THE COMPLETE POETICAL WORKS OF SIR WALTER SCOTT. Walter Scott
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Название: THE COMPLETE POETICAL WORKS OF SIR WALTER SCOTT

Автор: Walter Scott

Издательство: Bookwire

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isbn: 9788027201907

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СКАЧАТЬ (A Scottish monarch slept below);

       Thus spoke the Monk, in solemn tone:

       “I was not always a man of woe;

       For Paynim coutries have I trod,

       And fought beneath the Cross of God:

       Now, strange to my eyes thine arms appear,

       And their iron clang sounds strange to my ear.

       XIII

      “In these far climes it was my lot

       To meet the wondrous Michael Scott,

       A wizard, of such dreaded fame,

       Than when, in Salmanca’s cave,

       Him listed his magic wand to wave,

       The bells would ring in Notre Dame!

       Some of his skill he taught to me;

       And Warrior, I could say to thee

       The words that cleft Eildon hills in three,

       And bridled the Tweed with a curb of stone:

       But to speak them were a deadly sin;

       And for having but thought them my heart within,

       A treble penance must be done.

       XIV

      “When Michael lay on his dying bed,

       His conscience was awakened:

       He bethought him of his sinful deed,

       And he gave me a sign to come with speed;

       I was in Spain when the morning rose,

       But I stood by his bed ere evening close.

       The words may not again be said,

       That he spoke to me, on deathbed laid;

       They would rend they Abbay’s massy nave,

       And pile it in heaps above his grave.

       XV

      “I swore to bury his Mighty Book,

       That never mortal might therein look;

       And never to tell where it was hid,

       Save at his Chief of Branksome’s need:

       And when that need was past and o’er,

       Again the volume to restore.

       I buried him on St. Michael’s night,

       When the bell toll’d one, and the moon was bright,

       And I dug his chamber among the dead,

       When the floor of the chancel was stained red,

       That his patron’s cross might over him wave,

       And scare the fiends from the Wizard’s grave.

       XVI

      “It was a night of woe and dread,

       When Michael in the tomb I laid!

       Strange sounds along the chancel pass’d,

       The banners waved without a blast;”

       Still spoke the Monk, when the bell toll’d one!

       I tell you, that a braver man

       Than William of Deloraine, good at need,

       Against a foe ne’er spurr’d a steed;

       Yet somewhat was he chill’d with dread,

       And his hair did bristle upon his head.

       XVII

      “Lo, Warrior! now, the Cross of Red

       Points to the grave of the mighty dead;

       Within it burns a wondrous light,

       To chase the spirits that love the night:

       That lamp shall burn unquenchably,

       Until the eternal doom shall be.”

       Slowly moved the Monk to the broad flagstone,

       Which the bloody Cross was traced upon:

       He pointed to a secret nook;

       An iron bar the Warrior took;

       And the Monk made a sign with his wither’d hand,

       The grave’s huge portal to expand.

       XVIII

      With beating heart to the task he went;

       His sinewy frame o’er the gravestone bent;

       With bar of iron heaved amain,

       Till the toil-drops fell from his brows, like rain.

       It was by dint of passing strength,

       That he moved the massy stone at length.

       I would you had been there, to see

       How the light broke forth so gloriously,

       Stream’d upward to the chancel roof,

       And through the galleries far aloof!

       No earthly flame blazed e’er so bright:

       It shone like haaven’s own blessed light,

       And, issuing from the tomb,

       Show’d th Monk’s cowl, and visage pale,

       Danced on the dark-brow’d Warrior’s mail,

       And kiss’d his waving plume.

       XIX

      Before their eyes the Wizard lay,

       As if he had not been dead a day.

       His hoary beard in silver roll’d,

       He seem’d some seventy winters old;

       A palmer’s amice wrapp’d him round,

       With a wrought Spanish baldric bound,

       Like a pilgrim from beyond the sea;

       СКАЧАТЬ