![]() | The Crusade of St. Lewis | ![]() |
ST. LEWIS.
See, the Christian fleet unmoors!
Pike, and spear, and faulchion gleaming,
Hark the frequent dash of oars!
Knight and serf beneath it trod,
Who had bown'd them for the battle,
Soldiers of the living God,
Life and growth, in nature's shame;
Where the burning soil is cinder;
Where the passing wind is flame.
Mounted on a nimble steed,
Ambush'd there, the Moorish pricker
Brandishes his pointed reed.
Hears the fatal lelies sound;
Whizzing flies the fatal jerrid;
Horse and horseman bite the ground.
For these, see Bruce's account of his journey home across the desert; a narrative full of interest, which gives a lively impression of the wonders which he had witnessed, and the dangers he had escaped.
These moving columns are by land what water-spouts are by sea. The action of the wind on sand and water is the same, and has been satisfactorily described and explained by Dr. Franklin.
Hurtling, menace sudden death,
Whirl'd across that pathless ocean
By the Sirocc's angry breath:
Of the sun burns ruby-red;
Now their spires appear to cluster;
Parting now, they seem to spread.
When, like some illusive spell,
Lo! the dreadful pageant vanish'd
As the sultry Sirocc fell.
Sink beneath a burning sun—
Hark the joyful cry of “Water,”
Thro' the ranks in thunder run!
How each sinking bosom leaps!—
“'Tis a lake! at-length reflected,
On its face the palm-tree sleeps.”
Which deceiv'd the Christians' eyes;
As their thirsty squadrons follow,
Lo! the false illusion flies.
Yet the fearful tale may rue,
How strange fire, which nothing quenches,
Oft the Turkish foe-man threw.
Every moment to decay,
Whom the sword or sorrow wasted,
It were long, and sad to say.
Whence no friendly zephyr blew,
Whom the pestilence or poison
Of the deadly Samiel slew.
Under battle, toil and pain,
Nor, till vanquish'd and in durance,
Gave the glorious strife for vain.
Of a crown in Eastern land,
Nor to build a name in story,
Arm'd, O God, this feeble hand.
For thine honor's pure increase,
And that I and every stranger
Might approach thy tomb in peace.
Safe for me, their state might keep;
Lion-Richard with his trophies
Haunted not my peaceful sleep:
Ere his beard was razor-ripe,
And well nigh his sceptre wrested
From the Soldan's forceful gripe.
In the battle's doubtful shock,
Ne'er for Schiraz' wines I thirsted,
Or the snows of Haffner's rock.
With the wanton's practis'd glance,
When the spirit-stirring tabor
Wakes the loose Egyptian dance.
To behold the crescent's fall,—
—To behold thy red-cross planted
On thy chosen city's wall,
Winnow'd from each baser scope;
Never worldly passion mingled
With that great and glorious hope.”
EDWARD THE MARTYR.
King Edward stray'd the woods among:
He rode in sorry case;
Nor path, nor print of horse's hoof
Amid those branching trees, star-proof,
East, west, or north, could trace.
Where copse-wood form'd a summer-shade,
Close-cradled over-head:
Scant might he force a passage thro',
So close the tangled alley grew,
Nigh waste for lack of tread.
And all one way the branches bent,
The brush-wood grew less stiff:
Now pricking light o'er stobb and gorse,
He gave the bridle to his horse,
And wan St. Aldhem's cliff.
Such is generally the transition to be observed in woods on approaching the sea towards the south-west; indeed whatever there is of description in the following stanzas is copied from places not far removed from where the scene is laid.
St. Aldhem has been metamorphosed into St. Aldan, but more commonly St. Alban. There is a chapel dedicated to him on the cliff, and this part of it is called St. Alban's head. Off this runs a race, similar in its nature to that of Portland, but of much less danger. St. Aldhem was an Anglo-Saxon bishop, who wrote a book on Latin prosody.
And crimson'd Durlstone's rocks of chalk;
The Needles' triple spire,
With dusky vapor overhung,
So far the parting blaze was flung,
Seem'd pyramids of fire.
Scarce might you mark his billows creep
To land, whereso the stream was deep;
(What time, now blowing hard,
Now in light flaws, with sudden change,
The quick and restless wind did range
About the shipman's card)
The battled rocks, which girdle round
That grim sea frontier, iron-bound,
Iron-bound is a nautical phrase, denoting an inhospitable and inaccessible shore. The language of mariners like the language of nations of hunters and fishers, and from the same cause, is highly figurative. A seaman will talk of the sky being big with something, of the wind coming in spiteful puffs, of the sun setting red and angry. If he would convey to you that the violence of a gale has abated, he will say that the heart of it is broke; he talks of pulling against a heart-breaking tide, &c. &c. It is singular that Falconer, in his Shipwreck, should not have availed himself of so poetical a phraseology: but we are apt to think little of that with which we are most familiarized.
High furrowing in a ridge,
They foam'd and froth'd with hollow roar,
And broke, in thunder, on the shore,
From Peverel to The Bridge.
He twitch'd the mantle to his throat,
And rode by cape or wharf;
Now, inland, prick'd o'er hill and mead,
And stay'd at last his weary steed
Before the gates of Corfe.
His step-dame Elfrid knew the sound
Which rang through keep and court;
And to her bow'r-woman 'gan say;
“The deer we've hunted many a day,
E'en now the quarry is at bay;
I hear the merry mort!”
Her young son Eldred in her hand;
And sore she griev'd apart,
To see the greeting and the cheer,
Which pass'd between those brothers dear,
In singleness of heart.
Anger was but a smoldering flame,
Until its sparks took air:
She, hatching deep and deadly sin,
Could cloak the wickedness within
Beneath a semblance fair.
And feed within my tow'rs, this night,
On Purbeck's fallow deer;
'Tis said, where cost and care is least,
Large love and welcome make a feast;
Then taste our forest cheer.”
—“The scud flies swiftly overhead,
The south-west wind is up.—
Yet will I, stepdame, in despite
Of wind and weather, do you right,
In one free loving cup.”
With ruby liquor foaming o'er,
Old Bourdeaux' rich increase;
She laid her lip unto the brink,
—And, “Wassal, son,” she said, “and drink.”—
And gave the kiss of peace.
Had drain'd the goblet at a draught;—
But she her vantage spied,
And, at her sign, a stalwart groom,
Who stood beside his horse, thrust home
A dagger in his side.
The heart's-blood from the wound did spin,
When he drew back the knife;
And Edward, as the stream outbrake,
Let go the wassal-bowl, and strake
His horse, and rode for life.
His visage fell, his cheek grew wan
—He reels—the bridle drops—
'Tis o'er; fast by a neighbouring well,
He hurtles headlong from the sell,
And short the courser stops.
And slipt her blood-hounds on the trail:
They stay'd upon the king;
The ruffians saw life's font was dried,
And, neck and heels, the carcase tied,
And cast it in the spring.
A bickering flame of fire did dwell;
The burgher and the swain,
Sore trembling for their town and tillage,
Dream'd that the beacon told of pillage,
Wrought by the murderous Dane.
The lords will tomb in holy ground;
And, more the rite to hallow,
E'en she who wrought the sinful deed,
—That bold, bad woman, on her steed,
The mourning train will follow.
And swells upon the midnight air
The dirge's doleful sound:
Forth pace the bearers with the corse,
The nobles next; but Elfrid's horse
Stands rooted to the ground.
The palfrey from his trance can stir;
She lights, and now will tread,
Behind the bier, a pilgrim poor;
But (as her courser fared before)
Her feet became as lead.
The train moves on, she's left alone;
Nor till the funeral hymn
Was heard no more, and, by degrees,
The lights went out in Kizwood trees,
Could lift one icy limb.
How still she heard a bugle sound,
At fall of twilight hoar;
And ever, when she rais'd the piece
To drink, the wine-press' pure increase
Would change to human gore.
She strove to wrestle down despair.
'Twas vain:—with holier thought,
She gave the fruitless struggle up,
And in religion's healing cup
Her last-left comfort sought.
And after Worwell's cloister'd aisle
Rose at her hest; and there,
She, ever with herself at strife,
Wore out the remnant of her life
In penitence and pray'r.
Now fence the lowly peasant's bones,
Or piece some ruin'd grange;
Nor less, O Purbeck, on thine hills,
Time, which all earthly wonder spills,
Hath wrought portentous change.
Tall oak, and tufted chesnut sprung
From many a rifted seam,
Thy wavy forests, round in-isled,
Holt upon holt sublimely piled,
The sylvan lawn, the covert wild
Sound like a poet's dream.
And speckl'd o'er with straggling flocks,
Are open to the storm;
And, Corfe, down toppled are thy towers,
And in thy roofless hall and bowers
The hare and coney fourm.
Of king, captived or foully spilt,
Hath cast thy stones on earth;
The cause in which thy tow'rs did fall
Had brought a blessing on thy wall,
Did fortune follow worth.
The banners of your rightful liege,
At your she-captain's call;
Who—miracle of womankind!—
Lent mettle to the meanest hind,
That mann'd her castle-wall.
Long foil'd thy battled tow'rs before,
(Their fearful entrance made)
To raze thy stones with plough and harrow;
—Yet thrice the wild sow cast her farrow,
And well the boar was bay'd,
In the west-wind their colours danc'd.—
Long Corfe the day shall rue,
When on her walls their spite was wroke,
When loud the prison'd thunder broke,
And in a fountain-stream of smoke
Heaven-high their fragments flew.
![]() | The Crusade of St. Lewis | ![]() |