Part 7 (1/2)
”'No, Marie, no! my wife shall share With me the trials soldiers bear: No longer and no more we part.--- Thy presence needful to my heart I now more evidently know; Making the careful moments flow To happy music! on my brow The iron casque shall lighter prove,-- The corslet softer on my breast, The s.h.i.+eld upon my arm shall rest More easy, when the hand of love There places them. Our succours soon Arrive; and then, whatever boon I shall think fitting to demand, My gracious monarch's bounteous hand Awards as guerdon for my charge, And bids my wishes roam at large.
Then if we from these rebels tear The traitor honours which they wear, Thy father's tides and domain Shall flourish in his line again!
And Marie's child, in time to come, Shall call his grandsire's castle, home!
Alas! poor babe! the scenes of war For him too harsh and frightful are!
Would that he might in safety rest Upon my gentle mother's breast!
That in the vessel now at bay, In Hugh de Lacy's care he lay!
My heart and reason would be free, If he were safe beyond the sea.
”'Nay, let me not my love displease!
But is it fit, that walls like these The blooming cherub should inclose!
And when our close approaching foes Are skirmis.h.i.+ng the country o'er, We must adventure forth no more.'
”At length I gave a half consent, Resign'd, submissive, not content: For, only in intensest prayer, For, only kneeling did I dare, Sustaining thus my sinking heart, Suffer my infant to depart.
Oh! yet I see his sparkling tears; His parting cries are in my ears, As, strongly bending back the head, The little hands imploring spread, Him from my blinding sight they bore, Down from the fort along the sh.o.r.e.
”From the watch-tower I saw them sail, And pour'd forth prayers--of no avail!
Yet, when a tempest howl'd around, Hurling huge branches on the ground From stately trees; when torrents swept The fields of air, I tranquil kept.--
”Hope near a fading blossom Will often take her stand; Revive it on her bosom, Or screen it with her wand: But to the leaves no sunbeams press, Her fair, thick locks pervading; Through that bright wand no dew-drops bless, Still cherish'd, and still fading:-- Beneath her eye's bright beam it pines, Fed by her angel smile, declines.
”Eustace, meanwhile, with feverish care, Seem'd worse the dire suspense to bear.
Bewilder'd, starting at the name Of messenger, when any came, With body shrinking back, he sought, While his eye seem'd on fire with thought, Defying, yet subdued by fear, To ask that truth he dar'd not hear.
”He went his rounds.--The duty done, His mind still tending toward his son; With spirit and with heart deprest, A judgment unsustain'd by rest;-- Fainting in effort, and at strife With feelings woven into life; And with the chains of being twin'd By links so strong, though undefin'd, They curb or enervate the brain, Weigh down by languor, rack by pain, And spread a thousand subtil ties Across the tongue, and through the eyes; Till the whole frame is fancy vext, And all the powers of mind perplext.
”What wonder, then, it sunk and fail'd!
What wonder that your plans prevail'd!
In vain by stratagem you toil'd;-- His skill and prudence all had foil'd; For one day's vigilance surpast Seeming perfection in the last.
Each hour more active, more intent, Unarm'd and una.s.sail'd he went; While every weapon glanc'd aside, His armour every lance defied.
The blow that could that soul subdue At length was struck--but not by you!
It fell upon a mortal part-- A poison'd arrow smote his heart; The winds impelling, when they bore Wrecks of the vessel to our sh.o.r.e!
”Oh! ever dear! and ever kind!
What madness could possess thy mind, From me, in our distress, to fly?
True, much delight had left my eye; And, in the circle of my bliss, One holy, rapturous joy to miss Was mine!--Yet I had more than this, Before my wounds were clos'd, to bear!
See thee, an image of despair, Just rush upon my woe, then shun Her who alike deplor'd a son; And, ere alarm had taken breath, Be told, my husband, of thy death!
And feel upon this blighted sphere No tie remain to bind me here!
Still in my life's young summer see A far and weary path to thee!
Along whose wild and desert way No sportive tribes of fancy play; No smiles that to the lips arise, No joys to sparkle in the eyes;-- No thrills of tenderness to feel, No spring of hope, no touch of zeal.
All sources of heart-feeling stopt, All impulse, all sustainment dropt.
With aching memory, sinking mind, Through this drear wilderness to find The path to death;--and pining, roam Myriads of steps to reach the tomb!
Of which to catch a distant view, The softest line, the faintest hue, As symbol when I should be free, Were happiness too great for me!”
Here clos'd at once, abrupt, the lay!
The Minstrel's fingers ceas'd to play!
And, all her soul to anguish given, Doubted the pitying care of Heaven.
But evil, in its worst extreme, In its most dire, impending hour, Shall vanish, like a hideous dream, And leave no traces of its power!
The vessel plunging on a rock, Wreck threatening in its fellest shape, No moment's respite from the shock, No human means or power to 'scape, Some higher-swelling surge shall free, And lift and launch into the sea!
So, Marie, yet shall aid divine Restore that failing heart of thine!
Though to its centre wounded, griev'd, Though deeply, utterly bereav'd.