brute than the brute.
+Yet in thy deepest depths, filth-wallowing orgies of night,
+Lust remorseless of blood, yet, allow'd an inlet for light:
+As where, a thousand fathom beneath us, midnight afar
+Glooms in some gulph, and we gaze, and, behold! one flash of one star!
+For, ever, the golden gates stand open, the transit is free
+For the human to mix with divine; from himself to the Highest to flee.
+Lo on its knees by the bedside the babe:--and the song that we hear
+Has been heard already in Heaven! the low-lisp'd music is clear:--
+For, fresh from the hand of the Maker, the child still breathes the light
+air
+Of the House Angelic, the meadow where souls yet unbodied repair,
+Lucid with love, translucent with bliss, and know not the doom
+In the Marah valley of life laid up for the sons of the womb.
+--I speak not of grovelling hearts, souls blind and begrimed from the
+birth,
+But the spirits of nobler strain, the elect of the children of earth:--
+For the needle swerves from the pole; they cannot do what they would;
+In their truest aim is falsehood, and ill out-balancing good.
+Faith's first felicities fade; the world-mists thicken and roll,
+'Neath the heavens arching their heaven; o'er-hazing the eye of the soul.
+Then the vision is pure no longer; refracted above us arise
+The phantasmal figures of passion; earth's mirage exhaled to the skies.
+And they go as the castled clouds o'er the verge when the tempest is
+laid,
+Towering Ambition, and Glory, and Self as Duty array'd:--
+Idols no less than that idol whom lustful Ammon of yore
+With the death-scream of children, a furnace of blood, was fain to adore!
+So these, in the shrine of the soul, for a Moloch sacrifice cry,
+The conscience of candid childhood, the pure directness of eye:--
+Till the man yields himself to himself, accepting his will as his fate,
+And the light from above within him is darkness; the darkness how great!
+
+ O Land whom the Gods,--loving most,--most sorely in wisdom have tried,
+England! since Time was Time, thrice swept by the conqueror tide,
+Why on thyself thrice turn, thrice crimson thy greenness in gore,
+With the slain of thy children, as sheep, thy meadows whitening-o'er?
+Race impatiently patient; tenacious of foe as of friend;
+Slow to take flame; but, enflamed, that burns thyself out to the end:
+Slow to return to the balance, once moved; not easily sway'd
+From the centre, and, star-like, retracing thy orbit through sunlight and
+shade!
+--Without hate, without party affection, we now look back on the fray,
+Through the mellowing magic of time the phantoms emerging to day!
+Grasping too much for self, unjust to his rival in strife,
+Each foe with good conscience and honour advances; war to the knife!
+Lo, where with feebler hand the Stuart essays him to guide
+The disdainful coursers of Henry, the Tudor car in its pride!
+For he saw not the past was past; nor the swirl and inrush of the tide,
+A nation arising in manhood; its will would no more be denied.
+They would share in the labour and peril of State; they must perish or
+win;
+'Tis the instinct of Freedom that cries; a voice of Nature within!
+Narrow the cry and sectarian oft: true sons of their age;
+Justice avenged unjustly; yet more in sorrow than rage;
+Till they drank the poison of power, the Circe-cup of command,
+And the face of Liberty fail'd, and the sword was snatch'd from her hand.
+Now Law 'neath the scaffold cowers, and,--shame engendering shame,--
+The hell-pack of war is laid close on the land for ruin and flame.
+For as things most holy are worst, from holiness when they decline,
+So Law, in the name of law once outraged, demon-divine,
+Swoops back as Anarchy arm'd, and maddens her lovers of yore,
+Changed from their former selves, and clothed in the chrisom of gore.
+Then Falkland and Hampden are gone; and darker counsels arise;
+Vane with his tortuous soul, through over-wisdom unwise;
+Pym, deep stately designer, the subtle in simple disguised,
+Artist in plots, projector of panics he used, and despised!
+--But as, in the mountain world, where the giants each lift up their horn
+To the skies defiant and pale, and our littleness measure and scorn,
+Frowning-out from their far-off summits: and eye and mind may not know
+Which is hugest, where all are huge: But, as from the region we go
+Receding, the Titan of Titans comes forth, and above him the sky
+Is deepest: and lo!--'tis the White One, the Monarch!--He mounts, as we
+fly!
+Or as over the sea the gay ships and the dolphins glisten and flit,
+And then that Leviathan comes, and takes his pastime in it;
+And wherever he ploughs his dark road, they must sink or follow him
+still,
+For his is the bulkiest strength, the proud and paramount will!
+--Thou wast great, O King! (for we grudge not the style thou didst yearn-
+for in vain,
+But a river of blood was between and an ineffaceable stain),
+Great with an earth-born greatness; a Titan of awe, not of love;
+'Twas strength and subtlety balanced; the wisdom not from above.
+For he leant o'er his own deep soul, oracular; over the pit
+As the Pythia throned her of old, where the rock in Delphi was split;
+And the vapour and echo within he mis-held for divine; and the land
+Heard and obey'd, unwillingly willing, the voice of command.
+--Soaring enormous soul, that to height o'er the highest aspires;
+All that the man can seize being nought to what he desires!
+And as, in a palace nurtured, the child to courtesy grows,
+Becoming at last what it acts; so man on himself can impose,
+Drill and accustom himself to humility, till, like an art,
+The lesson the fingers have learn'd appears the command of the heart;
+Whilst pride, as the snake at the charmer's command, coils low in its
+place,
+And he wears to himself and his fellows the mask that is almost a face.
+Truest of hypocrites, he!--in himself entangled, he thinks
+Earth uprising to Heaven, while earth-ward the heavenly sinks:
+Conscience, we grant it, his guide; but conscience drugg'd and deceived;
+Conscience which all that his self-belief whisper'd as duty believed.
+And though he sought earnest for God, in life-long wrestle and prayer,
+Yet the sky by a veil was darken'd, a phantom flitting in air;
+For a cloud from that seething cavernous heart fumed out in his youth,
+And whatever he will'd in the strength of the soul was imaged as truth:--
+Grew with his growth: And now 'tis Ambition, disguised in success;
+And he walks with the step assured, that cares not its issue to guess,
+Clear in immediate purpose: and moulding his party at will,
+He thrones it o'er obstinate sects, his ideal constrain'd to fulfil.
+Cool in his very heat, self-master, he masters the realm:
+God and His glory the flag; but King Oliver lord of the helm!
+As he needs, steers crooked or straight: with his eye controlling the
+proud,
+While blandness runs from his tongue, as the candidate fawns on the
+crowd;
+Sagest of Titans, he stands; dark, ponderous, muddy-profound,
+Greatness untemper'd, untuned; no song, but a chaos of sound:--
+Yet the key-note is ever beneath: 'Mere humble instruments! See!
+Poor weak saints, at the best: but who has triumph'd as we?'
+Thanks the Lord for each massacre-mercy, His glory, for His is the Cause:
+Catlike he bridles, and purrs about God: but within are the claws,
+The lion-strength is within!--Vane, Ludlow, Hutchinson, knew,
+When the bauble of Law disappear'd, and the sulky senate withdrew:
+When the tyrannous Ten sword-silenced the land, and the necks of the
+strong
+By the heel of their great Dictator were bruised, wrong trampling on
+wrong.
+Least willing of despots! and fain the fair temple of Law to restore,
+Sheathing the sword in the sceptre: But lo! as in legends of yore,
+Once drawn, once redden'd, it may not return to the scabbard!--and
+straight
+On that iron-track'd path he had framed to the end he is goaded by Fate.
+And yet, as a temperate man, to flavour some exquisite dish,
+Without stint pours forth the red wine, thus only can compass his wish;
+Upon Erin the death-mark he brands, the Party and Cause to secure;
+Not bloodthirsty by birth; just, liquor 'twas needful to pour;
+Only the wine of man's blood! . . . But the horrible sacrament thrill'd
+Right through the heart of a nation; nor yet is the memory still'd;
+E'en yet the dim spectre returns, the ghost of the murderous years,
+Blood flushing out in hatred; or blood transmuted to tears!
+--Ah strange drama of Fate! what motley pageantries rise
+On the stage of this make-shift world! what irony silenced in sighs!
+For as when the Switzer looks down on the dell, from the pass and the
+snow,
+Sees the peace of the fields, the white farms, the clear equable
+streamlet below,
+And before him the world unknown, the blaze of the shadowless Line,
+Riches ill-purchased in exile, the toiling plantation and mine;
+And the horn floats up the faint music of youth from his forefathers'
+fold,
+And he sighs for the patient life, the peace more golden than gold:--
+So He now looks back on the years, and groans 'neath the load he must
+bear,
+Loving this England that loathed him, and none the burden to share!
+Gagging not gaining souls: to the close he wonders in vain
+Why he cannot win hearts: why 'tis only the will that resigns to his
+reign.
+As that great image in Dura, the land perforce must obey,
+Unloved, unlovely,--and not the feet only of iron and clay,--
+Atlas of this wide realm! in himself he summ'd up the whole;
+Its children the Cause had devour'd: the sword was childless and sole.
+
+ --Ah strange drama of Fate! what motley pageantries rise
+On the stage of this make-shift world! what irony silenced in sighs!
+In the strait beneath Etna for as the waves ebb, and Scylla betrays
+The monster below, foul scales of the serpent and slime,--could we gaze
+On Tyranny stript of her tinsel, what vision of dool and dismay!
+Terror in confidence clothed, and anarchy biding her day:
+Selfishness hero-mask'd; stage-tricks of the shabby-sublime;
+Impotent gaspings at good; and the deluge after her time!
+
+ --Is it war that thunders o'er England, and bursts the millennial oak
+From his base like a castle uprooted, and shears with impalpable stroke
+The sails from the ocean, the houses of men, while the Conqueror lay
+On the morn of his crowning mercy, and life flicker'd down with the day?
+Is it war on the earth, or war in the skies, or Nature who tolls
+Her passing-bell as from earth they go up, her imperial souls?
+--He rests:--'Tis a lion-sleep: and the sternness of Truth is reproved:
+The sleep of a leader of men; unhuman, to watch him unmoved!
+In the stillness of pity and awe we remember his troublesome years,
+For man is the magnet to man, and mortal failure has tears.
+--He rests:--On the massive brows, as a rock by the sunrise is crown'd,
+His passionate love for the land, in a glory-coronal bound!
+And Mercy dawns fast o'er the dead, from the bier as we turn and depart,
+England for England's sake clasp'd firm as a child to his heart.
+--He rests:--And the storm-clouds have fled, and the sunshine of Nature
+repress'd
+Breaks o'er the realm in smiles, and the land again has her rest.
+He rests: the great spirit is hid where from heaven the veil is unroll'd,
+And justice merges in love, and the dross is purged from the gold.
+
+The general point of view from which this subject is here approached is
+given in the following passages:--'The whole nation,' says Macaulay
+(1659), 'was sick of government by the sword, and pined for government by
+the law.' Hence, when Charles landed, 'the cliffs of Dover were covered
+by thousands of gazers, among whom scarcely one could be found who was
+not weeping with delight . . . Every where flags were flying, bells and
+music sounding, wine and ale flowing in rivers to the health of him whose
+return was the return of peace, of law, and of freedom.' Nor was this
+astonishing: the name of the Commonwealth, a greater than Macaulay
+remarks, 'was grown infinitely odious: it was associated with the tyranny
+of ten years, the selfish rapacity of the Rump, the hypocritical
+despotism of Cromwell, the arbitrary sequestrations of committee-men, the
+iniquitous decimations of military prefects, the sale of British citizens
+for slavery in the West Indies, the blood of some shed on the scaffold
+without legal trial, . . . the persecution of the Anglican Church, the
+bacchanalian rant of sectaries, the morose preciseness of puritans . . .
+It is universally acknowledged that no measure was ever more national, or
+has ever produced more testimonies of public approbation, than the
+restoration of Charles II. . . . For the late government, whether under
+the parliament or the protector, had never obtained the sanction of
+popular consent, nor could have subsisted for a day without the support
+of the army. The King's return seemed to the people the harbinger of a
+real liberty, instead of that bastard Commonwealth which had insulted
+them with its name' (Hallam: _Const. Hist_. ch. x and xi).
+
+_Peace in her car_; It will be seen that the Rospigliosi _Aurora_,
+Guido's one inspired work, has been here before the writer's memory.
+
+_On thyself thrice turn_; The civil wars of the Barons, the Roses, and
+the Commonwealth.
+
+_He saw not_; Ranke's dispassionate summary of the attempted 'arrest of
+five members,' which has been always held one of the King's most
+arbitrary steps, as it was, perhaps, the most fatal, illustrates the view
+here taken: 'The prerogative of the Crown, _in the sense of the early
+kings_' (unconditional right of arrest, in cases of treason), 'and the
+privilege of Parliament, _in the sense of coming times_, were directly
+contradictory to each other': (viii: 10).
+
+_Till they drank the poison_; A sentence weighty with his judicial force
+may be here quoted from Hallam:--'The desire of obtaining or retaining
+power, if it be ever sought as a means, is soon converted into an end.'
+The career of the Long Parliament supports this judgment: of it 'it may
+be said, I think, with not greater severity than truth, that scarce two
+or three public acts of justice, humanity, or generosity, and very few of
+political wisdom and courage, are recorded of them from their quarrel
+with the King to their expulsion by Cromwell': (_Const. Hist_. ch. x:
+Part i).
+
+_The chrisom_; Name for the white cloth in which babes were veiled
+immediately after Baptism.
+
+_Artist in plots_; See Ranke (viii: 5) for Pym's skilful use of a
+supposed plot, (the main element in which was known by himself to be
+untrue), in older to terrify the House and ensure the destruction of
+Stafford; and Hallam (ch. ix).--Admiration of Pym may be taken as a proof
+that a historian is ignorant of, or faithless to, the fundamental
+principles of the Constitution:--as the worship of Cromwell is decisive
+against any man's love of liberty, whatever his professions.
+
+_O King_; 'Cromwell, like so many other usurpers, felt his position too
+precarious, or his vanity ungratified, without the name which mankind
+have agreed to worship.' The conversations recorded by Whitelock are
+conclusive on this point: 'and, though compelled to decline the crown, he
+undoubtedly did not lose sight of the object for the short remainder of
+his life' (_Hallam_).
+
+_The sky by a veil_; See _Appendix_ D.
+
+_And he walks_; 'He said on one occasion, _He goes furthest who knows not
+whither he is going_': (Ranke: xii: 1).
+
+_Purrs about God_; Examples, (the tone of which justifies this phrase,
+and might deserve a severer), may be found by the curious in the
+frailties of poor human nature, _passim_, in Cromwell's 'Letters and
+Speeches,' for which, (although not always edited with precise accuracy),
+we are indebted to Mr. T. Carlyle. But the view which he takes of his
+'hero,' whether in regard of many particular facts alleged or neglected,
+or of the general estimate of Cromwell as a man,--as it appears to the
+author plainly untenable in face of proved historical facts, is here
+rejected.
+
+The familiar figure of the Tyrant, too long known to the world,--with the
+iron, the clay, and the little gold often interfused also in the
+statue,--has been always easily recognisable by unbiassed eyes in Oliver
+Cromwell. His tyranny was substantially that of his kind, before his
+time and since, in its actions, its spirit, its result. Fanaticism and
+Paradox may come with their apparatus of rhetoric to blur, as they
+whitewash, the lineaments of their idol. Such eulogists may 'paint an
+inch thick': yet despots,--political, military, ecclesiastical,--will
+never be permanently acknowledged by the common sense of mankind as
+worthy the great name of Hero.
+
+_The tyrannous Ten_; The Major-Generals, originally ten, (but the number
+varied), amongst whom, in 1655, the Commonwealth was divided. They
+displayed 'a rapacity and oppression beyond their master's' (Hallam): a
+phrase amply supported by the hardly-impeachable evidence of Ludlow.
+
+_The horrible sacrament_; See _Appendix_ D.
+
+_Why he cannot win hearts_; 'In the ascent of this bold usurper to
+greatness . . . he had encouraged the levellers and persecuted them; he
+had flattered the Long Parliament and betrayed it; he had made use of the
+sectaries to crush the Commonwealth; he had spurned the sectaries in his
+last advance to power. These, with the Royalists and Presbyterians,
+forming in effect the whole people . . . were the perpetual,
+irreconcilable enemies of his administration' (Hallam ch. x).
+
+_Stage-tricks_; See the curious regal imitations and adaptations of the
+Protector during his later years, in matters regarding his own and his
+family's titles and state, or the marriage of his daughters.
+
+_Mortal failure_; See _Appendix_ D.
+
+
+
+THE POET'S EUTHANASIA
+
+
+November: 1674
+
+Cloked in gray threadbare poverty, and blind,
+Age-weak, and desolate, and beloved of God;
+High-heartedness to long repulse resign'd,
+Yet bating not one jot of hope, he trod
+The sunless skyless streets he could not see;
+By those faint feet made sacrosanct to me.
+
+Yet on that laureate brow the sign he wore
+Of Phoebus' wrath; who,--for his favourite child,
+When war and faction raised their rancorous roar,
+Leagued with fanatic frenzy, blood-defiled,
+To the sweet Muses and himself untrue,--
+Around the head he loved thick darkness threw.
+
+--He goes:--But with him glides the Pleiad throng
+Of that imperial line, whom Phoebus owns
+His ownest: for, since his, no later song
+Has soar'd, as wide-wing'd, to the diadem'd thrones
+That, in their inmost heaven, the Muses high
+Set for the sons of immortality.
+
+Most loved, most lovely, near him as he went,
+Vergil: and He, supremest for all time,
+In hoary blindness:--But the sweet lament
+Of Lesbian love, the Parian song sublime,
+Follow'd:--and that stern Florentine apart
+Cowl'd himself dark in thought, within his heart
+
+Nursing the dream of Church and Caesar's State,
+Empire and Faith:--while Fancy's favourite child,
+The myriad-minded, moving up sedate
+Beckon'd his countryman, and inly smiled:--
+Then that august Theophany paled from view,
+To higher stars drawn up, and kingdoms new.
+
+The last ten years of Milton's life were passed at his house situate in
+the (then) 'Artillery Walk,' Bunhill, near Aldersgate. He is described
+as a spare figure, of middle stature or a little less, who walked,
+generally clothed in a gray camblet overcoat, in the streets between
+Bunhill and Little Britain.
+
+_Vergil_; placed first as most like Milton in consummate art and
+permanent exquisiteness of phrase. It is to him, also, (if to any one),
+that Milton is metrically indebted.--The other poets classed as
+'Imperial' are Homer, Sappho, Archilochus, Dante, Shakespeare. The
+supremacy in rank which the writer has here ventured to limit to these
+seven poets, (though with a strong feeling of diffidence in view of
+certain other Hellenic and Roman claims), is assigned to Sappho and
+Archilochus, less on account of the scanty fragments, though they be
+'more golden than gold,' which have reached us, than in confidence that
+the place collateral with Homer, given them by their countrymen (who
+criticized as admirably as they created), was, in fact, justified by
+their poetry.
+
+_The dream_; Dante's political wishes and speculations, wholly opposed to
+Milton's, are, however, like his in their impracticable originality.
+
+_Theophany_; Vision of the Gods.
+
+
+
+WHITEHALL GALLERY
+
+
+February 11: 1655
+
+ As when the King of old
+ 'Mid Babylonian gold,
+And picture-woven walls, and lamps that gleam'd
+ Unholy radiance, sate,
+ And with some smooth slave-mate
+Toy'd, and the wine laugh'd round, and music stream'd
+Voluptuous undulation, o'er the hall,--
+ Till on the palace-wall
+
+ Forth came a hand divine
+ And wrote the judgment-sign,
+And Babylon fell!--So now, in that his place
+ Of Tudor-Stuart pride,
+ The golden gallery wide,
+'Mid venal beauty's lavish-arm'd embrace,
+And hills of gambler-gold, a godless King
+ Moved through the revelling
+
+ With quick brown falcon-eye
+ And lips of gay reply;
+Wise in the wisdom not from Heaven!--as one
+ Who from his exile-days
+ Had learn'd to scorn the praise
+Of truth, the crown by martyr-virtue won:
+Below ambition:--Grant him regal ease!
+ The rest, as fate may please!
+
+ --O royal heir, restored
+ Not by the bitter sword,
+But when the heart of these great realms in free,
+ Full, triple, unison beat
+ The Martyr's son to greet,
+Her ancient law and faith and flag with thee
+Rethroned,--not thus!--in this inglorious hall
+ Of harem-festival,
+
+ Not thus!--For even now,
+ The blaze is on thy brow
+Scored by the shadowy hand of him whose wing
+ Knows neither haste nor rest;
+ Who from the board each guest
+In season calling,--knight and kerne and king,--
+Where Arthur lies, and Alfred, signs the way;--
+ --We know him, and obey.
+
+Lord Macaulay's lively description of this scene (_Hist_. Ch iv) should
+be referred to. 'Even then,' he says, 'the King had complained that he
+did not feel well.'
+
+_Tudor-Stuart_; This famous Gallery was of sixteenth-century date.
+
+_When the heart_; The weariness of England under the triple yoke of
+Puritanism, the Independents, and the Protector, has been already
+noticed: (Note on p. 125).
+
+'The Restoration,' says Professor Seeley, in an able essay on current
+perversions of seventeenth-century-history, 'was not a return to
+servitude, but the precise contrary. It was a great emancipation, an
+exodus out of servitude into liberty . . . As to the later Stuarts, I
+regard them as pupils of Cromwell: . . . it was their great ambition to
+appropriate his methods,' (and, we may add, to follow his foreign policy
+in regard to France and Holland), for the benefit of the old monarchy.
+They failed where their model had succeeded, and the distinction of
+having enslaved England remained peculiar to Cromwell.'
+
+
+
+THE BALLAD OF KING MONMOUTH
+
+
+1685
+
+_Fear not_, _my child, though the days be dark_,
+ _Never fear_, _he will come again_,
+_With the long brown hair_, _and the banner blue_,
+ _King Monmouth and all his men_!
+
+ The summer-smiling bay
+ Has doff'd its vernal gray;
+ A peacock breast of emerald shot with blue:
+ Is it peace or war that lands
+ On these pale quiet sands,
+As round the pier the boats run-in their silent crew?
+
+ Bent knee, and forehead bare;
+ That moment was for prayer!
+ Then swords flash out, and--Monmouth!--is the cry:
+ The crumbling cliff o'erpast,
+ The hazard-die is cast,
+'Tis James 'gainst James in arms! Soho! and Liberty!
+
+--_Fear not, my child, though he come with few_;
+ _Alone will he come again_;
+_God with him, and his right hand more strong_
+ _Than a thousand thousand men_!
+
+ They file by Colway now;
+ They rise o'er Uplyme brow;
+ And faithful Taunton hails her hero-knight:
+ And girlhood's agile hand
+ Weaves for the patriot band
+The crown-emblazon'd flag, their gathering star of fight.
+
+ --Ah flag of shame and woe!
+ For not by these who go,
+ Scythe-men and club-men, foot and hunger-worn,
+ These levies raw and rude,
+ Can England be subdued,
+Or that ancestral throne from its foundations torn!
+
+ Yet by the dour deep trench
+ Their mettle did not blench,
+ When mist and midnight closed o'er sad Sedgemoor;
+ Though on those hearts of oak
+ The tall cuirassiers broke,
+And Afric's tiger-bands sprang forth with sullen roar:
+
+ Though the loud cannon plane
+ Death's lightning-riven lane,
+ Levelling that unskill'd valour, rude, unled:
+ --Yet happier in their fate
+ Than whom the war-fiends wait
+To rend them limb from limb, the gibbet-withering dead!
+
+--_Yet weep not, my child, though the dead be dead_,
+ _And the wounded rise not again_!
+_For they are with God who for England fought_,
+ _And they bore them as Englishmen_.
+
+ Stout hearts, and sorely tried!
+ --But he, for whom they died,
+ Skulk'd like the wolf in Cranborne, torn and gaunt:--
+ Till, dragg'd and bound, he knelt
+ To one no prayers could melt,
+Nor bond of blood, nor fear of fate, from vengeance daunt.
+
+ --O hill of death and gore,
+ Fast by the tower'd shore,
+ What wealth of precious blood is thine, what tears!
+ What calmly fronted scorn;
+ What pangs, not vainly borne!
+For heart beats hot with heart, and human grief endears!
+
+--_Then weep not, my child, though the days be dark_;
+ _Fear not; He will come again_,
+_With Arthur and Harold and good Saint George_,
+ _King Monmouth and all his men_!
+
+Monmouth's invasion forms one of the most brilliant,--perhaps the most
+brilliant,--of Lord Macaulay's narratives. But many curious details are
+added in the _History_ by Mr. G Roberts (1844).
+
+The belief, which this poem represents, that 'King Monmouth,' as he was
+called in the West, would return, lasted long. He landed in Lyme Bay,
+June 11, 1685, between the Cobb (Harbour-pier) and the beginning of the
+Ware cliffs: marching north, after a few days, by the road which left the
+ruins of Colway House on the right and led over Uplyme to Axminster.
+
+_Soho_; the watch-word on Monmouth's side at Sedgemoor; his London house
+was in the Fields, (now Square), bearing that name.
+
+_Faithful Taunton_; here the Puritan spirit was strong; and here Monmouth
+was persuaded to take the title of king (June 20), symbolized by the flag
+which the young girls of Taunton presented to him. It bore a crown with
+the cypher J B.--Monmouth's own name being James.
+
+_Dour deep trench_; Sedgemoor lies in a marshy district near Bridgewater,
+much intersected by trenches or 'Rhines.' One, the Busses Rhine, lay
+between the two armies as they fought, July 6. Monmouth was caught
+hiding in Cranborne Chase, July 8; executed, after a vain attempt to move
+the heart of his uncle the king, July 15, on Tower Hill.
+
+_Afric's tiger-bands_; Kirke savage troops from Tangier.
+
+
+
+WILLELMUS VAN NASSAU
+
+
+Yes! we confess it! 'mong the sons of Fate,
+ Earth's great ones, thou art great!
+As that tall peak which from her silver cone
+ Of maiden snow unstain'd
+All but the bravest scares, and reigns alone
+
+In glacier isolation: Thus wert thou,
+ With that pale steadfast brow,
+Gaunt aquiline: Thy whole life one labouring breath,
+ Yet the strong soul untamed;
+France bridled, England saved, thy task ere death!
+
+--O day of triumph, when thy bloodless host
+ From Devon's russet coast
+Through the fair capital of the garden-West,
+ And that, whose gracious spire
+Like childhood's prayer springs heaven-ward unrepress'd,
+
+To Thames march'd legion-like, and at their tread
+ The sullen despot fled,
+And Law and Freedom fair,--so late restored,
+ And to so-perilous life,
+While Stuart craft replaced the Usurper's sword,--
+
+Broke forth, as sunshine from the breaking sky,
+ When vernal storm-wings fly!
+That day was thine, great Chief, from sea to sea:
+ The whole land's welcome seem'd
+The welcome of one man! a realm by thee
+
+Deliver'd!--But the crowning hour of fame,
+ The zenith of a name
+Is ours once only: and he, too just, too stern,
+ Too little Englishman,
+A nation's gratitude did not care to earn,
+
+On wider aims, not worthier, set:--A soul
+ Immured in self-control;
+Saving the thankless in their own despite:--
+ Then turning with a gasp
+Of joy, to his own land by native right;
+
+Changing the Hall of Rufus and the Keep
+ Of Windsor's terraced steep
+For Guelderland horizons, silvery-blue;
+ The green deer-twinkling glades,
+And long, long, avenues of the stately Loo.
+
+'William,' says his all too zealous panegyrist, 'never became an
+Englishman. He served England, it is true; but he never loved her, and
+he never obtained her love. To him she was always a land of exile,
+visited with reluctance and quitted with delight. . . . Her welfare was
+not his chief object. Whatever patriotic feeling he had was for Holland.
+. . . In the gallery of Whitehall he pined for the familiar House in the
+Wood at the Hague, and never was so happy as when he could quit the
+magnificence of Windsor for his humbler seat at Loo:' (Macaulay: _Hist_.
+ch. vii)
+
+_One labouring breath_; William throughout life was tortured by asthma.
+
+_Demon's russet coast_; Torbay.--_Capital of the garden-West_;
+Exeter.--_Gracious spire_; Salisbury.--_Hall of Rufus_; The one
+originally built by William II at Westminster.
+
+
+
+THE CHILDLESS MOTHER
+
+
+1700-1702
+
+Oft in midnight visions
+ Ghostly by my bed
+Stands a Father's image,
+ Pale discrowned head:--
+--I forsook thee, Father!
+ Was no child to thee!
+Child-forsaken Mother,
+ Now 'tis so with me.
+
+Oft I see the brother,
+ Baby born to woe,
+Crouching by the church-wall
+ From the bloodhound-foe.
+Evil crown'd of evil,
+ Heritage of strife!
+Mine, an heirless sceptre:
+ His, an exile life!
+
+--O my vanish'd darlings,
+ From the cradle torn!
+Dewdrop lives, that never
+ Saw their second morn!
+Buds that fell untimely,--
+ Till one blossom grew;
+As I watch'd its beauty,
+ Fading whilst it blew.
+
+Thou wert more to me, Love,
+ More than words can tell:
+All my remnant sunshine
+ Died in one farewell.
+Midnight-mirk before me
+ Now my life goes by,
+For the baby faces
+ As in vain I cry.
+
+O the little footsteps
+ On the nursery floor!
+Lispings light and laughter
+ I shall hear no more!
+Eyes that gleam'd at waking
+ Through their silken bars;
+Starlike eyes of children,
+ Now beyond the stars!
+
+Where the murder'd Mary
+ Waits the rising sign,
+They are laid in darkness,
+ Little lambs of mine.
+Only this can comfort:
+ Safe from earthly harms
+Christ the Saviour holds them
+ In His loving arms:--
+
+Spring eternal round Him,
+ Roses ever fair:--
+Will His mercy set them
+ All beside me there?
+Will their Angels guide me
+ Through the golden gate?
+--Wait a little, children!
+ Mother, too, must wait!
+
+_I forsook thee_; Marlborough, desirous to widen the breach between Anne
+and William III, influenced her to write to her Father, 'supplicating his
+forgiveness, and professing repentance for the part she had taken.'
+
+_Now 'tis so_; Anne 'was said to attribute the death of her children to
+the part she had taken in dethroning her father:' (Lecky, _History of the
+Eighteenth Century_).
+
+_The brother_; The infant son of James, known afterwards as the 'Old
+Pretender,' or as James III. He was carried as an infant from the Palace
+(Dec. 1688) to Lambeth, where he was in great peril of discovery. The
+story is picturesquely told by Macaulay.
+
+_One blossom_; The Duke of Gloucester, who grew up to eleven years, dying
+in July 1700. After his death Anne signed, in private letters, 'your
+unfortunate' friend.
+
+Anne's character, says the candid Lecky, 'though somewhat peevish and
+very obstinate, was pure, generous, simple, and affectionate; and she
+displayed, under bereavements far more numerous than fall to the share of
+most, a touching piety that endeared her to her people.'
+
+_Where the murder'd Mary_; 'Above and around, in every direction,' says
+Dean Stanley, describing the vault beneath the monument of Mary of
+Scotland in Henry the Seventh's Chapel,--'crushing by the accumulated
+weight of their small coffins the receptacles of the illustrious dust
+beneath, lie the eighteen children of Queen Anne, dying in infancy or
+stillborn, ending with William Duke of Gloucester, the last hope of the
+race:' (_Historical Memorials of Westminster Abbey_, ch. iii).
+
+
+
+BLENHEIM
+
+
+August 13: 1704
+
+ Oft hast thou acted thy part,
+ My country, worthily thee!
+ Lifted up often thy load
+ Atlantean, enormous, with glee:--
+ For on thee the burden is laid to uphold
+ World-justice; to keep the balance of states;
+ On thee the long cry of the tyrant-oppress'd,
+ The oppress'd in the name of liberty, waits:--
+ Ready, aye ready, the blade
+ In its day to draw forth, unafraid;
+ Thou dost not blench from thy fate!
+By thy high heart, only, secure; by thy magnanimity, great.
+
+ E'en so it was on the morn
+ When France with Spain, in one realm
+ Welded, one thunderbolt, stood,
+ With one stroke the world to o'erwhelm.
+ --They have pass'd the great stream, they have stretch'd their white
+camp
+ Above the protecting morass and the dell,
+ Blenheim to Lutzingen, where the long wood
+ In summer-thick leafage rounds o'er the fell:
+ --England! in nine-fold advance
+ Cast thy red flood upon France;
+ Over marsh over beck ye must go,
+Wholly together! or, Danube to Rhine, all slides to the foe!
+
+ As the lava thrusts onward its wall,
+ One mass down the valley they tramp;
+ Fascine-fill the marsh and the stream;
+ Like hornets they swarm up the ramp,
+ Lancing a breach through the long palisade,
+ Where the rival swarms of the stubborn foe,
+ While the sun goes high and goes down o'er the fight,
+ Sting them back, blow answering blow:--
+ O life-blood lavish as rain
+ On war's red Aceldama plain!
+ While the volleying death-rattle rings,
+And the peasant pays for the pride and the fury-ambition of kings!
+
+ And as those of Achaia and Troia
+ By the camp on the sand, so they
+ In the aether-amber of evening
+ Kept even score in the fray;
+ Rank against rank, man match'd with man,
+ In backward, forward, struggle enlaced,
+ Grappled and moor'd to the ground where they stood
+ As wrestlers wrestling, as lovers embraced:--
+ And the lightnings insatiable fly,
+ As the lull of the tempest is nigh,
+ And each host in its agony reels,
+And the musket falls hot from the hand, enflamed by the death that it
+deals.
+
+ But, as when through the vale the rain-clouds
+ Darker and heavier flow,
+ Above them the dominant summit
+ Stands clad in calmness and snow;
+ So thou, great Chief, awaiting the turn
+ Of the purple tide:--And the moment has come!
+ And the signal-word flies out with a smile,
+ And they charge the foe in his fastness, home:--
+ As one long wave when the wind
+ Urges an ocean behind,
+ One line, they sweep on the foe,
+And France from our battle recoils, and Victory edges the blow.
+
+ As a rock by blue lightning divided
+ Down the hillside scatters its course,
+ So in twain their army is parted
+ By the sabres sabring in force:
+ They have striven enough for honour! . . . and now
+ Crumble and shatter, and sheer o'er the bank
+ Where torrent Danube hisses and swirls
+ Slant and hurry in rankless rank:--
+ There are sixty thousand the morn
+ 'Gainst the Lions marching in scorn;
+ But twenty, when even is here,
+Broken and brave and at bay, the Lilied banner uprear.
+
+ --So be it!--All honour to him
+ Who snatch'd the world, in his day,
+ From an overmastering King,
+ A colossal imperial sway!
+ Calm adamantine endurant chief,
+ Fit forerunner of him, whose crowning stroke,
+ Rousing his Guards on the Flandrian plain,
+ Unvassall'd Europe from despot yoke!
+ He who from Ganges to Rhine
+ Traced o'er the world his red line
+ Irresistible; while in the breast
+Reign'd devotedness utter, and self for England suppress'd!
+
+ O names that enhearten the soul,
+ Blenheim and Waterloo!
+ In no vain worship of glory
+ The poet turns him to you!
+ O sung by worthier song than mine,
+ If the day of a nation's weakness rise,
+ Of the little counsels that dare not dare,
+ Of a land that no more on herself relies,--
+ O breath of our great ones that were,
+ Burn out this taint in the air!
+ The old heart of England restore,
+Till the blood of the heroes awake, and shout in her bosom once more!
+
+ --Morning is fresh on the field
+ Where the war-sick champions lie,
+ By the wreckage of stiffening dead,
+ The anguish that yearns but to die.
+ Ah note of human agony heard
+ The paean of victory over and through!
+ Ah voice of duty and justice stern
+ That, at e'en this price, commands them to do!
+ And a vision of Glory goes by,
+ Veil'd head and remorseful eye,
+ A triumph of Death!--And they cried
+'Only less dark than defeat is the morning of conquest';--and sigh'd.
+
+Blenheim is fully described in Lord Stanhope's _Reign of Queen Anne_. Its
+importance as a critical battle in European history lies in the fact that
+the work of liberating the Great Alliance against the paramount power of
+France under Lewis XIV, (which England had unwisely fostered from
+Cromwell to James II), was secured by this victory. 'The loss of France
+could not be measured by men or fortresses. A hundred victories since
+Rocroi had taught the world to regard the armies of Lewis as all but
+invincible, when Blenheim and the surrender of the flower of the French
+soldiery broke the spell': (Green: _History of the English People_: B.
+VIII: ch. iii).
+
+'The French and Bavarians, who numbered, like their opponents, some fifty
+thousand men, lay behind a little stream which ran through swampy ground
+to the Danube . . . It was not till midday that Eugene, who commanded on
+the right, succeeded in crossing the stream. The English foot at once
+forded it on the left.' They were repelled for the time. But, in the
+centre, Marlborough, 'by making an artificial road across the morass
+which covered it,' in two desperate charges turned the day.
+
+A map of 1705 in the _Annals of Queen Anne's Reign_, shows vast hillsides
+to the right of the Allies covered with wood. This map also specifies
+the advance of the English in nine columns.
+
+_Only less_; 'Marlborough,' says Lord Stanhope, 'was a humane and
+compassionate man. Even in the eagerness to pursue fresh conquests he
+did not ever neglect the care of the wounded.'
+
+
+
+AT HURSLEY IN MARDEN
+
+
+1712
+
+ We count him wise,
+Timoleon, who in Syracuse laid down
+ That gleaming bait of all men's eyes,
+And for his cottage changed the invidious crown;
+Moving serenely through his grayhair'd day
+ 'Mid vines and olives gray.
+
+ He also, whom
+The load of double empire, half the world
+ His own, within a living tomb
+Press'd down at Yuste,--Spain's great banner furl'd
+His winding-sheet around him,--while he strove
+ The impalpable Above
+
+ Though mortal yet,
+To breathe, is blazon'd on the sages' roll:--
+ High soaring hearts, who could forget
+The sceptre, to the hermitage of the soul
+Retired, sweet solitudes of the musing eye,
+ And let the world go by!
+
+ There, if the cup
+Of Time, that brims ere we can reach repose,
+ Fill'd slow, the soul might summon up
+The strenuous heat of youth, the silenced foes;
+The deeds of fame, star-bright above the throne;
+ The better deeds unknown.
+
+ There, when the cloud
+Eased its dark breast in thunder, and the light
+ Ran forth, their hearts recall the loud
+Hoarse onset roar, the flashing of the fight;
+Those other clouds piled-up in white array
+ Whence deadlier lightnings play.
+
+ There, when the seas
+Murmur at midnight, and the dome is clear,
+ And from their seats in heaven the breeze
+Loosens the stars, to blaze and disappear,
+_And such as Glory_! . . . with a sigh suppress'd
+ They smile, and turn to rest.
+
+ --But he, who here
+Unglorious hides, untrain'd, unwilling Lord,
+ The phantom king of half a year,
+From England's throne push'd by the bloodless sword,
+Unheirlike heir to that colossal fame;--
+ How should men name his name,
+
+ How rate his worth
+With those heroic ones who, life's labour done,
+ Mark'd out their six-foot couch of earth,
+The laurell'd rest of manhood's battle won?
+--Not so with him! . . . Yet, ere we turn away,
+ A still small voice will say,
+
+ By other rule
+Than man's coarse glory-test does God bestow
+ His crowns: exalting oft the fool,
+So deem'd, and the world-hero levelling low.
+--And he, who from the palace pass'd obscure,
+ And honourably poor,
+
+ Spurning a throne
+Held by blood-tenure, 'gainst a nation's will;
+ Lived on his narrow fields alone,
+Content life's common service to fulfil;
+Not careful of a carnage-bought renown,
+ Or that precarious crown:--
+
+ Him count we wise,
+Him also! though the chorus of the throng
+ Be silent: though no pillar rise
+In slavish adulation of the strong:--
+But here, from blame of tongues and fame aloof,
+ 'Neath a low chancel roof,
+
+ --The peace of God,--
+He sleeps: unconscious hero! Lowly grave
+ By village-footsteps daily trod
+Unconscious: or while silence holds the nave,
+And the bold robin comes, when day is dim,
+ And pipes his heedless hymn.
+
+_Timoleon_; was invited from Corinth by the Syracusans (B.C. 344) to be
+their leader in throwing off the tyranny of the second Dionysius. Having
+effected this, defeated the Carthaginian invaders, and reduced all the
+minor despotisms within Sicily, he voluntarily resigned his paramount
+power and died in honoured retirement.
+
+_He also_; In 1556 the Emperor Charles V gave up all his dominions,
+withdrawing in 1557 to Yuste;--a monastery situated in a region of
+singular natural beauty, between Xarandilla and Plasencia in Estremadura.
+He died there, Sep. 21, 1558.
+
+_Loosens the stars_; So Vergil, _Georg_. I., 365:
+
+ Saepe etiam stellas vento inpendente videbis
+ Praecipites caelo labi . . .
+
+_The phantom king_; Richard Cromwell was Protector from Sep. 3, 1658 to
+May 25, 1659. After 1660 his life was that of a simple country
+gentleman, till his death in 1712, when he was buried at Hursley near
+Winchester.
+
+_Unheirlike heir_; See _Appendix_ E.
+
+
+
+CHARLES EDWARD AT ROME
+
+
+1785
+
+1
+
+ O sunset, of the rise
+ Unworthy!--that, so brave, so clear, so gay;
+ This, prison'd in low-hanging earth-mists gray,
+ And ever-darken'd skies:--
+ Sad sunset of a royal race in gloom,
+Accomplishing to the end the dolorous Stuart doom!
+
+2
+
+ Ghost of a king, he sate
+ In Rome, the city of ghosts and thrones outworn,
+ Drowsing his thoughts in wine;--a life forlorn;
+ Pageant of faded state;
+ Aged before old age, and all that Past,
+Like a forgotten thing of shame, behind him cast.
+
+3
+
+ Yet if by chance the cry
+ Of the sharp pibroch through the palace thrill'd,
+ He felt the pang of high hope unfulfill'd:--
+ And once, when one came by
+ With the dear name of Scotland on his lips,
+The heart broke forth behind that forty-years' eclipse,
+
+4
+
+ Triumphant in its pain:--
+ Then the old days of Holyrood halls return'd
+ The leaden lethargy from his soul he spurn'd,
+ And was the Prince again:--
+ All Scotland waking in him; all her bold
+Chieftains and clans:--and all their tale, and his, he told:
+
+5
+
+ --Told how, o'er the boisterous seas
+ From faithless France he danced his way
+ Where Alban's thousand islands lay,
+ The kelp-strown ridge of the lone Hebrides:--
+ How down each strath they stream'd as springtide rills,
+ When he to Finnan vale
+ Came from Glenaladale,
+And that snow-handful grew an avalanche of the hills.
+
+6
+
+ There Lochiel, Glengarry there,
+ Macdonald, Cameron: souls untried
+ In war, but stout in mountain-pride
+ All odds against all worlds to laugh and dare:
+ Unpurchaseable faith of chief and clan!
+ Enough! Their Prince has thrown
+ Himself upon his own!
+By hearts not heads they count, and manhood measures man!
+
+7
+
+ --Torrent from Lochaber sprung,
+ Through Badenoch bare and Athole turn'd,
+ The fettering Forth o'erpast and spurn'd,
+ Then on the smiling South in fury flung;
+ Now gather head with all thine affluent force,
+ Draw forth the wild mellay!
+ At Gladsmuir is the fray;
+Scotland 'gainst England match'd: White Rose against White Horse!
+
+8
+
+ Cluster'd down the slope they go,
+ Red clumps of ragged valour, down,
+ While morn-mists yet the hill-top crown:--
+ Clan Colla! on!--the Camerons touch the foe!
+ One touch!--the battle breaks, the fight is fought,
+ As summit-boulders glide
+ Riddling the forest-side,
+And in one moment's crash an army melts to nought!
+
+9
+
+ --Ah gay nights of Holyrood!
+ Star-eyes of Scotland's fairest fair,
+ Sun-glintings of the golden hair,
+ Life's tide at full in that brief interlude!
+ Then as a bark slips from her natural coast
+ Deep into seas unknown,
+ Scotland went forth alone,
+Unfriended, unallied; a handful 'gainst a host.
+
+10
+
+ By the Bolder moorlands bare,
+ By faithless Solway's glistening sands,
+ And where Caer Luel's dungeon stands,
+ Huge keep of ancient Urien, huge, foursquare:--
+ Preston, and loyal Lancashire; . . . and then
+ From central Derby down,
+ To strike the royal town,
+And to his German realm the usurper thrust again!
+
+11
+
+ --O the lithesome mountaineers,
+ Wild hearts with kingly boyhood high,
+ And victory in each forward eye,
+ While stainless honour his white banner rears!
+ Then all the air with mountain-music thrill'd,
+ The bonnets o'er the brow,--
+ My gallant clans! . . . and now
+The voices closed in earth, in death the pibroch still'd!
+
+12
+
+ --As beneath Ben Aille's crest
+ The west wind weaves its roof of gray,
+ And all the glory of the day
+ Blooms off from loch and copse and green hill-breast;
+ So, when that craven council spoke retreat,
+ The fateful shameful word
+ They heard,--and scarcely heard!
+At Scotland's name how should the blood refuse to beat?
+
+13
+
+ --O soul-piercing stroke of shame!
+ O last, last, chance,--and wasted so!
+ Work wanting but the final blow,--
+ And, then, the hopeless hope, the crownless name,
+ The heart's desire defeated!--What boots now
+ That ice-brook-temper'd will,
+ Indomitable still
+As on through snow and storm their path the dalesmen plough?
+
+14
+
+ --Yet again the tartans hail
+ One smile of Scotland's ancient face;
+ One favour waits the faithful race,--
+ One triumph more at Falkirk crowns the Gael!
+ And O! what drop of Scottish blood that runs
+ Could aught, save do or die,
+ And Bannockburn so nigh?
+What cause to higher height could animate her sons?
+
+15
+
+ Up the gorse-embattled brae,
+ With equal eager feet they dash,
+ And on the moorland summit clash,
+ Friend mix'd with foe in stormy disarray:
+ Once more the Northern charge asserts its right,
+ As with the driving rain
+ They drive them down the plain:
+That star alone before Drummossie gilds the night.
+
+16
+
+ --Ah! No more!--let others tell
+ The agony of the mortal moor;
+ Death's silent sheepfold dotted o'er
+ With Scotland's best, sleet-shrouded as they fell!
+ There on the hearts, once mine, the snow-wreaths drift;
+ Night's winter dews at will
+ In bitter tears distil,
+And o'er the field the stars their squadrons coldly shift.
+
+17
+
+ Faithful in a faithless age!
+ Yet happier, in that death-dew drench'd,
+ In each rude hand the claymore clench'd,
+ Than who, to soothe a nation's craven rage,
+ To the red scaffold went with steady eye,
+ And the red martyr-grave,
+ For one, who could not save!
+Who only lives to weep the weight of life, and die!
+
+18
+
+ --He ended, with such grief
+ As fits and honours manhood:--Then, once more
+ Weaving that long romantic lay, told o'er
+ The names of clan and chief
+ Who perill'd all for him, and died;--and how
+In islets, caves, and clefts, and bare high mountain-brow
+
+ 19
+
+ The wanderer hid, and all
+ His Odyssey of woes!--Then, agonized
+ Not by the wrongs he suffer'd and despised,
+ But for the Cause's fall,--
+ The faces, loved and lost, that for his sake
+Were raven-torn and blanch'd, high on the traitor's stake,
+
+20
+
+ As on Drummossie drear
+ They fell,--as a dead body falls,--so he;
+ Swoon-senseless at that killing memory
+ Seen across year on year:
+ O human tears! O honourable pain!
+Pity unchill'd by age, and wounds that bleed again!
+
+21
+
+ --Ah, much enduring heart!
+ Ah soul, miscounsell'd oft and lured astray,
+ In that long life-despair, from wisdom's way
+ And thy young hero-part!--
+ --And yet--DILEXIT MULTUM!--In that cry
+Love's gentler judgment pleads; thine epitaph a sigh!
+
+The sad old age of Prince Charles is described by Lord Mahon [Stanhope]
+in his able _History_: ch. xxx: and some additional details will be found
+in Chambers' narrative of the expedition. During later life, an almost
+entire silence seems to have been maintained by the Prince upon his
+earlier days and his royal claims. But the bagpipe was occasionally
+heard in the Roman Palace, and a casual visit, which Lord Mahon fixes in
+1785, drew forth the recital which is the subject of this poem. The
+prince fainted as he recalled what his Highland followers had gone
+through, and his daughter rushing in exclaimed to the visitor, 'Sir! what
+is this! You must have been speaking to my father about Scotland and the
+Highlanders! No one dares to mention these subjects in his presence:'
+(Mahon: ch. xxvi).
+
+St. 2 _Drowsing His thoughts_; The habit of intemperance, common in that
+century to many who had not Charles Edward's excuses, appear to have been
+learned during the long privations which accompanied his wanderings,
+between Culloden and his escape to France.
+
+St. 5 _Hebrides_; Charles landed at Erisca, an islet between Barra and
+South Uist, in July 1745.
+
+St. 7 _Fettering Forth_; 'Forth,' according to the proverb, 'bridles the
+wild Highlandman.'--Charles passed it at the Ford of Frew, about eight
+miles above Stirling.--_At Gladsmuir_; or Preston Pans; Sep. 21,
+1745.--_White Horse_; The armorial bearing of Hanover.
+
+St. 8 _Clan Colla_; general name for the sept of the Macdonalds.
+
+St. 10 _Caer Luel_; Urien ap Urbgen is an early hero of Strathclyde or
+Alcluith, the British kingdom lying between Dumbarton and Carlisle, then
+Caer Luel.
+
+St. 12 _Ben Aille_; a mountain over Loch Ericht in the central Highlands.
+
+St. 13 _Ice-brook-temper'd_; 'It is a sword of Spain, the ice-brook's
+temper': (_Othello_: A. 5: S. 2).
+
+St. 14 _At Falkirk_; Jan 17, 1746. 'On the eve after his victory Charles
+again encamped on Bannockburn.'
+
+St. 16 _The mortal moor_; named Culloden and Drummossie: Ap. 16, 1746.
+The cold at that time was very severe.
+
+St. 17 A _nation's craven rage_; See _Appendix_ F.
+
+St. 21 _Love's gentler judgment_; We may perhaps quote on his behalf
+Vergil's beautiful words
+
+ . . . utcumque ferent ea facta minores,
+ Vincet amor patriae laudumque inmensa cupido.
+
+--It is also pleasant to record that over the coffin of Charles in S.
+Peter's, Rome, a monument was placed by George the Fourth, upon which, by
+a graceful and gallant 'act of oblivion,' are inscribed the names of
+James the Third, Charles the Third, and Henry the Ninth, 'Kings of
+England.'
+
+On the simple monument set up by his brother Henry in S. Pietro,
+Frascati, it may be worth notice that Charles is only described as
+_Paterni iuris et regiae_ | _dignitatis successor et heres_:--the title,
+King, (given to his Father in the inscription), not being assigned to
+Charles, or assumed by the Cardinal.
+
+
+
+TRAFALGAR
+
+
+October 21: 1805
+
+Heard ye the thunder of battle
+ Low in the South and afar?
+Saw ye the flash of the death-cloud
+ Crimson o'er Trafalgar?
+Such another day never
+ England will look on again,
+When the battle fought was the hottest,
+ And the hero of heroes was slain!
+
+For the fleet of France and the force of Spain were gather'd for fight,
+A greater than Philip their lord, a new Armada in might:--
+And the sails were aloft once more in the deep Gaditanian bay,
+Where _Redoubtable_ and _Bucentaure_ and great _Trinidada_ lay;
+Eager-reluctant to close; for across the bloodshed to be
+Two navies beheld one prize in its glory,--the throne of the sea!
+Which were bravest, who should tell? for both were gallant and true;
+But the greatest seaman was ours, of all that sail'd o'er the blue.
+
+ From Cadiz the enemy sallied: they knew not Nelson was there;
+His name a navy to us, but to them a flag of despair.
+'Twixt Algeziras and Ayamonte he guarded the coast,
+Till he bore from Tavira south; and they now must fight, or be lost;--
+Vainly they steer'd for the Rock and the Midland sheltering sea,
+For he headed the Admirals round, constraining them under his lee,
+Villeneuve of France, and Gravina of Spain: so they shifted their ground,
+They could choose,--they were more than we;--and they faced at Trafalgar
+round;
+Rampart-like ranged in line, a sea-fortress angrily tower'd!
+In the midst, four-storied with guns, the dark _Trinidada_ lower'd.
+
+ So with those.--But meanwhile, as against some dyke that men massively
+rear,
+From on high the torrent surges, to drive through the dyke as a spear,
+Eagled-eyed e'en in his blindness, our chief sets his double array,
+Making the fleet two spears, to thrust at the foe, any way, . . .
+'Anyhow!--without orders, each captain his Frenchman may grapple
+perforce:
+Collingwood first' (yet the _Victory_ ne'er a whit slacken'd her course)
+'Signal for action! Farewell! we shall win, but we meet not again!'
+--Then a low thunder of readiness ran from the decks o'er the main,
+And on,--as the message from masthead to masthead flew out like a flame,
+ENGLAND EXPECTS EVERY MAN WILL DO HIS DUTY,--they came.
+
+ --Silent they come:--While the thirty black forts of the foeman's
+array
+Clothe them in billowy snow, tier speaking o'er tier as they lay;
+Flashes that thrust and drew in, as swords when the battle is rife;--
+But ours stood frowningly smiling, and ready for death as for life.
+--O in that interval grim, ere the furies of slaughter embrace,
+Thrills o'er each man some far echo of England; some glance of some face!
+--Faces gazing seaward through tears from the ocean-girt shore;
+Faces that ne'er can be gazed on again till the death-pang is o'er. . . .
+Lone in his cabin the Admiral kneeling, and all his great heart
+As a child's to the mother, goes forth to the loved one, who bade him
+depart
+. . . O not for death, but glory! her smile would welcome him home!
+--Louder and thicker the thunderbolts fall:--and silent they come.
+
+ As when beyond Dongola the lion, whom hunters attack,
+Plagued by their darts from afar, leaps in, dividing them back;
+So between Spaniard and Frenchman the _Victory_ wedged with a shout,
+Gun against gun; a cloud from her decks and lightning went out;
+Iron hailing of pitiless death from the sulphury smoke;
+Voices hoarse and parch'd, and blood from invisible stroke.
+Each man stood to his work, though his mates fell smitten around,
+As an oak of the wood, while his fellow, flame-shatter'd, besplinters the
+ground:--
+Gluttons of danger for England, but sparing the foe as he lay;
+For the spirit of Nelson was on them, and each was Nelson that day.
+
+ 'She has struck!'--he shouted--'She burns, the _Redoubtable_! Save
+whom we can,
+Silence our guns':--for in him the woman was great in the man,
+In that heroic heart each drop girl-gentle and pure,
+Dying by those he spared;--and now Death's triumph was sure!
+From the deck the smoke-wreath clear'd, and the foe set his rifle in
+rest,
+Dastardly aiming, where Nelson stood forth, with the stars on his
+breast,--
+'In honour I gain'd them, in honour I die with them' . . . Then, in his
+place,
+Fell . . . 'Hardy! 'tis over; but let them not know': and he cover'd his
+face.
+Silent, the whole fleet's darling they bore to the twilight below:
+And above the war-thunder came shouting, as foe struck his flag after
+foe.
+
+ To his heart death rose: and for Hardy, the faithful, he cried in his
+pain,--
+'How goes the day with us, Hardy?' . . . ''Tis ours':--Then he knew, not
+in vain
+Not in vain for his comrades and England he bled: how he left her secure,
+Queen of her own blue seas, while his name and example endure.
+O, like a lover he loved her! for her as water he pours
+Life-blood and life and love, lavish'd all for her sake, and for ours!
+--'Kiss me, Hardy!--Thank God!--I have done my duty!'--And then
+Fled that heroic soul, and left not his like among men.
+
+Hear ye the heart of a nation
+ Groan, for her saviour is gone;
+Gallant and true and tender,
+ Child and chieftain in one?
+Such another day never
+ England will weep for again,
+When the triumph darken'd the triumph,
+ And the hero of heroes was slain.
+
+
+
+TORRES VEDRAS
+
+
+1810
+
+As who, while erst the Achaians wall'd the shore,
+ Stood Atlas-like before,
+A granite face against the Trojan sea
+ Of foes who seethed and foam'd,
+From that stern rock refused incessantly;
+
+So He, in his colossal lines, astride
+ From sea to river-side,
+Alhandra past Aruda to the Towers,
+ Our one true man of men
+Frown'd back bold France and all the Imperial powers.
+
+For when that Eagle, towering in his might
+ Beyond the bounds of Right,
+O'ercanopied Europe with his rushing wings,
+ And all the world was prone
+Before him as a God, a King of Kings;
+
+When Freedom to one isle, her ancient shrine,
+ O'er the free favouring brine
+Fled, as a girl by lustful war and shame
+ Discloister'd from her home,
+Barefoot, with glowing eyes, and cheeks on flame,
+
+And call'd aloud, and bade the realm awake
+ To arms for Freedom's sake:
+--Yet,--for the land had rusted long in rest,
+ The nerves of war unstrung,
+Faint thoughts or rash alternate in her breast,
+
+While purblind party-strife with venomous spite
+ Made plausible wrong seem right,--
+O then for that unselfish hero-chief
+ Tender and true, and lost
+At Trafalgar,--or him, whose patriot grief
+
+Died with the prayer for England, as he died,
+ In vain we might have cried!
+But this one pillar rose, and bore the war
+ Upon himself alone;
+Supreme o'er Fortune and her idle star.
+
+For not by might but mind, by skill, not chance,
+ He headed stubborn France
+From Tagus back by Douro to Garonne;
+ And on the last, worst, field,
+The crown of all his hundred victories won,
+
+World-calming Waterloo!--Then, laying by
+ War's fearful enginery,
+In each state-tempest mann'd the wearying helm;
+ E'en through life's winter-years
+Serving with all his strength the ungrateful realm.
+
+O firm and foursquare mind! O solid will
+ Fix'd, inexpugnable
+By crowns or censures! only bent to do
+ The day's work in the day;--
+Fame with her idiot yelp might come, or go!
+
+O breast that dared with Nature's patience wait
+ Till the slow wheels of Fate
+Struck the consummate hour; in leash the while
+ Reining his eager bands,
+The prey in view,--with that foreseeing smile!
+
+And when for blood on Salamanca ridge
+ Morn broke, or Orthez' bridge,
+He read the ground, and his stern squadrons moved
+ And placed with artist-skill,
+Red counters in the perilous game they loved,
+
+Impassive, iron, he and they!--and then
+ With eagle-keener ken
+Glanced through the field, the crisis-instant knew,
+ And through the gap of war
+His thundering legions on their victory threw.
+
+Not iron, he, but adamant! Diamond-strong,
+ And diamond-clear of wrong:
+For truth he struck right out, whate'er befall!
+ Above the fear of fear:
+Duty for duty's sake his all-in-all.
+
+Among the many wonders of Wellington's Peninsular campaign, from Vimiera
+(1808) to Toulouse (1814), the magnificent unity of scheme preserved
+throughout is, perhaps, the most wonderful: the dramatic coherence,
+development, and final catastrophe of triumph. For this, however,
+readers must be referred to Napier's _History_; Enough here to add that
+one of the most decisive steps was the formation of the lines in defence
+of Lisbon, of which the most northerly ran from Alhandra on the Tagus by
+Aruda and Zibreira to Torres Vedras near the sea-coast at the mouth of
+the Zizandre.
+
+_When Freedom_; the unwise and uncertain management of the campaign by
+the English home Government has been set forth by Napier with so much
+emphasis as, in some degree, to impair the reader's full conviction. Yet
+the amazing superiority in energy and wisdom with which Wellington
+towered over his contemporaries, (the field being, however, cleared by
+the recent deaths of Nelson and Pitt), is so patent, that this attempt to
+do justice to his greatness is offered with hesitation and apology.
+
+_Orthez' Bridge_; crosses the river named Gave de Pau;--and covered
+Soult's forces then lying north of it.
+
+
+
+THE SOLDIERS' BATTLE
+
+
+November 5: 1854
+
+ In the solid sombre mist
+ And the drizzling dazzling shower
+ They may mass them as they list,
+ The gray-coat Russian power;
+They are fifties 'gainst our tens, they, and more!
+ And from the fortress-town
+ In silent squadrons down
+ O'er the craggy mountain-crown
+ Unseen, they pour.
+
+ On the meagre British line
+ That northern ocean press'd;
+ But we never knew how few
+ Were we who held the crest!
+While within the curtain-mist dark shadows loom
+ Making the gray more gray,
+ Till the volley-flames betray
+ With one flash the long array:
+ And then, the gloom.
+
+ For our narrow line too wide
+ On the narrow crest we stood,
+ And in pride we named it _Home_,
+ As we sign'd it with our blood.
+And we held-on all the morning, and the tide
+ Of foes on that low dyke
+ Surged up, and fear'd to strike,
+ Or on the bayonet-spike
+ Flung them, and died.
+
+ It was no covert, that,
+ 'Gainst the shrieking cannon-ball!
+ But the stout hearts of our men
+ Were the bastion and the wall:--
+And their chiefs hardly needed give command;
+ For they tore through copse and gray
+ Mist that before them lay,
+ And each man fought, that day,
+ For his own hand!
+
+ Yet should we not forget
+ 'Gainst that dun sea of foes
+ How Egerton bank'd his line,
+ Till in front a cloud uprose
+From the level rifle-mouths; and they dived
+ With bayonet-thrust beneath;
+ Clench'd teeth and sharp-drawn breath,
+ Plunging to certain death,--
+ And yet survived!
+
+ Nor the gallant chief who led
+ Those others, how he fell;
+ When our men the captive guns
+ Set free they loved so well,
+And embraced them as live things, by loss endear'd:--
+ Nor, when the crucial stroke
+ On their last asylum broke,
+ And e'en those hearts of oak
+ Might well have fear'd,--
+
+ How Stanley to the fore
+ The citadel rush'd to guard,
+ With that old Albuera cry
+ _Fifty-seventh_! _Die hard_!
+Yet saw not how his lads clear the crest,
+ And, each one confronting five,
+ The stubborn squadrons rive,
+ And backward, downward, drive,--
+ --Death-call'd to rest!
+
+ --O proud and sad for thee!
+ And proud and sad for those
+ Who on that stern foreign field
+ Not seeking, found repose,
+As for England dear their life they gladly shed!
+ Yet in death bethought them where,
+ Not on these hillsides bare,
+ But within sweet English air
+ Their own home-dead
+
+ In a green and sure repose
+ Beside God's house are laid:--
+ Then faced the charging foes
+ Unmoved, unhelp'd, unafraid:--
+For they knew that God would rate each shatter'd limb
+ Death-torn for England's sake,
+ And in Christ's own mercy take
+ On the day when souls shall wake,
+ Their souls to Him!
+
+The battle of Inkermann was mainly fought on a ridge of rock which
+projects from the south-eastern angle of Sebastapol: the English centre
+of operations being the ill-fortified line named the 'Home Ridge.' The
+numbers engaged in field-operations, roughly speaking, were 4,000 English
+against 40,000 Russians.
+
+_The curtain-mist_; The battle began about 6 A.M. under heavy mist and
+drizzling rain, which lasted for several hours. Through this curtain the
+Russian forces coming down from the hill were seen only when near enough
+to darken the mist by their masses.
+
+_Egerton_; He commanded four companies of the 77th, and charged early in
+the battle with brilliant success;--his men, about 250, scattering 1500
+Russians.
+
+_The gallant chief_; General Soimonoff, killed just after Egerton's
+charge.
+
+_With that old Albuera cry_; Prominent in the defence of the English main
+base of operations, the Home Ridge, against a weighty Russian advance,
+was Captain Stanley, commanding the 57th. This regiment, it was said, at
+the battle of Albuera had been encouraged by its colonel with the words,
+'Fifty-seventh, die hard':--and Stanley, having less than 400 against
+2000, thought the time had come to remind his 'Die-hards' of their
+traditional gallantry;--after which he himself at once fell mortally
+wounded.
+
+
+
+AFTER CAWNPORE
+
+
+June: 1857
+
+ Fourteen, all told, no more,
+ Pack'd close within the door
+ Of that old idol-shrine:
+ And at them, as they stand,
+ And from that English band,
+The leaden shower went out, and Death proclaim'd them
+ _Mine_!
+ Fourteen against an army; they, no more,
+ Had 'scaped Cawnpore.
+
+ With each quick volley-flash
+ The bullets ping and plash:
+ Yet, though the tropic noon
+ With furnace-fury broke
+ The sulphur-curling smoke,
+Scarr'd, sear'd, thirst-silenced, hunger-faint, they stood:
+ And soon
+ A dusky wall,--death sheltering life,--uprose
+ Against their foes.
+
+ Behind them now is cast
+ The horror of the past;
+ The fort that was no fort,
+ The deep dark-heaving flood
+ Of foes that broke in blood
+On our devoted camp, victims of fiendish sport;
+ From that last huddling refuge lured to fly,
+ --And help so nigh!
+
+ Down toward the reedy shore
+ That fated remnant pour,
+ Had Fear and Death beside;
+ And other spectres yet
+ Of darker vision flit,--
+Old unforgotten wrongs, the harshness and the pride
+ Of that imperial race which sway'd the land
+ By sheer command!
+
+ O little hands that strain
+ A mother's hand in vain
+ With terror vague and vast:--
+ Parch'd eyes that cannot shed
+ One tear upon the head,
+A young child's head, too bright for such fell death to blast!
+ Ah! sadder captive train ne'er filed to doom
+ Through vengeful Rome!
+
+ From Ganges' reedy shore
+ The death-boats they unmoor,
+ Stack'd high with hopeless hearts;
+ A slowly-drifting freight
+ Through the red jaws of Fate,
+Death-blazing banks between, and flame-wing'd arrow-darts:--
+ Till down the holy stream those cargoes pour
+ Their flame and gore.
+
+ In feral order slow
+ The slaughter-barges go,
+ Martyrs of heathen scorn:
+ While, saved from flood and fire
+ To glut the tyrant's ire,
+The quick and dead in one, from their red shambles borne,
+ Maiden and child, in that dark grave they throw,
+ Our well of woe!
+
+ Ah spot on which we gaze
+ Through Time's all-softening haze,
+ In peace, on them at peace
+ And taken home to God!
+ --O whether 'neath the sod,
+Or sea, or desert sand, what care,--if that release
+ From this dim shadow-land, through pathways dim,
+ Bear us to Him!
+
+ But those fourteen, the while,
+ Wrapt in the present, smile
+ On their grim baffled foe;
+ Till o'er the wall he heaps
+ The fuel-pile, and steeps
+With all that burns and blasts;--and now, perforce, they go
+ Hack'd down and thinn'd, beyond that temple-door
+ But Seven,--no more.
+
+ O Elements at strife
+ With this poor human life,
+ Stern laws of Nature fair!
+ By flame constrain'd to fly
+ The treacherous stream they try,--
+And those dark Ganges waves suck down the souls they bear!--
+ Ah, crowning anguish! Dawn of hope in sight;
+ Then, final night!
+
+ And now, Four heads, no more,
+ Life's flotsam flung ashore,
+ They lie:--But not as they
+ Who o'er a dreadful past
+ The heart's-ease sigh may cast!
+Too worn! too tried!--their lives but given them as a prey!
+ Whilst all seems now a dream, a nought of nought,
+ For which they fought!
+
+ --O stout Fourteen, who bled
+ O'erwhelm'd, not vanquished!
+ In those dark days of blood
+ How many dared, and died,
+ And others at their side
+Fresh heroes, sprang,--a race that cannot be subdued!
+ --Like them who pass'd Death's vale, and lived;--the Four
+ Saved from Cawnpore!
+
+The English garrison at Cawnpore, with a large number of sick, women, and
+children, were besieged in their hastily made and weak earthworks by Nana
+Sahib from June 6 to June 25, 1857. Compelled to surrender, under
+promise of safe convoy down the Ganges, on the 27th they were massacred
+by musketry from the banks; the thatch of the river-boats being also
+fired. The survivors were murdered and thrown into the well upon
+Havelock's approach on July 15.
+
+One boat managed to escape unburnt on June 27. It was chased through the
+28th and 29th, by which time the crowd on board was reduced to fourteen
+men, one of whom, Mowbray-Thomson, has left a narrative equally striking
+from its vividness and its modesty. Seven escaped from the small temple
+in which they defended themselves; four only finally survived to tell the
+story.
+
+_A dusky wall_; 'After a little time they stood behind a rampart of black
+and bloody corpses, and fired, with comparative security, over this
+bulwark:' (Kaye: _Sepoy War_: B. V: ch. ii).
+
+
+
+MOUNT VERNON
+
+
+October 5: 1860
+
+Before the hero's grave he stood,
+--A simple stone of rest, and bare
+To all the blessing of the air,--
+And Peace came down in sunny flood
+From the blue haunts of heaven, and smiled
+Upon the household reconciled.
+
+--A hundred years have hardly flown
+Since in this hermitage of the West
+'Mid happy toil and happy rest,
+Loving and loved among his own,
+His days fulfill'd their fruitful round,
+Seeking no move than what they found.
+
+Sweet byways of the life withdrawn!
+Yet here his country's voice,--the cry
+Of man for natural liberty,--
+That great Republic in her dawn,
+The immeasurable Future,--broke;
+And to his fate the Leader woke.
+
+Not eager, yet, the blade to bare
+Before the Father-country's eyes,--
+--E'en if a parent's rights, unwise,
+With that bold Son he grudged to share,
+In manhood strong beyond the sea,
+And ripe to wed with Liberty!
+
+--Yet O! when once the die was thrown,
+With what unselfish patient skill,
+Clear-piercing flame of changeless will,
+The one high heart that moved alone
+Sedate through the chaotic strife,--
+He taught mankind the hero-life!
+
+As when the God whom Pheidias moulds,
+Clothed in marmoreal calm divine,
+Veils all that strength 'neath beauty's line,
+All energy in repose enfolds;--
+So He, in self-effacement great,
+Magnanimous to endure and wait.
+
+O Fabius of a wider world!
+Master of Fate through self-control
+And utter stainlessness of soul!
+And when war's weary sign was furl'd,
+Prompt with both hands to welcome in
+The white-wing'd Peace he warr'd to win!
+
+Then, to that so long wish'd repose!
+The liberal leisure of the farm,
+The garden joy, the wild-wood charm;
+Life ebbing to its perfect close
+Like some white altar-lamp that pales
+And self-consumed its light exhales.
+
+No wrathful tempest smote its wing
+Against life's tender flickering flame;
+No tropic gloom in terror came;
+Slow waning as a summer-spring
+The soul breathed out herself, and slept,
+And to the end her beauty kept.
+
+Then, as a mother's love and fears
+Throng round the child, unseen but felt,
+So by his couch his nation knelt,
+Loving and worshipping with her tears:--
+Tears!--late amends for all that debt
+Due to the Liberator yet!
+
+For though the years their golden round
+O'er all the lavish region roll,
+And realm on realm, from pole to pole,
+In one beneath thy stars be bound:
+The far-off centuries as they flow,
+No whiter name than this shall know!
+
+--O larger England o'er the wave,
+Larger, not greater, yet!--With joy
+Of generous hearts ye hail'd the Boy
+Who bow'd before the sacred grave,
+With Love's fair freight across the sea
+Sped from the Fatherland to thee!
+
+And Freedom on that Empire-throne
+Blest in his Mother's rule revered,
+On popular love a kingdom rear'd,
+And rooted in the years unknown,--
+Land rich in old Experience' store
+And holy legacies of yore,
+
+And youth eternal, ever-new,--
+From the high heaven look'd out:--and saw
+This other later realm of Law,
+Of that old household first-born true,
+And lord of half a world!--and smiled
+Upon the nations reconciled.
+
+The date prefixed is that of the visit which the Prince of Wales paid to
+the tomb of Washington: carrying home thence, as one of the most
+distinguished of his hosts said, 'an unwritten treaty of amity and
+alliance.'
+
+Mount Vernon on the Potomac, named after the Admiral, was the family seat
+of Augustine, father to George Washington, and the residence of the
+latter from 1752. But all his early years also had been spent in that
+neighbourhood, in those country pursuits which formed his ideal of life:
+and thither, on resigning his commission as Commander-in-Chief, he
+retired in 1785; devoting himself to farming and gardening with all the
+strenuousness and devoted passion of a Roman of Vergil's type. And there
+(Dec. 1799) was he buried.
+
+_Not eager_; When the ill-feeling between England and America deepened
+after 1765, Washington 'was less eager than some others in declaring or
+declaiming against the mother country;' (Mahon: _Hist_. ch. lii).
+
+_Ripe to wed with Liberty_; See _Appendix_ G.
+
+_And to the end_; See Petrarch's beautiful lines: _Trionfo della Morte_,
+cap. I.
+
+_Due to the Liberator_; Compare the epitaph by Ennius on Scipio:
+
+ Hic est ille situs, cui nemo civi' neque hostis
+ Quivit pro factis reddere opis pretium.
+
+History, it may be said with reasonable confidence, records no hero more
+unselfish, no one less stained with human error and frailty, than George
+Washington.
+
+_The years unknown_; It is to Odin, whatever date be thereby signified,
+that our royal genealogy runs back.
+
+
+
+SANDRINGHAM
+
+
+1871
+
+ In the drear November gloom
+ And the long December night,
+ There were omens of affright,
+ And prophecies of doom;
+And the golden lamp of life burn'd spectre-dim,
+ Till Love could hardly mark
+ The little sapphire spark
+ That only made the dark
+ More dark and grim.
+
+ There not around alone
+ Watch'd sister, brother, wife,
+ And she who gave him life,
+ White as if wrought in stone
+Unheard, invisible, by the bed of death
+ Stood eager millions by;
+ And as the hour drew nigh,
+ Dreading to see him die,
+ Held their breath.
+
+ Where'er in world-wide skies
+ The Lion-Banner burns,
+ A common impulse turns
+ All hearts to where he lies:--
+For as a babe the heir of that great throne
+ Is weak and motionless;
+ And they feel the deep distress
+ On wife and mother press,
+ As 'twere their own.
+
+ O! not the thought of race
+ From Asian Odin drawn
+ In History's mythic dawn,
+ Nor what we downward trace,
+--Plantagenet, York, Edward, Elizabeth,--
+ Heroic names approved,--
+ The blood of the people moved;
+ But that, 'mongst those he loved,
+ He fought with death.
+
+ And if the Reason said
+ ''Gainst Nature's law and death
+ Prayer is but idle breath,'--
+ Yet Faith was undismayed,
+Arm'd with the deeper insight of the heart:--
+ Nor can the wisest say
+ What other laws may sway
+ The world's apparent way,
+ Known but in part.
+
+ Nor knew we on that life
+ What burdens may be cast;
+ What issues wide and vast
+ Dependent on that strife:--
+This only:--'Twas the son of those we loved!
+ That in his Mother's hand
+ Peace set her golden wand;
+ 'Mid heaving realms, one land
+ Law-ruled, unmoved.
+
+ --He fought, and we with him!
+ And other Powers were by,
+ Courage, and Science high,
+ Grappling the spectre grim
+On the battle-field of quiet Sandringham:
+ And force of perfect Love,
+ And the will of One above,
+ Chased Death's dark squadrons off,
+ And overcame.
+
+ --O soul, to life restored
+ And love, and wider aim
+ Than private care can claim,
+ --And from Death's unsheath'd sword!
+By suffering and by safety dearer made:--
+ O may the life new-found
+ Through life be wisdom-crown'd,--
+ Till in the common ground
+ Thou too art laid!
+
+
+
+A DORSET IDYL
+
+
+_HARCOMBE NEAR LYME_
+
+September: 1878
+
+ Before me with one happy heave
+ Of golden green the hillside curves,
+ Where slowly, smoothly, rounding swerves
+ The shadow of each perfect tree,
+ By slanting shafts of eve
+Flame-fringed and bathed in pale transparency.
+
+ And that long ridge that crowns the hill
+ Stands fir-dark 'gainst the falling rays;
+ Above, a waft of pearly haze
+ Lies on the sapphire field of air,
+ So radiant and so still
+As though a star-cloud took its station there.
+
+ Up wold and wild the valley goes,
+ 'Mid heath and mounded slopes of oak,
+ And light ash-thicket, where the smoke
+ Wreathes high in evening's air serene,
+ Floating in white repose
+O'er the blue reek of cottage-hearths unseen.
+
+ Another landscape at my feet
+ Unfolds its nearer grace the while,
+ Where gorses gleam with golden smile;
+ Where Inula lifts a russet head
+ The shepherd's spikenard sweet;
+And closing Centaury points her rosy red.
+
+ One light cicada's simmering cry,
+ Survivor of the summer heat,
+ Chimes faint; the robin, shrill and sweet,
+ Pipes from green holly; whilst from far
+ The rookery croaks reply,
+Hoarse, deep, as veterans readying for war.
+
+ --Grief on a happier future dwells;
+ The happy present haunts the past;
+ And those old minstrels who outlast
+ Our looser-textured webs of song,
+ Nursed in Hellenic dells,
+Sicilian, or Italian, hither throng.
+
+ Why care if Turk and Tartar fume,
+ Barbarian 'gainst barbarian set,
+ Or how our politic prophets fret,
+ When on this tapestry-thyme and heath,
+ Fresh work of Nature's loom,
+Thus, thus, we can diffuse ourselves, and breathe
+
+ Autumnal sparkling freshness?--while
+ The page by some bless'd miracle saved
+ When Goth and Frank 'gainst Hellas raved.
+ Paints how the wanderer-chief divine,
+ Snatch'd from Circaean guile,
+Led by Nausicaa past Athene's shrine,
+
+ In that delicious garden sate
+ Where summer link'd to summer glows,
+ Grapes ever ripe, and rose on rose;
+ And all the wonders of thy tale
+ --O greatest of the great--
+Whose splendour ne'er can fade, nor beauty fail!
+
+ Or by the city of God above
+ In rose-red meadows, where the day
+ Eternal burns, the bless'd ones stray;
+ The harp lets loose its silver showers
+ From the dark incense-grove;
+And happiness blooms forth with all her flowers.
+
+ O Theban strain,--remote and pure,
+ Voice of the higher soul, that shames
+ Our downward, dry, material aims,
+ The bestial creed of earth-to-earth,--
+ Owning with insight sure
+The signs that speak of Man's celestial birth!
+
+ Or white Colonos here through green
+ Green Dorset winds his holy vale,
+ Where the divine deep nightingale
+ Heaps note on note and love on love,
+ In ivy thick unseen,
+While goddesses with Dionysos rove.
+
+ Another music then we hear,
+ A cry from the Sicilian dell,
+ 'Here 'mid sweet grapes and laurel dwell;
+ Slips by from wood-girt Aetna's dome
+ Snow-cold the stream and clear:--
+Hither to me, come, Galataea, come!'
+
+ --Voices and dreams long fled and gone!
+ And other echoes make reply,
+ The low Maenalian melody
+ ''Twas in our garth, a twelve-year child,
+ I saw thee, little one,
+Pick the red fruit that to thy fancy smiled,
+
+ 'Thee and thy mother: I, your guide:'--
+ O sweet magician! Happy heart!
+ Content with that unrivall'd art,--
+ The soul of grace in music shrined,--
+ And notes of modest pride,
+To sing the life he loved to all mankind!
+
+ There, shading pine and torrent-song
+ Breathe midday slumber, sudden, sweet;
+ Deep meadows woo the wayward feet;
+ In giant elm the ring-doves moan;
+ There, peace secure from wrong,
+The life that keeps its promise, there, alone!
+
+ --O loftier than the wordy strife
+ That floats o'er capitals; the chase
+ Of florid pleasure; the blind race
+ Of gold for gold by gamblers run,
+ This fair Vergilian life,
+Where heaven and we and nature are at one!
+
+ On that deep soil great Rome was sown;
+ Our England her foundations laid:--
+ Hence, while the nations, change-dismay'd,
+ To tyrant or to quack repair,
+ A healthier heart we own,
+And the plant Man grows stronger than elsewhere.
+
+ Should changeful commerce shun the shore,
+ And newer, mightier races meet
+ To push us from our empire-seat,
+ England will round her call her own,
+ And as in days of yore
+The sea-girt Isle be Freedom's central throne.
+
+ Freedom, fair daughter-wife of Law;
+ One bright face on the future cast,
+ One reverent fix'd upon the past,
+ And that for Hope, for Wisdom this:--
+ While counsels wild and raw
+Fly those keen eyes, and leave the land to bliss:--
+
+ Dear land, where new is one with old:
+ Land of green hillside and of plain,
+ Gray tower and grange and tree-fringed lane,
+ Red crag and silver streamlet sweet,
+ Wild wood and ruin bold,
+And this repose of beauty at my feet:--
+
+ Fair Vale, for summer day-dreams high,
+ For reverie in solitude
+ Fashion'd in Nature's finest mood;
+ Or, sweeter yet, for fond excess
+ Of glee, and vivid cry,
+Whilst happy children find more happiness
+
+ Ranging the brambled hollows free
+ For purple feast;--till, light as Hope,
+ The little footsteps scale the slope;
+ And from the highest height we view
+ Our island-girdling sea
+Bar the green valley with a wall of blue.
+
+The poets whose landscape-pictures are here contrasted with English
+scenery, are Homer, Pindar, Sophocles, Theocritus, and Vergil.
+
+
+
+A HOME IN THE PALACE
+
+
+1840-1861
+
+ Thrice fortunate he
+Who, in the palace born, has early learn'd
+ The lore of sweet simplicity:
+From smiling gold his eyes inviolate turn'd,
+Turn'd unreturning:--Who the people's cause,
+ The sovereign-levelling laws,
+
+ Above the throne,
+--He made for them, not they for him,--has set;
+ Life-lavish for his land alone,
+Whether she crown with gratitude, or forget:--
+He, who in courts beneath the purple weight
+ Of precedence moves sedate,
+
+ By all that glare
+Of needful pageantry less stirr'd than still'd,
+ Bringing a waft of natural air
+Through halls with pomp and flattering incense fill'd;
+And in the central heart's calm secret, waits
+ The closure of the gates,
+
+ The music mute,
+The darkling lamps, the festal tables clear:--
+ Then,--glad as one who from pursuit
+Breathes safe, and lets himself himself appear,--
+Turns to the fireside jest, the laughing eyes,
+ The love without disguise,--
+
+ On home alone,
+The loyal partnership of man with wife,
+ Building a throne beyond the throne;
+All happiness in that common household life
+By peasant shared with prince,--when toil and health,
+ True parents of true wealth,
+
+ To its fair close
+Round the long day, and all are in the nest,
+ And care relaxes to repose,
+And the blithe restless nursery lulls to rest;
+Prayer at the mother's knee; and on their beds
+ We kiss the shining heads!
+
+ --Thrice fortunate he
+Who o'er himself thus won his masterdom,
+ Earning that rare felicity
+E'en in the palace walls to find the Home!
+Who shaped his life in calmness, firm and true,
+ Each day, and all day through,
+
+ To that high goal
+Where self, for England's sake, was self-effaced,
+ In silence reining-in his soul
+On the strait difficult line by wisdom traced,
+'Twixt gulf and siren, avalanche and ravine,
+ Guarding the golden mean.
+
+ Hence, as the days
+Went by, with insight time-enrich'd and true,
+ O'er Europe's policy-tangled maze
+He glanced, and touch'd the central shining clue:
+And when the tides of party roar'd and surged,
+ 'Gainst the state-bulwarks urged
+
+ By factious aim
+Masquing beneath some specious patriot cloke,
+ Or flaunting a time-honour'd name,--
+Athwart the flood he held an even stroke;
+Between extremes on her old compass straight
+ Aiding to steer the state.
+
+ With equal mind,
+Hence,--sure of those he loved on earth, and then
+ His loved ones sure again to find,--
+For Christ's and England's cause, Goodwill to men,
+To the end he strove, and put the fever by,--
+ Ready to live or die.
+
+ --And if in death
+We were not so alone, who might not quit,
+ Smiling, this tediousness of breath,
+These bubble joys that flash and burst and flit,--
+This tragicomedy of life, where scarce
+ We know if it be farce,
+
+ A puppet-sight
+Of nerve-pull'd dolls that o'er the world dance by,
+ Or Good in that unequal fight
+With Ill . . . who from such theatre would not fly?
+--But those dear faces round the bed disarm
+ Death of his natural charm!
+
+ --O Prince, to Her
+First placed, first honour'd in our love and faith,
+ True stay, true constant counseller,
+From that first love of boyhood's prime,--to death!
+O if thy soul on earth permitted gaze
+ In these less-fortunate days
+
+ When, hour by hour,
+The million armaments of the world are set
+ Skill-weapon'd with new demon-power,
+Mouthing around this little isle, . . . and yet
+On dream-security our fate we cast,
+ Of all that glory-past
+
+ With light fool-heart
+Oblivious! . . . O in spirit again restored,
+ Insoul us to the nobler part,
+The chivalrous loyalty of thy life and word!
+Thou, who in Her to whom first love was due,
+ Didst love her England too,
+
+ If earthly care
+In that eternal home, where thou dost wait
+ Renewal of the days that were,
+Move thee at all,--upon the realm estate
+The wisdom of thy virtue, the full store
+ Thy life's experience bore!
+
+ O known when lost,
+Lost, yet not fully known, in all thy grace
+ Of bloom by cruel early frost,
+Best prized and most by Her, to whom thy face
+Was love and life and counsel:--If this strain
+ Renew not all in vain
+
+ The bitter cry
+Of yearning for the loss we yet deplore,--
+ Yet for her heart, who stood too nigh
+For comfort, till God's hour thy face restore.
+Man has no lenitive! He, who wrought the grief, . . .
+ Alone commands relief.
+
+ --Thou, as the rose
+Lies buried in her fragrance, when on earth
+ The summer-loosen'd blossom flows,
+Art sepulchred and embalm'd in native worth:
+While to thy grave, in England's anxious years,
+ We bring our useless tears.
+
+_Above the throne_; 'He knows that if Princes exist, it is for the good
+of the people. . . . Well for him that he does so,' was the remark made
+by an observing foreigner on Prince Albert: (Martin: _Life of H.R.H. the
+Prince Consort_: ch. xi).
+
+_On home alone_; 'She who reigns over us,' said the then Mr. Disraeli
+when seconding the Address on the death of the Duchess of Kent, (March,
+1861), 'She who reigns over us has elected, amid all the splendour of
+empire, to establish her life on the principle of domestic love' (Martin:
+ch. cxi).
+
+_Firm and true_, 'Treu und Fest' is the motto of the Saxe-Coburg family.
+
+_Goodwill to men_; A revision of the despatch to the Cabinet of the
+United States, remonstrating on the 'Trent affair,' whilst the fatal
+fever was on him, was the last of Prince Albert's many services (Nov. 30,
+1861) to England. To the temperate and conciliatory tone which he gave
+to this message, its success in the promotion of peace between the two
+countries was largely due: (Martin: ch. cxvi).
+
+
+
+ODE
+
+
+_FOR THE TWENTY-FIRST OF JUNE_
+1887
+
+. . . _Sunt hic sua praemia laudi_,
+_Sunt lacrimae rerum_ . . .
+
+ As when the snowdrop from the snowy ground
+ Lifting a maiden face, foretells the flowers
+ That lurk and listen, till the chaffinch sound
+ Spring's advent with the glistening willow crown'd,
+ Sheathed in their silken bowers:--
+ E'en so the promise of her life appears
+ Through those white childhood-years;
+ --Whether in seaside happiness, and air
+ Rosing the fair cheek,--sand, and spade, and shell,--
+ Or race with sister-feet, that flash'd and fell
+ Printing the beach, while the gay comrade-wind
+ Play'd in the soft light hair:--
+ Or if with sunbeam-smile and kind
+ Small hand at cottage-door
+ Her simple alms she tender'd to the poor:
+Love's healthy happy heart in all her steps was seen,
+ And God, in life's fresh springtime, bless'd our Queen.
+
+ Lo! the quick months their order'd dance pursue,
+ And Spring's bright apple-blossoms flush to fruit;
+ The bay-tree thrives 'neath Heaven's own gracious dew,
+ And her young shoots the parent-life renew
+ Around the fostering root.
+ --The Girl from care in youth's sweet sleep withdrawn
+ Wakes to a crown at dawn!
+ But Love is at her side, strong, faithful, wise,
+ To share the world-wide burden of command,
+ The sceptre's weight in the unlesson'd hand;
+ To aid each nursery inmate,--each in turn
+ Dear pride of watchful eyes,--
+ To clasp the innocent hands, and learn
+ The words of love and grace,
+ Lifting their souls to the compassionate Face:--
+While o'er the fortunate fold the Shepherd watch'd unseen;
+ And home, in all its beauty, bless'd a Queen.
+
+ Ah! Happy she, who wedded finds in one
+ Wisest and dearest! happy, happy years!
+ But summer whirlwinds wait on summer's sun;
+ Where the Five Rivers from Himala run,
+ His snow where Everest rears,
+ Or Alma's echoing crags with war-cry wake
+ The wind-vext Euxine lake.
+ --O Death in myriad forms! O brutal roar
+ Of battle! throes of race, and crash of thrones!
+ Imploring hands, and wreck of whitening bones
+ In Khyber pass;--Or woman's stifled cry,
+ And that dark pit of gore!
+ --Yet night had light; for He was by,
+ Her heart, her strength, her shield,
+ Twin-star in the Throne's radiance self-conceal'd;
+Love's hand laid light on hers, guiding the ship unseen--
+ For God's best grace in Albert bless'd the Queen.
+
+ But at man's side each hour with ambush'd sword
+ Death hurries, nor for prayer nor love delays;
+ In God's own time His harvest-sheaves are stored,
+ 'For My thoughts are not your thoughts,' saith the Lord,
+ 'Nor are your ways My ways.'
+ He Who spared not the Son His bitter cup,
+ The broken heart binds up
+ In His fit hour, All-Merciful!--And she,
+ The desolate faithful Mother, in the nest
+ By children's love soft-woven, has found rest;
+ Some constant to her side, if some have flown
+ The Angels' road, and see
+ The Vision of the Eternal Throne:--
+ With them, 'tis well!--But thou,
+ Strong through submission, to His will dost bow,
+Till God renew the home in that far realm unseen,
+ And bless with all her lost ones England's Queen.
+
+ Yet in great Nature's changeful mystic dance
+ Joy circles grief, gay dawn outsmiles the night:
+ 'Tis meet our song should build its radiance
+ Like some high palace-porch, and walls that glance
+ With gold and marble light:
+ Now fifty suns 'neath one firm patriot sway
+ Have whirl'd their shining way.
+ --Lo Commerce with the golden girdling chain
+ That links all nations for the good of each;
+ While Science boasts her silent lightning speech
+ Swifter than thought; and how her patience rein'd
+ To post o'er earth and main
+ The panting white-breath'd Titan, chain'd
+ Bondslave to man:--and won
+ The magic spark o'erdazzling star and sun
+From its dark cave: for He, the all-seeing Lord unseen
+ Enlightening, bless'd the years of England's Queen.
+
+ Freedom of England! from thy sacred source
+ Where Alfred arm'd in Athelney, welling pure,
+ With hero-blood dyed in thy widening course,
+ --What loyaler hand than her's to guide thy force
+ Down ancient channels sure?
+ Honour of England! in what bosom stirs
+ Thy soul more quick than her's?
+ Yet in her days . . . O greater grief, than when
+ In years of woe, the years of happiness
+ Flash o'er us,--to behold,--and no redress,--
+ Some deed of shame we cannot cure nor stay!
+ Our best, our man of men,
+ Martyr'd inch-meal by dull delay!
+ Ah, sacred, hidden grave!
+ Ah gallant comrade feet, love-wing'd to save,
+Too late, too late!--But Thou, Whose counsels work unseen,
+ Spare us henceforth such pangs, spare England's Queen
+
+ O much enduring, much revered! To thee
+ Bring sun-dyed millions love more sweet than fame,
+ And happy isles that star the purple sea
+ Homage;--and children at the mother's knee
+ With her's unite thy name;
+ And faithful hearts, that throb 'neath palm and pine,
+ From East to West, are thine.
+ For as some pillar-star o'er sea and storm
+ Whole fleets to haven guides, so from that height
+ One great example points the path of Right,
+ And purifies the home; with gracious aid
+ Lifting the fallen form.
+ See Death by finer skill delay'd;
+ Kind hearts to wait on woe,
+ And feet of Love that in Christ's footsteps go;
+Wild wastes of life reclaim'd by Woman's hand unseen:
+ All England bless'd with England's Empress Queen.
+
+ And now, as one who through some fruitful field
+ Has urged the fifty furrows of the grain,--
+ Look round with joy, and know thy care will yield
+ A thousandfold in its due day reveal'd,
+ The harvest laugh again:--
+ E'en now thy great crown'd ancestors on high
+ Watch with exultant eye
+ Thy hundred Englands o'er the broad earth sown,
+ And Arthur lives anew to hail his heir!
+ --O then for her and us we chant the prayer,--
+ Keep Thou this sea-girt citadel of the free
+ Safe 'neath her ancient throne,
+ Love-link'd in loyal unity;
+ Let eve's calm after-glow
+ Arch all the heaven with Hope's wide roseate bow:
+Till in Time's fulness Thou, Almighty Lord unseen,
+ With glory and life immortal crown the Queen.
+
+Published (June, 1887) under sanction of the Delegates of the Clarendon
+Press, Oxford; and intended as an humble offering of loyalty and hearty
+good-wishes on the part of the University.
+
+
+
+ENGLAND ONCE MORE
+
+
+Old if this England be
+The Ship at heart is sound,
+And the fairest she and gallantest
+That ever sail'd earth round!
+And children's children in the years
+Far off will live to see
+Her silver wings fly round the world,
+Free heralds of the free!
+ While now on Him who long has bless'd
+ To bless her as of yore,
+ Once more we cry for England,
+ England once more!
+
+They are firm and fine, the masts;
+And the keel is straight and true;
+Her ancient cross of glory
+Rides burning through the blue:--
+And that red sign o'er all the seas
+The nations fear and know,
+And the strong and stubborn hero-souls
+That underneath it go:--
+ While now on Him who long has bless'd
+ To bless her as of yore,
+ Once more we cry for England,
+ England once more!
+
+Prophets of dread and shame,
+There is no place for you,
+Weak-kneed and craven-breasted,
+Amongst this English crew!
+Bluff hearts that cannot learn to yield,
+But as the waves run high,
+And they can almost touch the night,
+Behind it see the sky.
+ While now on Him who long has bless'd
+ To bless her as of yore,
+ Once more we cry for England,
+ England once more!
+
+As Past in Present hid,
+As old transfused to new,
+Through change she lives unchanging,
+To self and glory true;
+From Alfred's and from Edward's day
+Who still has kept the seas,
+To him who on his death-morn spoke
+Her watchword on the breeze!
+ While now on Him who long has bless'd
+ To bless her as of yore,
+ Once more we cry for England,
+ England once more!
+
+What blasts from East and North,
+What storms that swept the land
+Have borne her from her bearings
+Since Caesar seized the strand!
+Yet that strong loyal heart through all
+Has steer'd her sage and free,
+--Hope's armour'd Ark in glooming years,
+And whole world's sanctuary!
+ While now on Him who long has bless'd
+ To bless her as of yore,
+ Once more we cry for England,
+ England once more!
+
+Old keel, old heart of oak,
+Though round thee roar and chafe
+All storms of life, thy helmsman
+Shall make the haven safe!
+Then with Honour at the head, and Faith,
+And Peace along the wake,
+Law blazon'd fair on Freedom's flag,
+Thy stately voyage take:--
+ While now on Him who long has bless'd
+ To bless Thee as of yore,
+ Once more we cry for England,
+ England once more!
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX
+
+
+A: p. 87
+
+
+_Till the terrible Day unreveal'd_; Much of course is and will probably
+remain unknown among the details of that fatal and fascinating drama,
+Mary's life. But all hitherto ascertained evidence has now, mainly by
+Mr. Hosack, been sifted so closely and so ably that the main turning
+points in her career seem to have reached that twilight certainty beyond
+which History can rarely hope to go, and are placed beyond the reach of
+reasonable controversy. Such, (not to enter upon the Queen's life as
+Elizabeth's captive), is the more than Macchiavellian--the almost
+incredible--perfidy of the leading Scottish politicians, united with a
+hypocrisy more revolting still, and enabled to do its wicked work, (with
+regret we must confess), by the shortsighted bigotry of Knox:--The
+gradual forgery of the letters by which the Queen's death was finally
+obtained from the too-willing hands of Elizabeth's Cabinet:--The all but
+legally proved innocence of Mary in regard to Darnley's death, and the
+Bothwell marriage. Taking her life as a whole, it may be fairly doubted
+whether any woman has ever been exposed to trials and temptations more
+severe, or has suffered more shamefully from false witness and fanatical
+hatred. But the prejudices which have been hence aroused are so strong,
+such great interests, religious and political, are involved in their
+maintenance, that they will doubtless prevail in the popular mind until
+our literature receives,--what an age of research and of the scientific
+spirit should at last be prepared to give us,--a tolerably truthful
+history of the Elizabethan period. (1889)
+
+
+
+B: p. 102
+
+
+_Heroes both_;--_Each his side_;--In regard to the main issue at stake in
+the Civil War, and the view taken of it throughout this book, let me here
+once for all remark that no competent and impartial student of our
+history can deny a fair cause to each side, whatever errors may have been
+committed by Charles and by the Parliament, or however fatal for some
+fifteen years to liberty and national happiness were the excesses and the
+tyranny into which the victorious party gradually, and as it were
+inevitably, drifted. 'No one,' says Ranke (whom I must often quote,
+because to this distinguished foreigner we owe the single, though too
+brief, narrative of this period in which history has been hitherto,
+treated historically, that is, without judging of the events by the light
+either of their remote results, or of modern political party), 'will make
+any very heavy political charge against Strafford on the score of his
+government of Ireland, or of the partisan attitude which he had taken up
+in the intestine struggle in England in general; for the ideas for which
+he contended were as much to be found in the past history of England as
+were those which he attacked:' --and Hampden's conduct may claim
+analogous justification. If the Parliament could appeal to those
+mediaeval precedents which admitted the right of the people through their
+representatives, to control taxation and (more or less) direct national
+policy, Charles, (and Strafford with him), might as lawfully affirm that
+they too were standing 'on the ancient ways'; on the royal supremacy
+undeniably exercised by Henry II or Edward I. by Henry VIII and by
+Elizabeth. Both parties could equally put forward the prosperity of
+England under these opposed modes of government: Patriotism, honour,
+conscience, were watchwords which either might use with truth or abuse
+with profit. If the great struggle be patiently studied, the moral
+praise and censure so freely given, according to a reader's personal
+bias, will be found very rarely justified. There was far, very far, less
+of tyranny or of liberty involved in the contest, up to 1642, than
+partisans aver. To the actual actors (nor, as retrospectively criticized
+by us) it is a fair battle on both sides, not a contest 'between light
+and darkness.'
+
+We, looking back after two centuries, are of course free to recognize,
+that one effect of the Tudor despotism had been to train Englishmen
+towards ruling themselves;--we may agree that the time had come for Lords
+and Commons to take their part in the Kingdom. But no proof, I think it
+may be said, can be shown that this great idea, in any conscious sense,
+governed the Parliaments of James and Charles. It is we who,--reviewing
+our history since the definite establishment of the constitutional
+balance after 1688, and the many blessings the land has enjoyed,--can
+perceive what in the seventeenth century was wholly hidden from
+Commonwealth and from King. And even if in accordance with the common
+belief, we ascribe English freedom and prosperity and good government to
+the final triumph of the popular side, yet deeper consideration should
+suggest that such retrospective judgments are always inevitably made
+under our human entire ignorance what might have been the result had the
+opposite party prevailed. Who should say how often, in case of these
+long and wide extended struggles,--political and dynastic,--the effects
+which we confidently claim as _propter hoc_, are only _post hoc_ in the
+last reality?
+
+Waiving however these somewhat remote and what many will judge
+over-sceptical considerations, this is certain, that unless we can purify
+our judgment from reading into the history of the past the long results
+of time;--from ascribing to the men of the seventeenth century prophetic
+insight into the nineteenth;--unless, in short, we can free ourselves
+from the chain of present or personal prepossessions;--no approach can be
+made to a fair or philosophical judgment upon such periods of strife and
+crisis as our Civil War preeminently offers.
+
+
+
+C: p. 108
+
+
+_With glory he gilt_; Yet to readers, (if such readers there be) who can
+look with an undazzled eye on military success, or hear the still small
+voice of truth through the tempest of rhetoric, Cromwell's foreign
+policy, (excepting the isolated case of his interference with the then
+comparatively feeble powers of Savoy and the Papacy on behalf of the
+persecuted Waldenses), will be far from supporting the credit with which
+politico-theological partisanship has invested it.
+
+Holland was beyond question the natural ally on political and religious
+grounds of puritan England. But a mischievous war against her in 1652-3
+was caused by the arrogant restrictions of the Navigation Act of 1651.
+The successful English demand in 1653 that the Orange family, as
+connected closely with that of Stuart, should be excluded from the
+Stadtholdership, was in a high degree to the prejudice of the United
+Provinces.
+
+In 1654 Cromwell was negotiating with France and Spain. From the latter
+he arrogantly asked wholly unreasonable terms, whilst Mazarin, on the
+part of France, offered Dunkirk as a bribe. News opportunely arriving
+that certain Spanish possessions in America were feebly armed, Cromwell
+at once declared war: and now, supplementing unscrupulous policy by false
+theology, announced 'the Spaniards to be the natural and ordained enemies
+of England, whom to fight was a duty both to country and to religion:'
+(Ranke: xii. 6).
+
+The piratical war which followed, in many ways similar to that which the
+'wise Walpole' tried to avert in 1739, was hardly less impolitic than
+immoral. It alienated Holland, it sanctioned French aggression on
+Flanders (xii. 7), it ended by giving Mazarin and Lewis XIV that
+supremacy in Western Europe for which England had to pay in the wars of
+William III and Anne; whilst, as soon as it was over, France naturally
+allied herself with Spain, on a basis which might have caused the union
+of the two crowns (xii. 8) and which allowed Spain at once to support
+Charles II. As the result of the Protector's 'spirited policy' England
+thus figured as the catspaw of France, and the enemy of European liberty.
+
+It is satisfactory, however, to find that, in Ranke's judgment, the
+common modern opinion that Cromwell's despotism was favourably regarded
+in England because of his foreign enterprize, is exaggerated. Even
+against the conquest of Jamaica,--his single signal gain,--unanswerable
+arguments were popularly urged at the time: (xii. 4, 8)--But the
+Protectorate, in the light of modern research,--like the reign of
+Elizabeth,--still awaits its historian.
+
+
+
+D: p. 127
+
+
+_The sky by a veil_; 'A spiritual world,' says a critic of deep insight,
+'over and above this invisible one, is a most important addition to our
+idea of the universe; but it does not of itself touch our moral nature. . . .
+Its moral effect depends entirely upon what we make that world to
+be.'--Cromwell's religion, which may be profitably studied in his letters
+and speeches, (much better known of, than read) reveals itself there as
+the simple reflex of his personal views: it had great power to animate,
+little or none to regulate or control his impulses. He had, indeed, a
+most real and pervading 'natural turn for the invisible; he thought of
+the invisible till he died; but the cloudy arch only canopied a field of
+human aim and will.'
+
+_The horrible sacrament_; The summary of Cromwell's conduct at Drogheda
+by a writer of so much research, impartiality, and philosophic liberality
+as Mr. Lecky deserves to be well considered.
+
+'The sieges of Drogheda and Wexford, and the massacres that accompanied
+them, deserve to rank in horror with the most atrocious exploits of Tilly
+and Wallenstein, and they made the name of Cromwell eternally hated in
+Ireland. It even now acts as a spell upon the Irish mind, and has a
+powerful and living influence in sustaining the hatred both of England
+and Protestantism. The massacre of Drogheda acquired a deeper horror and
+a special significance from the saintly professions and the religious
+phraseology of its perpetrators, and the town where it took place is, to
+the present day, distinguished in Ireland for the vehemence of its
+Catholicism:' (_Hist. of Eighteenth Cent_. ch. vi).
+
+_Mortal failure_; The ever-increasing unsuccess of Cromwell's career is
+forcibly set forth by Ranke (xii. 8). He had 'crushed every enemy,--the
+Scottish and the Presbyterian system, the peers and the king, the Long
+Parliament and the Cavalier insurgents,--but to create . . . an
+organization consistent with the authority which had fallen to his own
+lot, was beyond his power. Even among his old' Anabaptist and
+Independent 'friends, his comrades in the field, his colleagues in the
+establishment of the Commonwealth, he encountered the most obstinate
+resistance. . . . At no time were the prisons fuller; the number of
+political prisoners was estimated at 12,000 . . . The failure of his
+plans soured and distracted him.' It was, in fact, wholly 'beyond his
+power to consolidate a tolerably durable political constitution.'--To the
+disquiet caused by constant attempts against Cromwell's life, Ranke adds
+the death of his favourite daughter, Lady Claypole, whose last words of
+agony 'were of the right of the king, the blood that had been shed, the
+revenge to come.'
+
+
+
+E: p. 146
+
+
+_Unheirlike heir_; Richard Cromwell has received double measure of that
+censure which the world's judgment too readily gives to unsuccess,
+finding favour neither from Royalists nor Cromwellians. Macaulay, with
+more justice, remarks, 'That he was a good man he evinced by proofs more
+satisfactory than deep groans or long sermons, by humility and suavity
+when he was at the height of human greatness, and by cheerful resignation
+under cruel wrongs and misfortunes.' . . . 'He did nothing amiss during
+his short administration.'
+
+His fall may be traced to several causes: to the fact that the puritan
+party proper, who supported him, the 'sober men' mentioned by Baxter
+'that called his father no better than a traitorous hypocrite,' had not
+power to resist the fanatic cabal of army chiefs: to the necessity he was
+under of protecting some justly-odious confederates of Oliver: his own
+want of ability or energy to govern,--a point fully recognized during
+Oliver's supremacy; and to his own honourable decision not to 'have a
+drop of blood shed on his poor account.' Yet there is ample evidence to
+show that Richard, had he chosen, might have made a struggle to retain
+the throne,--sufficient, at least, to have thus deluged the kingdom.
+
+Richard's life was passed in great quiet after 1660: Charles II,
+according to Clarendon, with a wise and humorous lenity, not thinking it
+'necessary to inquire after a man so long forgotten.' His letters reveal
+a man of affectionate and honest disposition; he uses the Puritan
+phraseology of the day without leaving a sense of nausea in the reader's
+mind. At Hursley he was buried at a good old age in 1712.
+
+
+
+F: p. 152
+
+
+_A nation's craven rage_; The want of public spirit in England shown
+during the war of 1745-6 is astonishing. 'England,' wrote Henry Fox, 'is
+for the first comer . . . Had 5,000 [French troops] landed in any part of
+this island a week ago, I verily believe the entire conquest of it would
+not have cost them a battle.' And other weighty testimonies might be
+added, in support of Lord Mahon's view as to the great probability of the
+Prince's success, had he been allowed by his followers to march upon
+London from Derby.
+
+This apathy and the panic which followed found their natural issue in the
+sanguinary punishment of the followers of Prince Charles. 'The city and
+the generality,' wrote H. Walpole in August, 1746, 'are very angry that
+so many rebels have been pardoned.' The vindictive cruelty then shown
+makes, in truth (if we compare the magnitude and duration of the
+rebellion for which punishment was to be exacted), an unsatisfactory
+contrast to the leniency of 1660. But History supplies only too numerous
+proofs that a century's march in civilisation may be always undone at
+once by the demons of Panic or of Party in the hour of their respective
+triumphs.
+
+
+
+G: p. 169
+
+
+_Ripe to wed with Liberty_; Looking at the American War of Independence
+without party-passion and distortion, as should now at least be possible
+to Englishmen, the main cause must be acknowledged to lie simply in the
+growth and geographical position of the Colonies, which had brought them
+to the age of natural liberty, and had begun to fit them for its
+exercise:--facts which it was equally in accordance with nature that the
+Fatherland should fail to perceive. For the causes which gradually
+determined American resistance we must look, (as regards us), not to the
+blundering English legislation after 1760,--to the formalism of
+Grenville, the subterfuges of Franklin,--but to the whole course of our
+commercial policy since the Revolution: As regards the Colonies, to the
+extinction of the power of France in America by the Treaty of Paris in
+1763: (Lecky: ch. v; Mahon: ch. xliii).
+
+The Stamp Act of 1765 brought home, indeed, to a rapidly-developing
+people the supremacy claimed across the Atlantic; but the obnoxious
+taxation which it imposed, (despite the splendid sophistry of Chatham),
+cannot be shown to differ essentially from the trade restrictions and
+monopolies enacted in long series after 1688, as the result of the
+predominance obtained at the Revolution by the commercial classes in this
+country, and which so far as 1765 the colonies openly recognized as
+legal.
+
+Going, however, beyond these minor motives, the true cause was
+unquestionably that the time for separate life, for America to be
+herself, had come. This was a crisis which home-legislation could do
+little to create or to avert: a natural law, which only worked itself out
+ostensibly by political manoeuvres and military operations, so
+ill-managed as to be rarely creditable to either side;--and, regarded
+simply as a 'struggle for existence,' is, in the eye of impartial
+history, hardly within the scope of praise or censure.
+
+But it was a neutrally tinted background like this, which could most
+effectually bring into full relief the great qualities of the one great
+man who was prominent in the conflict.
+
+Printed by Cassell & Company, Limited. La Belle Sauvage, London. E.C.
+
+
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