More Bywords. Yonge Charlotte Mary
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Название: More Bywords

Автор: Yonge Charlotte Mary

Издательство: Public Domain

Жанр: Поэзия

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СКАЧАТЬ a deadly freight;

      Each Viking, fired with greed and hate,

      His axe is whetting for the strife,

      And counting how each Christian life

      Shall win him fame in Skaldic lays,

      And in Valhalla endless praise.

      For Hamble’s river straight they steer;

      Prayer is in vain, no aid is near—

      Hopeless and helpless all must die.

      Oh, fainting heart and failing eye,

      Look forth upon the foe once more!

      Why leap they not upon the shore?

      Why pause their keels upon the strand,

      As checked by some resistless hand?

      The sail they spread, the oars they ply,

      Yet neither may advance nor fly.

III

      Who is it holds them helpless there?

      ’Tis He Who hears the anguished prayer;

         ’Tis He Who to the wave

      Hath fixed the bound—mud, rock, or sand—

      To mark how far upon the strand

         Its foaming sweep may rave.

      What is it, but the ebbing tide,

      That leaves them here, by Hamble’s side,

      So firm embedded in the mud

      No force of stream, nor storm, nor flood,

      Shall ever these five ships bear forth

      To fiords and islets of the north;

      A thousand years shall pass away,

      And leave those keels in Hamble’s bay.

IV

      Ill were it in my rhyme to tell

      The work of slaughter that befell;

      In sooth it was a savage time—

      Crime ever will engender crime.

      Each Viking, as he swam to land,

      Fell by a Saxon’s vengeful hand;

      Turn we from all that vengeance wild—

      Where on the deck there cowered a child,

      And, closely to his bosom prest,

      A snow-white kitten found a nest.

      That tender boy, with tresses fair,

      Was Edric, Egbert’s cherished heir;

      The plaything of the homestead he,

      Now fondled on his grandame’s knee;

      Or as beside the hearth he sat,

      Oft sporting with his snow-white cat;

      Now by the chaplain taught to read,

      And lisp his Pater and his Creed;

      Well nurtured at his mother’s side,

      And by his father trained to ride,

      To speak the truth, to draw the bow,

      And all an English Thane should know,

      His days had been as one bright dream—

      As smooth as his own river’s stream!

      Until, at good King Alfred’s call,

      Thane Egbert left his native hall.

V

      Then, five days later, shout and yell,

      And shrieks and howls of slaughter fell,

      Upon the peaceful homestead came.

      ’Mid flashing sword, and axe, and flame,

      Snatched by a Viking’s iron grasp,

      From his slain mother’s dying clasp,

      Saved from the household’s flaming grave,

      Edric was dragged, a destined slave,

      Some northern dame to serve, or heed

      The flocks that on the Sæter feed.

      Still, with scarce conscious hold he clung

      To the white cat, that closely hung

      Seeking her refuge in his arm,

      Her shelter in the wild alarm—

      And who can tell how oft his moan

      Was soothed by her soft purring tone?

      Time keeping with retracted claw,

      Or patting with her velvet paw;

      Although of home and friends bereft,

      Still this one comforter was left,

      So lithe, so swift, so soft, so white,

      She might have seemed his guardian sprite.

         The rude Danes deemed her such;

      And whispered tales of ‘disir’ bound

      To human lords, as bird or hound.

      Nor one ’mid all the fleet was found

         To hurt one tender paw.

      And when the captive knelt to pray

      None would his orisons gainsay;

      For as they marked him day by day,

         Increased their wondering awe.

VI

      Crouched by the mast, the child and cat,

      Through the dire time of slaughter sat,

         By terror both spellbound;

      But when night came, a silence drear

      Fell on the coast; and far or near,

      No voice caught Edric’s wakeful ear,

         Save water’s lapping sound.

      He wandered from the stern to prow,

      Ate of the stores, and marvelled how

         He yet might reach the ground;

      Till low and lower sank the tide,

      Dark banks of mud spread far and wide

         Around that fast-bound wreck.

      Then the lone boy climbed down the ship,

      To cross the mud by bound and skip,

         His cat upon his neck.

      Light was his weight and swift his leap,

      Now would he softly tread, now creep,

      For treacherous was the mud, and deep

      From stone to weed, from weed to plank,

      Leaving a hole where’er he sank;

      With panting breath and sore taxed strength

      The solid earth he felt at length.

      Sheltered within the copse he lay,

      When dawn had brightened into day,

      For when one moment there was seen,

      His red cap glancing ’mid the green,

         A fearful cry arose—

      “Here lurks a Dane!”  “The Dane seek out”

      With knife and axe, the rabble rout

      Made the copse ring with yell and shout

         To find their dreaded foes.

      And Edric feared to meet a stroke,

      Before they knew the tongue he spoke.

      Hid ’mid the branches of an oak,

         He heard their calls and blows.

      Of food he СКАЧАТЬ