University of Virginia Library

Search this document 
Lays and Ballads from Ancient History

etc. By S. M. [i.e. M. B. Smedley]
  

collapse sectionI. 
  
  
  
  
  
  
collapse section 
 1. 
 2. 
 3. 
collapse section4. 
  
  
  
  
 5. 
  
  
  
The Lament of Eleanor of Bretagne.
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
collapse sectionII. 
  
  
  
collapse section 
 1. 
 2. 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
collapse section 
 I. 
 II. 
  


62

The Lament of Eleanor of Bretagne.

[_]

[Eleanor was so beautiful that she was called “The Pearl of Brittany.” She was the sister of Prince Arthur; and after the murder of her brother she was imprisoned in Bristol Castle by the cruel and tyrannical John, where she died after a captivity of many years.]

Comfort me, O my God!
Mine only hope Thou art!
The strokes of Thine afflicting rod
Fall heavy on my heart.
Oh, who would wish to live
When life's bright flowers decay!
Oh, had I power to give
This weight of life away!
Comfort me, O my God!
Thou didst Thyself endure
Full many a bitter pang;
Thou, the All-holy, the All-pure,
Upon the cross didst hang.
My feet are on the track
Trodden erewhile by Thine;—
Ah, do not cast me back
On this weak heart of mine!
Comfort me, O my God!
I will pour forth my woes
Into Thy pitying ear.
Stern, stern must be the hearts of those
Whose hands confined me here;
In the morning of my days,
In the spring of guiltless mirth,

63

Never again to gaze
Free on the gladsome earth!
Comfort me, O my God!
'Twas said that I was fair
As the white gem of the sea;
They named me, in my native air,
The Pearl of Brittany:
At tourneys have I been,
And they chose me, far and near,
To reign the tourney's queen,—
I, the poor captive here.
Comfort me, O my God!
But I do not now regret
My splendour, doom'd to fade;
My changing beauty I forget;—
But oh, the wood's deep shade,
The free bird's gushing songs,
The sound of murmuring seas,—
For these my spirit longs,
And for dearer things than these.
Comfort me, O my God!
I had a brother then,
Whose place was in my heart;—
Oh, give me my beloved again,
And freedom may depart!
How shall I breathe the tone
Of that name,—the lost—the dear?
Arthur! mine own, mine own!—
Alas, thou canst not hear!
Comfort me, O my God!

64

They murder'd him by night,
In the sweetness of his youth,
His brow all bright with boyhood's light,
Clear as the beams of truth.
Falaise, thy walls, Falaise,
Behold a fearful thing,
For his brother's child a brother slays,
And a traitor stabs his king!
Comfort me, O my God!
Yes, king thou shouldst have been
Of this isle of high renown;
But death's wide gulf is now between
Thee and thy thorny crown.
My brother! thou wert mine!
Of crowns I little reck;
But, oh, that I could twine
These arms about thy neck.
Comfort me, O my God!
Sleep on, sweet Arthur, sleep
In thy calm and happy grave;
How couldst thou bear to see me weep,
And not have power to save?
Farewell! And shall I waste
My weary life away
In weeping for the past?
No! let me kneel and pray,
Comfort me, O my God!
That wailing voice hath ceased,
It melted into tears;

65

And death's sure hand the maid released,
After long mournful years.
In her beauty and her bloom
She was borne to that dark hold;
Thence was she carried to her tomb,
Grey-hair'd, and wan, and old!