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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       Will Surrey dare to entertain,

       ‘Gainst Marmion, charge disproved and vain?

       Small risk of that, I trow.

       Yet Clare’s sharp questions must I shun;

       Must separate Constance from the nun -

       Oh, what a tangled web we weave,

       When first we practise to deceive!

       A Palmer too!—no wonder why

       I felt rebuked beneath his eye:

       I might have known there was but one

       Whose look could quell Lord Marmion.”

       XVIII

      Stung with these thoughts, he urged to speed

       His troop, and reached, at eve, the Tweed,

       Where Lennel’s convent closed their march;

       (There now is left but one frail arch,

       Yet mourn thou not its cells:

       Our time a fair exchange has made;

       Hard by, in hospitable shade,

       A reverend pilgrim dwells,

       Well worth the whole Bernardine brood

       That e’er wore sandal, frock, or hood.)

       Yet did Saint Bernard’s Abbot there

       Give Marmion entertainment fair,

       And lodging for his train and Clare.

       Next morn the baron climbed the tower,

       To view afar the Scottish power,

       Encamped on Flodden edge:

       The white pavilions made a show,

       Like remnants of the winter snow,

       Along the dusky ridge.

       Long Marmion looked: at length his eye

       Unusual movement might descry

       Amid the shifting lines:

       The Scottish host drawn out appears,

       For, flashing on the edge of spears

       The eastern sunbeam shines.

       Their front now deepening, now extending

       Their flank inclining, wheeling, bending,

       Now drawing back, and now descending,

       The skilful Marmion well could know,

       They watched the motions of some foe,

       Who traversed on the plain below.

       XIX

      Even so it was. From Flodden ridge

       The Scots beheld the English host

       Leave Barmore Wood, their evening post,

       And heedful watched them as they crossed

       The Till by Twisel Bridge.

       High sight it is, and haughty, while

       They dive into the deep defile;

       Beneath the caverned cliff they fall,

       Beneath the castle’s airy wall.

       By rock, by oak, by hawthorn tree,

       Troop after troop are disappearing;

       Troop after troop their banners rearing;

       Upon the eastern bank you see.

       Still pouring down the rocky den,

       Where flows the sullen Till,

       And rising from the dim-wood glen,

       Standards on stardards, men on men,

       In slow succession still,

       And, sweeping o’er the Gothic arch,

       And pressing on, in ceaseless march,

       To gain the opposing hill.

       That morn, to many a trumpet clang,

       Twisel! thy rocks deep echo rang;

       And many a chief of birth and rank,

       Saint Helen! at thy fountain drank.

       Thy hawthorn glade which now we see

       In springtide bloom so lavishly,

       Had then from many an axe its doom,

       To give the marching columns room.

       XX

      And why stands Scotland idly now,

       Dark Flodden! on thy airy brow,

       Since England gains the pass the while,

       And struggles through the deep defile?

       What checks the fiery soul of James?

       Why sits that champion of the dames

       Inactive on his steed,

       And sees, between him and his land,

       Between him and Tweed’s southern strand,

       His host Lord Surrey lead?

       What ‘vails the vain knight-errant’s brand?

       Oh, Douglas for thy leading wand!

       Fierce Randolph, for thy speed!

       Oh, for one hour of Wallace wight,

       Or well-skilled Bruce, to rule the fight,

       And cry, “Saint Andrew and our right!”

       Another sight had seen that morn,

       From Fate’s dark book a leaf been torn,

       And Flodden had been Bannockbourne!

       The precious hour has passed in vain,

       And England’s host has gained the plain;

       Wheeling their march, and circling still,

       Around the base of Flodden Hill.

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