Volume II Part 5 (2/2)

”Yea, fast, my page, I will do so, And keep thou at my side.”

x.x.xIII.

”Now nay, now nay, ride on thy way, Thy faithful page precede.

For I must loose on saddle-bow My battle-casque that galls, I trow, The shoulder of my steed; And I must pray, as I did vow, For one in bitter need.

x.x.xIV.

”Ere night I shall be near to thee,-- Now ride, my master, ride!

Ere night, as parted spirits cleave To mortals too beloved to leave, I shall be at thy side.”

The knight smiled free at the fantasy, And adown the dell did ride.

x.x.xV.

Had the knight looked up to the page's face, No smile the word had won; Had the knight looked up to the page's face, I ween he had never gone: Had the knight looked back to the page's geste, I ween he had turned anon, For dread was the woe in the face so young, And wild was the silent geste that flung Casque, sword to earth, as the boy down-sprung And stood--alone, alone.

x.x.xVI.

He clenched his hands as if to hold His soul's great agony-- ”Have I renounced my womanhood, For wifehood unto _thee_, And is this the last, last look of thine That ever I shall see?

x.x.xVII.

”Yet G.o.d thee save, and mayst thou have A lady to thy mind, More woman-proud and half as true As one thou leav'st behind!

And G.o.d me take with HIM to dwell-- For HIM I cannot love too well, As I have loved my kind.”

x.x.xVIII.

She looketh up, in earth's despair, The hopeful heavens to seek; That little cloud still floateth there, Whereof her loved did speak: How bright the little cloud appears!

Her eyelids fall upon the tears, And the tears down either cheek.

x.x.xIX.

The tramp of hoof, the flash of steel-- The Paynims round her coming!

The sound and sight have made her calm,-- False page, but truthful woman; She stands amid them all unmoved: A heart once broken by the loved Is strong to meet the foeman.

XL.

”Ho, Christian page! art keeping sheep, From pouring wine-cups resting?”-- ”I keep my master's n.o.ble name, For warring, not for feasting; And if that here Sir Hubert were, My master brave, my master dear, Ye would not stay the questing.”

XLI.

”Where is thy master, scornful page, That we may slay or bind him?”-- ”Now search the lea and search the wood, And see if ye can find him!

Nathless, as hath been often tried, Your Paynim heroes faster ride Before him than behind him.”

XLII.

”Give smoother answers, lying page, Or perish in the lying!”-- ”I trow that if the warrior brand Beside my foot, were in my hand, 'T were better at replying!”

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