The Earthly Paradise, (March-August), by William Morris, [1868], at sacred-texts.com
WHEN Ogier was born, six fay ladies came to the cradle where he lay, and gave him various gifts, as to be brave and happy and the like; but the sixth gave him to he her love when he should have lived long in the world: so Ogier grew up and became the greatest of knights, and at last, after many years, fell into the hands of that fay, and with her, as the story tells, he lives now, though he returned once to the world, as is shown in the process of this tale.
WITHIN some Danish city by the sea,
 Whose name, changed now, is all unknown to me,
 Great mourning was there one fair summer eve,
 Because the angels, bidden to receive
 The fair Queen's lovely soul in Paradise,
 Had done their bidding, and in royal guise
 Her helpless body, once the prize of love,
 Unable now for fear or hope to move,
 Lay underneath the golden canopy;
 And bowed down by unkingly misery
 The King sat by it, and not far away, p. 618
 Within the chamber a fair man-child lay,
 His mother's bane, the king that was to be,
 Not witting yet of any royalty,
 Harmless and loved, although so new to life.
   Calm the June evening was, no sign of strife
 The clear sky showed, no storm grew round the sun,
 Unhappy that his day of bliss was done;
 Dumb was the sea, and if the beech-wood stirred,
 Twas with the nestling of the grey-winged bird
 Midst its thick leaves; and though the nightingale
 Her ancient, hapless sorrow must bewail,
 No more of woe there seemed in her song
 Than such as doth to lovers words belong,
 Because their love is still unsatisfied.
    But to the King, on that sweet eventide,
 No earth there seemed, no heaven when earth was gone;
 No help, no God! but lonely pain alone;
 And he, midst unreal shadows, seemed to sit
 Himself the very heart and soul of it.
 But round the cradle of the new-born child
 The nurses now the weary time beguiled
 With stories of the just departed Queen;
 And how, amid the heathen folk first seen,
 She had been won to love and godliness;
 And as they spoke, een midst his dull distress,
 An eager whisper now and then would smite
 Upon the King's ear, of some past delight,
 Some once familiar name, and he would raise p. 619
 His weary head, and on the speaker gaze
 Like one about to speak, but soon again
 Would drop his head and be alone with pain,
 Nor think of these; who, silent in their turn,
 Would sit and watch the waxen tapers burn
 Amidst the dusk of the quick-gathering night,
 Until beneath the high stars glimmering light,
 The fresh earth lay in colourless repose.
    So past the night, and now and then one rose
 From out her place to do what might avail
 To still the new-born infant's fretful wail;
 Or through the softly-opened door there came
 Some nurse new waked, who, whispering low the name
 Of her whose turn was come, would take her place;
 Then toward the King would turn about her face
 And to her fellows whisper of the day,
 And tell again of her just past away.
   So passed the night, the moon arose and grew,
 From off the sea a little west-wind blew,
 Rustling the garden-leaves like sudden rain;
 And ere the moon had gun to fall again
 The wind grew cold, a change was in the sky,
 And in deep silence did the dawn draw nigh:
 Then from her place a nurse arose to light
 Fresh hallowed lights, for, dying with the night,
 The tapers round about the dead Queen were;
 But the King raised his head and gan to stare
 Upon her, as her sweeping gown did glide p. 620
 About the floor, that in the stillness cried
 Beneath her careful feet; and now as she
 Had lit the second candle carefully,
 And on its silver spike a second one
 Was setting, through her body did there run
 A sudden tremor, and the hand was stayed
 That on the dainty painted wax was laid;
 Her eyelids fell down and she seemed to sleep,
 And oer the staring King began to creep
 Sweet slumber too; the bitter lines of woe
 That drew his weary face did softer grow,
 His eyelids dropped, his arms fell to his side;
 And moveless in their places did abide
 The nursing women, held by some strong spell,
 Een as they were, and utter silence fell
 Upon the mournful, glimmering chamber fair.
    But now light footsteps coming up the stair,
 Smote on the deadly stillness, and the sound
 Of silken dresses trailing oer the ground;
 And heavenly odours through the chamber passed,
 Unlike the scents that rose and lily cast
 Upon the freshness of the dying night;
 Then nigher drew the sound of footsteps light
 Until the door swung open noiselessly
 A mass of sunlit flowers there seemed to be
 Within the doorway, and but pale and wan
 The flame showed now that serveth mortal man,
 As one by one six seeming ladies passed
 Into the room, and oer its sorrow cast p. 621
 That thoughtless sense of joy bewildering,
 That kisses youthful hearts amidst of spring;
 Crowned were they, in such glorious raiment clad,
 As yet no merchant of the world has had
 Within his coffers; yet those crowns seemed fair
 Only because they kissed their odorous hair,
 And all that flowery raiment was but blessed
 By those fair bodies that its splendour pressed.
    Now to the cradle from that glorious band,
 A woman passed, and laid a tender hand
 Upon the babe, and gently drew aside
 The swathings soft that did his body hide;
 And, seeing him so fair and great, she smiled,
 And stooped, and kissed him, saying, "O noble child,
 Have thou a gift from Gloriande this day;
 For to the time when life shall pass away
 From this dear heart, no fear of death or shame,
 No weariness of good shall foul thy name."
    So saying, to her sisters she returned;
 And one came forth, upon whose brow there burned
 A crown of rubies, and whose heaving breast
 With happy rings a golden hauberk pressed;
 She took the babe, and somewhat frowning said,
 "This gift I give, that till thy limbs are laid
 At rest for ever, to thine honoured life
 There never shall be lacking war and strife,
 That thou a long-enduring name mayst win,
 And by thy deeds, good pardon for thy sin."
    With that another, who, unseen, meanwhile p. 622
 Had drawn anigh, said with a joyous smile,
 "And this forgotten gift to thee I give,
 That while amidst the turmoil thou dost live,
 Still shalt thou win the game, and unto thee
 Defeat and shame but idle words shall be."
    Then back they turned, and therewithal, the fourth
 Said, "Take this gift for what it may be worth,
 For that is mine to give; lo, thou shalt be
 Gentle of speech, and in all courtesy
 The first of men: a little gift this is,
 After these promises of fame and bliss."
    Then toward the babe the fifth fair woman went;
 Grey-eyed she was, and simple, with eyes bent
 Down on the floor, parted her red lips were,
 And oer her sweet face marvellously fair
 Oft would the colour spread full suddenly;
 Clad in a dainty gown and thin was she,
 For some green summer of the fay-land dight,
 Tripping she went, and laid her fingers light
 Upon the child, and said, "O little one,
 As long as thou shalt look upon the sun
 Shall women long for thee; take heed to this
 And give them what thou canst of love and bliss."
    Then, blushing for her words, therefrom she past,
 And by the cradle stood the sixth and last,
 The fairest of them all; awhile she gazed
 Down on the child, and then her hand she raised,
 And made the one side of her bosom bare;
 "Ogier," she said, "if this be foul or fair p. 623
 Thou knowst not now, but when thine earthly life
 Is drunk out to the dregs, and war and strife
 Have yielded thee whatever joy they may,
 Thine head upon this bosom shalt thou lay;
 And then, despite of knowledge or of God,
 Will we be glad upon the flowery sod
 Within the happy country where I dwell:
 Ogier, my love that is to be, farewell!"
   She turned, and even as they came they passed
 From out the place, and reached the gate at last
 That oped before their feet, and speedily
 They gained the edges of the murmuring sea,
 And as they stood in silence, gazing there
 Out to the west, they vanished into air,
 I know not how, nor whereto they returned.
   But mixed with twilight in the chamber burned
 The flickering candles, and those dreary folk,
 Unlike to sleepers, from their trance awoke,
 But nought of what had happed meanwhile they knew;
 Through the half-opened casements now there blew
 A sweet fresh air, that of the flowers and sea
 Mingled together, smelt deliciously,
 And from the unseen sun the spreading light
 Began to make the fair June blossoms bright,
 And midst their weary woe uprose the sun,
 And thus has Ogier's noble life begun.
HOPE is our life, when first our life grows clear;
 Hope and delight, scarce crossed by lines of fear,
 Yet the day comes when fain we would not hope,
 But forasmuch as we with life must cope,
 Struggling with this and that, and who knows why
 Hope will not give us up to certainty,
 But still must bide with us: and with this man,
 Whose life amid such promises began
    Great things she wrought; but now the time has come
 When he no more on earth may have his home.
 Great things he suffered, great delights he had,
 Unto great kings he gave good deeds for bad;
 He ruled oer kingdoms where his name no more
 Is had in memory, and on many a shore
 He left his sweat and blood to win a name
 Passing the bounds of earthly creatures fame.
 A love he won and lost, a well-loved son
 Whose little day of promise soon was done:
 A tender wife he had, that he must leave
 Before his heart her love could well receive;
 Those promised gifts, that on his careless head
 In those first hours of his fair life were shed
 He took unwitting, and unwitting spent,
 Nor gave himself to grief and discontent
 Because he saw the end a-drawing nigh. p. 625
    Where is he now? in what land must he die,
 To leave an empty name to us on earth?
 A tale half true, to cast across our mirth
 Some pensive thoughts of life that might have been,
 Where is he now, that all this life has seen?
   Behold, another eve I bid you see
 Than that calm eve of his nativity;
 The sun is setting in the west, the sky
 Is clear and hard, and no clouds come anigh
 The golden orb, but further off they lie,
 Steel-grey and black with edges red as blood,
 And underneath them is the weltering flood
 Of some huge sea, whose tumbling hills, as they
 Turn restless sides about, are black or grey,
 Or green, or glittering with the golden flame;
 The wind has fallen now, but still the same
 The mighty army moves, as if to drown
 This lone, bare rock, whose shear scarped sides of brown
 Cast off the weight of waves in clouds of spray.
    Alas! what ships upon an evil day
 Bent over to the wind in this ill sea?
 What navy, whose rent bones lie wretchedly
 Beneath these cliffs? a mighty one it was,
 A fearful storm to bring such things to pass.
   This is the loadstone rock; no armament
 Of warring nations, in their madness bent
 Their course this way; no merchant wittingly p. 626
 Has steered his keel unto this luckless sea;
 Upon no shipman's card its name is writ,
 Though worn-out mariners will speak of it
 Within the ingle on the winter's night,
 When all within is warm and safe and bright,
 And the wind howls without: but gainst their will
 Are some folk driven here, and then all skill
 Against this evil rock is vain and nought,
 And unto death the shipmen soon are brought;
 For then the keel, as by a giant's hand,
 Is drawn unto that mockery of a land,
 And presently unto its sides doth cleave;
 When if they scape swift death, yet none may leave
 The narrow limits of that barren isle,
 And thus are slain by famine in a while
 Mocked, as they say, by night with images
 Of noble castles among gloves of trees,
 By day with sounds of merry minstrelsy.
   The sun sinks now below this hopeless sea,
 The clouds are gone, and all the sky is bright;
 The moon is rising oer the growing night,
 And by its light may ye behold the bones
 Of generations of these luckless ones
 Scattered about the rock; but nigh the sea
 Sits one alive, who uncomplainingly
 Awaits his death. White-haired is he and old,
 Arrayed in royal raiment, bright with gold,
 But tarnished with the waves and rough salt air; p. 627
 Huge is he, of a noble face and fair,
 As for an ancient man, though toil and eld
 Furrow the cheeks that ladies once beheld
 With melting heartsNay, listen, for he speaks!
    "God, thou hast made me strong! nigh seven weeks
 Have passed since from the wreck we haled our store,
 And five long days well told, have now passed oer
 Since my last fellow died, with my last bread
 Between his teeth, and yet I am not dead.
 Yea, but for this I had been strong enow
 In some last bloody field my sword to show.
 What matter? soon will all be past and done,
 Whereer I died I must have died alone:
 Yet, Caraheu, a good death had it been
 Dying, thy face above me to have seen,
 And heard my banner flapping in the wind,
 Then, though my memory had not left thy mind,
 Yet hope and fear would not have vexed thee more
 When thou hadst known that everything was oer;
 But now thou waitest, still expecting me,
 Whose sail shall never speck thy bright blue sea.
    "And thou, Clarice, the merchants thou mayst call,
 To tell thee tales within thy pictured hall,
 But never shall they tell true tales of me:
 Whatever sails the Kentish hills may see
 Swept by the flood-tide toward thy well-walled town,
 No more on my sails shall they look adown.
    "Get thee another leader, Charlemaine,
 For thou shalt look to see my shield in vain, p. 628
 When in the fair fields of the Frankish land,
 Thick as the corn they tread, the heathen stand.
    "What matter? ye shall learn to live your lives;
 Husbands and children, other friends and wives,
 Shall wipe the tablets of your memory clean,
 And all shall be as I had never been.
   "And now, O God, am I alone with Thee;
 A little thing indeed it seems to be
 To give this life up, since it needs must go
 Some time or other; now at last I know
 How foolishly men play upon the earth,
 When unto them a year of life seems worth
 Honour and friends, and these vague hopes and sweet
 That like real things my dying heart do greet,
 Unreal while living on the earth I trod,
 And but myself I knew no other god.
 Behold, I thank Thee that Thou sweetnest thus,
 This end, that I had thought most piteous,
 If of another I had heard it told."
   What man is this, who weak and worn and old,
 Gives up his life within that dreadful isle,
 And on the fearful coming death can smile?
 Alas! this man so battered and outworn,
 Is none but he, who, on that summer morn,
 Received such promises of glorious life:
 Ogier the Dane this is, to whom all strife
 Was but as wine to stir awhile the blood, p. 629
 To whom all life, however hard, was good
 This is the man, unmatched of heart and limb,
 Ogier the Dane, whose sight has waxed not dim
 For all the years that he on earth has dwelt;
 Ogier the Dane, that never fear has felt,
 Since he knew good from ill; Ogier the Dane,
 The heathen's dread, the evil-doer's bane.
BRIGHT had the moon grown as his words were done,
 And no more was there memory of the sun
 Within the west, and he grew drowsy now,
 And somewhat smoother was his wrinkled brow
 As thought died out beneath the hand of sleep,
 And oer his soul forgetfulness did creep,
 Hiding the image of swift-coming death;
 Until as peacefully he drew his breath
 As on that day, past for a hundred years,
 When, midst the nurse's quickly-falling tears,
 He fell asleep to his first lullaby.
    The night changed as he slept, white clouds and high
 Began about the lonely moon to close;
 And from the dark west a new wind arose,
 And with the sound of heavy-falling waves
 Mingled its pipe about the loadstone caves; p. 630
 But when the twinkling stars were hid away,
 And a faint light and broad, like dawn of day,
 The moon upon that dreary country shed,
 Ogier awoke, and lifting up his head
 And smiling, muttered, "Nay, no more again;
 Rather some pleasure new, some other pain,
 Unthought of both, some other form of strife;"
 For he had waked from dreams of his old life,
 And through St. Omer's archer-guarded gate
 Once more had seemed to pass, and saw the state
 Of that triumphant king; and still, though all
 Seemed changed, and folk by other names did call
 Faces he knew of old, yet none the less
 He seemed the same, and, midst that mightiness,
 Felt his own power, and grew the more athirst
 For coming glory, as of old, when first
 He stood before the face of Charlemaine,
 A helpless hostage with all life to gain.
    But now, awake, his worn face once more sank
 Between his hands, and, murmuring not, he drank
 The draught of death that must that thirst allay.
   But while he sat and waited for the day
 A sudden light across the bare rock streamed,
 Which at the first he noted not, but deemed
 The moon her fleecy veil had broken through;
 But ruddier indeed this new light grew
 Than were the moon's grey beams, and, therewithal,
 Soft far-off music on his ears did fall; p. 631
 Yet moved he not, but murmured, "This is death,
 An easy thing like this to yield my breath,
 Awake, yet dreaming, with no sounds of fear,
 No dreadful sights to tell me it is near;
 Yea, God, I thank thee!" but with that last word
 It seemed to him that he his own name heard
 Whispered, as though the wind had borne it past;
 With that he gat unto his feet at last,
 But still awhile he stood, with sunken head,
 And in a low and trembling voice he said,
 "Lord, I am ready, whither shall I go?
 I pray thee unto me some token show."
 And, as he said this, round about he turned,
 And in the east beheld a light that burned
 As bright as day; then, though his flesh might fear
 The coming change that he believed so near,
 Yet did his soul rejoice, for now he thought
 Unto the very heaven to be brought:
 And though he felt alive, deemed it might be
 That he in sleep had died full easily.
    Then toward that light did he begin to go,
 And still those strains he heard, far off and low,
 That grew no louder; still that bright light streamed
 Over the rocks, yet nothing brighter seemed,
 But like the light of some unseen bright flame
 Shone round about, until at last he came
 Unto the dreary islet's other shore,
 And then the minstrelsy he heard no more,
 And softer seemed the strange light unto him; p. 632
 But yet or ever it had grown quite dim,
 Beneath its waning light could he behold
 A mighty palace set about with gold,
 Above green meads and groves of summer trees
 Far-off across the welter of the seas;
 But, as he gazed, it faded from his sight,
 And the grey hidden moon's diffused soft light,
 Which soothly was but darkness to him now,
 His sea-girt island prison did but show.
    But oer the sea he still gazed wistfully,
 And said, "Alas! and when will this go by
 And leave my soul in peace? must I still dream
 Of life that once so dear a thing did seem,
 That, when I wake, death may the bitterer be?
 Here will I sit until he come to me,
 And hide mine eyes and think upon my sin,
 That so a little calm I yet may win
 Before I stand within the awful place."
    Then down he sat and covered up his face,
 Yet therewithal his trouble could not hide,
 Nor waiting thus for death could he abide,
 For, though he knew it not, the yearning pain
 Of hope of life had touched his soul again
 If he could live awhile, if he could live!
 The mighty being, who once was wont to give
 The gift of life to many a trembling man;
 Who did his own will since his life began;
 Who feared not aught, but strong and great and free
 Still cast aside the thought of what might be; p. 633
 Must all this then be lost, and with no will,
 Powerless and blind, must he some fate fulfil,
 Nor know what he is doing any more?
   Soon he arose and paced along the shore,
 And gazed out seaward for the blessed light;
 But nought he saw except the old sad sight,
 The ceaseless tumbling of the billows grey,
 The white upspringing of the spurts of spray
 Amidst that mass of timbers, the rent bones
 Of the sea-houses of the hapless ones
 Once cast like him upon this deadly isle.
    He stopped his pacing in a little while,
 And clenched his mighty hands, and set his teeth,
 And gazing at the ruin underneath,
 He swung from off the bare cliff's jagged brow,
 And on some slippery ledge he wavered now,
 Without a hand-hold, and now stoutly clung
 With hands alone, and oer the welter hung,
 Not caring aught if thus his life should end;
 But safely midst all this did he descend
 The dreadful cliff, and since no beach was there,
 But from the depths the rock rose stark and bare,
 Nor crumbled aught beneath the hammering sea,
 Upon the wrecks he stood unsteadily.
   But now, amid the clamour of the waves,
 And washing to-and-fro of beams and staves,
 Dizzy with hunger, dreamy with distress, p. 634
 And all those days of fear and loneliness,
 The ocean's tumult seemed the battle's roar,
 His heart grew hot, as when in days of yore
 He heard the cymbals clash amid the crowd
 Of dusky faces; now he shouted loud,
 And from crushed beam to beam began to leap,
 And yet his footing somehow did he keep
 Amidst their tossing, and indeed the sea
 Was somewhat sunk upon the island's lee.
 So quickly on from wreck to wreck he passed,
 And reached the outer line of wrecks at last,
 And there a moment stood unsteadily,
 Amid the drift of spray that hurried by,
 And drew Courtain his sword from out its sheath,
 And poised himself to meet the coming death,
 Still looking out to sea; but as he gazed,
 And once or twice his doubtful feet he raised
 To take the final plunge, that heavenly strain
 Over the washing waves he heard again,
 And from the dimness something bright he saw
 Across the waste of waters towards him draw;
 And hidden now, now raised aloft, at last
 Unto his very feet a boat was cast,
 Gilded inside and out, and well arrayed
 With cushions soft; far fitter to have weighed
 From some sweet garden on the shallow Seine,
 Or in a reach of green Thames to have lain,
 Than struggle with that huge confusèd sea;
 But Ogier gazed upon it doubtfully p. 635
 One moment, and then, sheathing Courtain, said,
 "What tales are these about the newly dead
 The heathen told? what matter, let all pass;
 This moment as one dead indeed I was,
 And this must be what I have got to do,
 I yet perchance may light on something new
 Before I die; though yet perchance this keel
 Unto the wondrous mass of charmed steel
 Is drawn as others." With that word he leapt
 Into the boat, and oer the cushions crept
 From stem to stern, but found no rudder there,
 Nor any oars, nor were the cushions fair
 Made wet by any dashing of the sea.
    Now while he pondered how these things could be,
 The boat began to move therefrom at last,
 But over him a drowsiness was cast,
 And as oer tumbling hills the skiff did pass,
 He clean forgot his death and where he was.
   At last he woke up to a sunny day,
 And, looking round, saw that his shallop lay
 Moored at the edge of some fair tideless sea
 Unto an overhanging thick-leaved tree,
 Where in the green waves did the low bank dip
 Its fresh and green grass-covered daisied lip;
 But Ogier looking thence no more could see
 That sad abode of death and misery,
 Nor aught but wide and empty ocean, grey
 With gathering haze, for now it neared midday; p. 636
 Then from the golden cushions did he rise,
 And wondering still if this were Paradise
 He stepped ashore, but drew Courtain his sword
 And muttered therewithal a holy word.
    Fair was the place, as though amidst of May,
 Nor did the brown birds fear the sunny day,
 For with their quivering song the air was sweet;
 Thick grew the field-flowers underneath his feet,
 And on his head the blossoms down did rain,
 Yet mid these fair things slowly and with pain
 He gan to go, yea, even when his foot
 First touched the flowery sod, to his heart's root
 A coldness seemed to strike, and now each limb
 Was growing stiff, his eyes waxed bleared and dim,
 And all his stored-up memory gan to fail,
 Nor yet would his once mighty heart avail
 For lamentations oer his changed lot;
 Yet urged by some desire, he knew not what,
 Along a little path twixt hedges sweet,
 Drawn sword in hand, he dragged his faltering feet,
 For what then seemed to him a weary way,
 Whereon his steps he needs must often stay
 And lean upon the mighty well-worn sword
 That in those hands, grown old, for king or lord
 Had small respect in glorious days long past.
   But still he crept along, and at the last
 Came to a gilded wicket, and through this
 Entered a garden fit for utmost bliss, p. 637
 If that might last which needs must soon go by:
 There gainst a tree he leaned, and with a sigh
 He said, "O God, a sinner I have been,
 And good it is that I these things have seen
 Before I meet what thou hast set apart
 To cleanse the earthly folly from my heart;
 But who within this garden now can dwell
 Wherein guilt first upon the world befell?"
    A little further yet he staggered on,
 Till to a fountain-side at last he won,
 Oer which two white-thorns their sweet blossoms shed,
 There he sank down, and laid his weary head
 Beside the mossy roots, and in a while
 He slept, and dreamed himself within the isle;
 That splashing fount the weary sea did seem,
 And in his dream the fair place but a dream;
 But when again to feebleness he woke
 Upon his ears that heavenly music broke,
 Not faint or far as in the isle it was,
 But een as though the minstrels now did pass
 Anigh his resting-place; then fallen in doubt,
 Een as he might, he rose and gazed about,
 Leaning against the hawthorn stem with pain;
 And yet his straining gaze was but in vain,
 Death stole so fast upon him, and no more
 Could he behold the blossoms as before,
 No more the trees seemed rooted to the ground,
 A heavy mist seemed gathering all around,
 And in its heart some bright thing seemed to be, p. 638
 And round his head there breathed deliciously
 Sweet odours, and that music never ceased.
 But as the weight of Death's strong hand increased
 Again he sank adown, and Courtain's noise
 Within the scabbard seemed a farewell voice
 Sent from the world he loved so well of old,
 And all his life was as a story told,
 And as he thought thereof he gan to smile
 Een as a child asleep, but in a while
 It was as though he slept, and sleeping dreamed,
 For in his half-closed eyes a glory gleamed,
 As though from some sweet face and golden hair,
 And on his breast were laid soft hands and fair,
 And a sweet voice was ringing in his ears,
 Broken as if with flow of joyous tears;
    "Ogier, sweet friend, hast thou not tarried long?
 Alas! thine hundred years of strife and wrong!"
 Then he found voice to say, "Alas! dear Lord,
 Too long, too long; and yet one little word
 Right many a year agone had brought me here."
 Then to his face that face was drawn anear,
 He felt his head raised up and gently laid
 On some kind knee, again the sweet voice said,
 "Nay, Ogier, nay, not yet, not yet, dear friend!
 Who knoweth when our linked life shall end,
 Since thou art come unto mine arms at last,
 And all the turmoil of the world is past?
 Why do I linger ere I see thy face
 As I desired it in that mourning place p. 639
 So many years agoso many years,
 Thou knewest not thy love and all her fears?"
    "Alas!" he said, "what mockery is this
 That thou wilt speak to me of earthly bliss?
 No longer can I think upon the earth,
 Have I not done with all its grief and mirth?
 Yes, I was Ogier once, but if my love
 Should come once more my dying heart to move,
 Then must she come from neath the milk-white walls
 Whereon to-day the hawthorn blossom falls
 Outside St. Omer'sart thou she? her name
 I could remember once mid death and fame
 GIs clean forgotten now; but yesterday,
 Meseems, our son, upon her bosom lay:
 Baldwin the fairwhat hast thou done with him
 Since Charlot slew him? Ah, mine eyes wax dim;
 Woman, forbear! wilt thou not let me die?
 Did I forget thee in the days gone by?
 Then let me die, that we may meet again!"
   He tried to move from her, but all in vain,
 For life had well-nigh left him, but withal
 He felt a kiss upon his forehead fall,
 And could not speak; he felt slim fingers fair
 Move to his mighty sword-worn hand, and there,
 Set on some ring, and still he could not speak,
 And once more sleep weighed down his eyelids weak.
BUT, ah! what land was this he woke unto?
 What joy was this that filled his heart anew?
 Had he then gained the very Paradise?
 Trembling, he durst not at the first arise,
 Although no more he felt the pain of eld,
 Nor durst he raise his eyes that now beheld
 Beside him the white flowers and blades of grass;
 He durst not speak, lest he some monster was.
    But while he lay and hoped, that gentle voice
 Once more he heard; "Yea, thou mayst well rejoice!
 Thou livest still, my sweet, thou livest still,
 Apart from every earthly fear and ill;
 Wilt thou not love me, who have wrought thee this,
 That I like thee may live in double bliss?"
    Then Ogier rose up, nowise like to one
 Whose span of earthly life is nigh outrun,
 But as he might have risen in old days
 To see the spears cleave the fresh morning haze;
 But, looking round, he saw no change there was
 In the fair place wherethrough he first did pass,
 Though all, grown clear and joyous to his eyes,
 Now looked no worse than very Paradise;
 Behind him were the thorns, the fountain fair
 Still sent its glittering stream forth into air,
 And by its basin a fair woman stood,
 And as their eyes met his renewèd blood
 Rushed to his face; with unused thoughts and sweet p. 641
 And hurrying hopes, his heart began to beat.
    The fairest of all creatures did she seem;
 So fresh and delicate you well might deem
 That scarce for eighteen summers had she blessed
 The happy, longing world; yet, for the rest,
 Within her glorious eyes such wisdom dwelt
 A child before her had the wise man felt,
 And with the pleasure of a thousand years
 Her lips were fashioned to move joy or tears
 Among the longing folk where she might dwell,
 To give at last the kiss unspeakable.
    In such wise was she clad as folk may be,
 Who, for no shame of their humanity,
 For no sad changes of the imperfect year,
 Rather for added beauty, raiment wear;
 For, as the heat-foretelling grey-blue haze
 Veils the green flowery morn of late May-days,
 Her raiment veiled her; where the bands did meet
 That bound the sandals to her dainty feet,
 Gems gleamed; a fresh rose-wreath embraced her head,
 And on her breast there lay a ruby red.
    So with a supplicating look she turned
 To meet the flame that in his own eyes burned,
 And held out both her white arms lovingly,
 As though to greet him as he drew anigh.
 Stammering he said, "Who art thou? how am I
 So cured of all my evils suddenly,
 That certainly I felt no mightier, when,
 Amid the backward rush of beaten men, p. 642
 About me drooped the axe-torn Oriflamme?
 Alas! I fear that in some dream I am."
    "Ogier," she said, "draw near, perchance it is
 That such a name God gives unto our bliss;
 I know not, but if thou art such an one
 As I must deem, all days beneath the sun
 That thou hast had, shall be but dreams indeed
 To those that I have given thee at thy need.
 For many years ago beside the sea
 When thou wert born, I plighted troth with thee:
 Come near then, and make mirrors of mine eyes,
 That thou mayst see what these my mysteries
 Have wrought in thee; surely but thirty years,
 Passed amidst joy, thy new-born body bears,
 Nor while thou art with me, and on this shore
 Art still full-fed of love, shalt thou seem more.
 Nay, love, come nigher, and let me take thine hand,
 The hope and fear of many a warring land,
 And I will show thee wherein lies the spell,
 Whereby this happy change upon thee fell."
   Like a shy youth before some royal love,
 Close up to that fair woman did he move,
 And their hands met; yet to his changed voice
 He dared not trust; nay, scarcely could rejoice
 Een when her balmy breath he gan to feel,
 And felt strange sweetness oer his spirit steal
 As her light raiment, driven by the wind,
 Swept round him, and, bewildered and half-blind, p. 643
 His lips the treasure of her lips did press,
 And round him clung her perfect loveliness.
    For one sweet moment thus they stood, and then
 She drew herself from out his arms again,
 And panting, lovelier for her love, did stand
 Apart awhile, then took her lover's hand,
 And, in a trembling voice, made haste to say,
    "O Ogier, when thou camest here to-day,
 I feared indeed, that in my sport with fate,
 I might have seen thee een one day too late,
 Before this ring thy finger should embrace;
 Behold it, love, and thy keen eyes may trace
 Faint figures wrought upon the ruddy gold;
 My father dying gave it me, nor told
 The manner of its making, but I know
 That it can make thee een as thou art now
 Despite the laws of Godshrink not from me
 Because I give an impious gift to thee
 Has not God made me also, who do this?
 But I, who longed to share with thee my bliss,
 Am of the fays, and live their changeless life,
 And, like the gods of old, I see the strife
 That moves the world, unmoved if so I will;
 For we the fruit, that teaches good and ill,
 Have never touched like you of Adam's race;
 And while thou dwellest with me in this place
 Thus shalt thou beah, and thou deemst, indeed,
 That thou shalt gain thereby no happy meed
 Reft of the world's joys? nor canst understand p. 644
 How thou art come into a happy land?
 Love, in thy world the priests of heaven still sing,
 And tell thee of it many a joyous thing;
 But thinkst thou, bearing the world's joy and pain,
 Thou couldst live there? nay, nay, but born again
 Thou wouldst be happy with the angels bliss;
 And so with us no otherwise it is,
 Nor hast thou cast thine old life quite away
 Even as yet, though that shall be to-day.
    "But for the love and country thou hast won,
 Know thou, that thou art come to Avallon,
 That is both thine and mine; and as for me,
 Morgan le Fay men call me commonly
 Within the world, but fairer names than this
 I have for thee and me, twixt kiss and kiss."
   Ah, what was this? and was it all in vain,
 That she had brought him here this life to gain?
 For, ere her speech was done, like one turned blind
 He watched the kisses of the wandering wind
 Within her raiment, or as some one sees
 The very best of well-wrought images
 When he is blind with grief, did he behold
 The wandering tresses of her locks of gold
 Upon her shoulders; and no more he pressed
 The hand that in his own hand lay at rest:
 His eyes, grown dull with changing memories,
 Could make no answer to her glorious eyes:
 Cold waxed his heart, and weary and distraught, p. 645
 With many a cast-by, hateful, dreary thought,
 Unfinished in the old days; and withal
 He needs must think of what might chance to fall
 In this life new-begun; and good and bad
 Tormented him, because as yet he had
 A worldly heart within his frame made new,
 And to the deeds that he was wont to do
 Did his desires still turn. But she a while
 Stood gazing at him with a doubtful smile,
 And let his hand fall down; but suddenly
 Sounded sweet music from some close nearby,
 And then she spoke again: "Come, love, with me,
 That thou thy new life and delights mayst see."
 And gently with that word she led him thence,
 And though upon him now there fell a sense
 Of dreamy and unreal bewilderment,
 As hand in hand through that green place they went,
 Yet therewithal a strain of tender love
 A little yet his restless heart did move.
   So through the whispering trees they came at last
 To where a wondrous house a shadow cast
 Across the flowers, and oer the daisied grass
 Before it, crowds of lovely folk did pass,
 Playing about in carelessness and mirth,
 Unshadowed by the doubtful deeds of earth;
 And from the midst a band of fair girls came,
 With flowers and music, greeting him by name,.
 And praising him; but ever like a dream p. 646
 He could not break, did all to Ogier seem,
 And he his old world did the more desire,
 For in his heart still burned unquenched the fire,
 That through the world of old so bright did burn:
 Yet was he fain that kindness to return,
 And from the depth of his full heart he sighed.
    Then toward the house the lovely Queen did guide
 His listless steps, and seemed to take no thought
 Of knitted brow or wandering eyes distraught,
 But still with kind love lighting up her face
 She led him through the door of that fair place,
 While round about them did the damsels press;
 And he was moved by all that loveliness
 As one might be, who, lying half asleep
 In the May morning, notes the light wind sweep
 Over the tulip-beds: no more to him
 Were gleaming eyes, red lips, and bodies slim,
 Amidst that dream, although the first surprise
 Of hurried love wherewith the Queen's sweet eyes
 Had smitten him, still in his heart did stir.
   And so at last he came, led on by her
 Into a hall wherein a fair throne was,
 And hand in hand thereto the twain did pass;
 And there she bade him sit, and when alone
 He took his place upon the double throne,
 She cast herself before him on her knees,
 Embracing his, and greatly did increase
 The shame and love that vexed his troubled heart: p. 647
 But now a line of girls the crowd did part,
 Lovelier than all, and Ogier could behold
 One in their midst who bore a crown of gold
 Within her slender hands and delicate;
 She, drawing nigh, beside the throne did wait
 Until the Queen arose and took the crown,
 Who then to Ogier's lips did stoop adown
 And kissed him, and said, "Ogier, what were worth
 Thy miserable days of strife on earth,
 That on their ashes still thine eyes are turned?"
    Then, as she spoke these words, his changed heart burned
 With sudden memories, and thereto had he
 Made answer, but she raised up suddenly
 The crown she held and set it on his head,
 "Ogier," she cried, "those troublous days are dead;
 Thou wert dead with them also, but for me;
 Turn unto her who wrought these things for thee!"
    Then, as he felt her touch, a mighty wave
 Of love swept oer his soul, as though the grave
 Did really hold his body; from his seat
 He rose to cast himself before her feet;
 But she clung round him, and in close embrace
 The twain were locked amidst that thronging place.
   Thenceforth new life indeed has Ogier won,
 And in the happy land of Avallon
 Quick glide the years oer his unchanging head;
 There saw he many men the world thought dead,p. 648
 Living like him in sweet forgetfulness
 Of all the troubles that did once oppress
 Their vainly-struggling livesah, how can I
 Tell of their joy as though I had been nigh?
 Suffice it that no fear of death they knew,
 That there no talk there was of false or true,
 Of right or wrong, for traitors came not there;
 That everything was bright and soft and fair,
 And yet they wearied not for any change,
 Nor unto them did constancy seem strange.
 Love knew they, but its pain they never had,
 But with each other's joy were they made glad;
 Nor were their lives wasted by hidden fire,
 Nor knew they of the unfulfilled desire
 That turns to ashes all the joys of earth,
 Nor knew they yearning love amidst the dearth
 Of kind and loving hearts to spend it on,
 Nor dreamed of discontent when all was won;
 Nor need they struggle after wealth and fame;
 Still was the calm flow of their lives the same,
 And yet, I say, they wearied not of it
 So did the promised days by Ogier flit.
THINK that a hundred years have now passed by,
 Since ye beheld Ogier lie down to die
 Beside the fountain; think that now ye are
 In France, made dangerous with wasting war; p. 649
 In Paris, where about each guarded gate,
 Gathered in knots, the anxious people wait,
 And press around each new-come man to learn
 If Harfleur now the pagan wasters burn,
 Or if the Rouen folk can keep their chain,
 Or Pont de lArche unburnt still guards the Seine?
 Or if 'tis true that Andelys succour wants?
 That Vernon's folk are fleeing east to Mantes?
 When will they come? or rather is it true
 That a great band the Constable oerthrew
 Upon the marshes of the lower Seine,
 And that their long ships, turning back again,
 Caught by the high-raised waters of the bore
 Were driven here and there and cast ashore?
    Such questions did they ask, and, as fresh men
 Came hurrying in, they asked them oer again,
 And from scared folk, or fools, or ignorant,
 Still got new lies, or tidings very scant.
   But now amidst these men at last came one,
 A little ere the setting of the sun,
 With two stout men behind him, armed right well,
 Who ever as they rode on, sooth to tell,
 With doubtful eyes upon their master stared,
 Or looked about like troubled men and scared.
 And he they served was noteworthy indeed;
 Of ancient fashion were his arms and weed,
 Rich past the wont of men in those sad times;
 His face was bronzed, as though by burning climes, p. 650
 But lovely as the image of a god
 Carved in the days before on earth Christ trod;
 But solemn were his eyes, and grey as glass,
 And like to ruddy gold his fine hair was;
 A mighty man he was, and taller far
 Than those who on that day must bear the war
 The pagans waged: he by the warders stayed
 Scarce looked on them, but straight their words obeyed
 And showed his pass; then, asked about his name
 And from what city of the world he came,
 Said, that men called him now the Ancient Knight,
 That he was come midst the king's men to fight
 From St. Omer's; and as he spoke, he gazed
 Down on the thronging street as one amazed,
 And answered no more to the questioning
 Of frightened folk of this or that sad thing;
 But, ere he passed on, turned about at last
 And on the wondering guard a strange look cast,
 And said, "St. Mary! do such men as ye
 Fight with the wasters from across the sea?
 Then, certes, are ye lost, however good
 Your hearts may be; not such were those who stood
 Beside the Hammer-bearer years agone."
    So said he, and as his fair armour shone
 With beauty of a time long passed away,
 So with the music of another day
 His deep voice thrilled the awe-struck, listening folk.
   Yet from the crowd a mocking voice outbroke, p. 651
 That cried, "Be merry, masters, fear ye nought,
 Surely good succour to our side is brought;
 For here is Charlemaine come off his tomb
 To save his faithful city from its doom."
    "Yea," said another, "this is certain news,
 Surely ye know how all the carvers use
 To carve the dead man's image at the best,
 That guards the place where he may lie at rest;
 Wherefore this living image looks indeed,
 Spite of his ancient tongue and marvellous weed,
 To have but thirty summers."
                                   At the name
 Of Charlemaine, he turned to whence there came
 The mocking voice, and somewhat knit his brow,
 And seemed as he would speak, but scarce knew how;
 So with a half-sigh soon sank back again
 Into his dream, and shook his well-wrought rein,
 And silently went on upon his way.
   And this was Ogier: on what evil day
 Has he then stumbled, that he needs must come,
 Midst war and ravage, to the ancient home
 Of his desires? did he grow weary then,
 And wish to strive once more with foolish men
 For worthless things? or is fair Avallon
 Sunk in the sea, and all that glory gone?
    Nay, thus it happedOne day she came to him
 And said, "Ogier, thy name is waxen dim
 Upon the world that thou rememberest not; p. 652
 The heathen men are thick on many a spot
 Thine eyes have seen, and which I love therefore;
 And God will give His wonted help no more.
 Wilt thou, then, help? canst thou have any mind
 To give thy banner once more to the wind?
 Since greater glory thou shalt win for this
 Than erst thou gatheredst ere thou camst to bliss:
 For men are dwindled both in heart and frame,
 Nor holds the fair land any such a name
 As thine, when thou wert living midst thy peers;
 The world is worser for these hundred years."
    From his calm eyes there gleamed a little fire,
 And in his voice was something of desire,
 To see the land where he was used to be,
 As now he answered: "Nay, choose thou for me,
 Thou art the wisest; it is more than well
 Within this peaceful place with thee to dwell:
 Nor ill perchance in that old land to die,
 If, dying, I keep not the memory
 Of this fair life of ours." "Nay, nay," said she,
 "As to thy dying, that shall never be,
 Whiles that thou keepst my ringand now, behold,
 I take from thee thy charmed crown of gold,
 And thou wilt be the Ogier that thou wast
 Ere on the loadstone rock thy ship was cast
 Yet thou shalt have thy youthful body still,
 And I will guard thy life from every ill."
   So was it done, and Ogier, armed right well, p. 653
 Sleeping, was borne away by some strong spell,
 And set upon the Flemish coast; and thence
 Turned to St. Omer's, with a doubtful sense
 Of being in some wild dream, the while he knew
 That great delight forgotten was his due,
 That all which there might hap was of small worth.
    So on he went, and sometimes unto mirth
 Did his attire move the country-folk,
 But oftener when strange speeches from him broke
 Concerning men and things for long years dead,
 He filled the listeners with great awe and dread;
 For in such wild times as these people were
 Are men soon moved to wonder and to fear.
   Now through the streets of Paris did he ride,
 And at a certain hostel did abide
 Throughout that night, and ere he went next day
 He saw a book that on a table lay,
 And opening it gan read in lazy mood:
 But long before it in that place he stood,
 Noting nought else; for it did chronicle
 The deeds of men of old he knew right well,
 When they were living in the flesh with him:
 Yea, his own deeds he saw, grown strange and dim
 Already, and true stories mixed with lies,
 Until, with many thronging memories
 Of those old days, his heart was so oppressed,
 He gan to wish that he might lie at rest,
 Forgetting all things: for indeed by this p. 654
 Little remembrance had he of the bliss
 That wrapped his soul in peaceful Avallon.
   But his changed life he needs must carry on;
 For ye shall know the Queen was gathering men
 To send unto the good King, who as then
 In Rouen lay, beset by many a band
 Of those who carried terror through the land,
 And still by messengers for help he prayed:
 Therefore a mighty muster was being made,
 Of weak and strong, and brave and timorous,
 Before the Queen anigh her royal house.
 So thither on this morn did Ogier turn,
 Some certain news about the war to learn;
 And when he came at last into the square,
 And saw the ancient palace great and fair
 Rise up before him as in other days,
 And in the merry morn the bright sun's rays
 Glittering on gathering helms and moving spears,
 He gan to feel as in the long-past years,
 And his heart stirred within him. Now the Queen
 Came from within, right royally beseen,
 And took her seat beneath a canopy,
 With lords and captains of the war anigh;
 And as she came a mighty shout arose,
 And round about began the knights to close,
 Their oath of fealty there to swear anew,
 And learn what service they had got to do.
 But so it was, that some their shouts must stay p. 655
 To gaze at Ogier as he took his way
 Through the thronged place; and quickly too he gat
 Unto the place whereas the Lady sat,
 For men gave place unto him, fearing him:
 For not alone was he most huge of limb,
 And dangerous, but something in his face,
 As his calm eyes looked oer the crowded place,
 Struck men with awe; and in the ancient days,
 When men might hope alive on gods to gaze,
 They would have thought, 'the Gods yet love our town,
 And from the heavens have sent a great one down.'
    Withal unto the throne he came so near,
 That he the Queen's sweet measured voice could hear;
 And swiftly now within him wrought the change
 That first he felt amid those faces strange;
 And his heart burned to taste the hurrying life
 With such desires, such changing sweetness rife.
 Ana yet, indeed, how should he live alone,
 Who in the old past days such friends had known?
 Then he began to think of Caraheu,
 Of Bellicent the fair, and once more knew
 The bitter pain of rent and ended love.
 But while with hope and vain regret he strove,
 He found none twixt him and the Queen's high-seat,
 And, stepping forth, he knelt before her feet
 And took her hand to swear, as was the way
 Of doing fealty in that ancient day,
 And raised his eyes to hers; as fair was she
 As any woman of the world might be, p. 656
 Full-limbed and tall, dark-haired, from her deep eyes,
 The snare of fools, the ruin of the wise,
 Love looked unchecked; and now her dainty hand,
 The well-knit holder of the golden wand,
 Trembled in his, she cast her eyes adown,
 And her sweet brow was knitted to a frown,
 As he, the taker of such oaths of yore,
 Now unto her all due obedience swore,
 Yet gave himself no name; and now the Queen,
 Awed by his voice as other folk had been,
 Yet felt a trembling hope within her rise
 Too sweet to think of, and with love's surprise
 Her cheek grew pale; she said, "Thy style and name
 Thou tellest not, nor what land of thy fame
 Is glad; for, certes, some land must be glad,
 That in its bounds her house thy mother had."
    "Lady," he said, "from what far land I come
 I well might tell thee, but another home.
 Have I long dwelt in, and its name have I
 Forgotten now, forgotten utterly
 Who were my fellows, and what deeds they did;
 Therefore, indeed, shall my first name be hid
 And my first country; call me on this day
 The Ancient Knight, and let me go my way."
 He rose withal, for she her fingers fair
 Had drawn aback, and on him gan to stare
 As one afeard; for something terrible
 Was in his speech, and that she knew right well,
 Who gan to love him, and to fear that she, p. 657
 Shut out by some strange deadly mystery,
 Should never gain from him an equal love;
 Yet, as from her high-seat he gan to move,
 She said, "O Ancient Knight, come presently,
 When we have done this muster, unto me,
 And thou shalt have thy charge and due command
 For freeing from our foes this wretched land!"
    Then Ogier made his reverence and went,
 And somewhat could perceive of her intent;
 For in his heart life grew, and love with life
 Grew, and therewith, twixt love and fame, was strife.
    But, as he slowly gat him from the square,
 Gazing at all the people gathered there,
 A squire of the Queen's behind him came,
 And breathless, called him by his new-coined name,
 And bade him turn because the Queen now bade,
 Since by the muster long she might be stayed,
 That to the palace he should bring him straight,
 Midst sport and play her coming back to wait;
 Then Ogier turned, nought loath, and with him went,
 And to a postern-gate his steps he bent,
 That Ogier knew right well in days of old;
 Worn was it now, and the bright hues and gold
 Upon the shields above, with lapse of days,
 Were faded much: but now did Ogier gaze
 Upon the garden where he walked of yore,
 Holding the hands that he should see no more;
 For all was changed except the palace fair,
 That Charlemaine's own eyes had seen built there p. 658
 Ere Ogier knew him; there the squire did lead
 The Ancient Knight, who still took little heed
 Of all the things that by the way he said,
 For all his thoughts were on the days long dead.
    There in the painted hall he sat again,
 And neath the pictured eyes of Charlemaine
 He ate and drank, and felt it like a dream;
 And midst his growing longings yet might deem
 That he from sleep should wake up presently
 In some fair city on the Syrian sea,
 Or on the brown rocks of the loadstone isle.
 But fain to be alone, within a while
 He gat him to the garden, and there passed
 By wondering squires and damsels, till at last,
 Far from the merry folk who needs must play,
 If on the world were coming its last day,
 He sat him down, and through his mind there ran
 Faint thoughts of that day, when, outworn and wan,
 He lay down by the fountain-side to die.
 But when he strove to gain clear memory
 Of what had happed since on the isle he lay
 Waiting for death, a hopeless castaway,
 Thought, failing him, would rather bring again
 His life among the peers of Charlemaine,
 And vex his soul with hapless memories;
 Until at last, worn out by thought of these,
 And hopeless striving to find what was true,
 And pondering on the deeds he had to do
 Ere he returned, whereto he could not tell, p. 659
 Sweet sleep upon his wearied spirit fell.
 And on the afternoon of that fair day,
 Forgetting all, beneath the trees he lay.
   Meanwhile the Queen, affairs of state being done,
 Went through the gardens with one dame alone
 Seeking for Ogier, whom at last she found
 Laid sleeping on the daisy-sprinkled ground,
 Dreaming, I know not what, of other days.
 Then on him for a while the Queen did gaze,
 Drawing sweet poison from the lovely sight,
 Then to her fellow turned, "The Ancient Knight
 What means he by this word of his?" she said;
 "He were well mated with some lovely maid
 just pondering on the late-heard name of love."
    "Softly, my lady, he begins to move,"
 Her fellow said, a woman old and grey;
 "Look now, his arms are of another day;
 None know him or his deeds; thy squire just said
 He asked about the state of men long dead;
 I fear what he may be; look, seest thou not
 That ring that on one finger he has got,
 Where figures strange upon the gold are wrought:
 God grant that he from hell has not been brought
 For our confusion, in this doleful war,
 Who surely in enough of trouble are
 Without such help;" then the Queen turned aside
 Awhile, her drawn and troubled face to hide,
 For lurking dread this speech within her stirred; p. 660
 But yet she said, "Thou sayest a foolish word,
 This man is come against our enemies
 To fight for us." Then down upon her knees
 Fell the old woman by the sleeping knight,
 And from his hand she drew with fingers light
 The wondrous ring, and scarce again could rise
 Ere neath the trembling Queen's bewildered eyes
 The change began; his golden hair turned white,
 His smooth cheek wrinkled, and his breathing light
 Was turned to troublous struggling for his breath,
 And on his shrunk lips lay the hand of death;
 And, scarce less pale than he, the trembling Queen
 Stood thinking on the beauty she had seen
 And longed for but a little while ago,
 Yet with her terror still her love did grow,
 And she began to weep as though she saw
 Her beauty een to such an ending draw.
 And neath her tears waking he oped his eyes,
 And strove to speak, but nought but gasping sighs
 His lips could utter; then he tried to reach
 His hand to them, as though he would beseech
 The gift of what was his: but all the while
 The crone gazed on them with an evil smile,
 Then holding toward the Queen that wondrous ring,
 She said, "Why weepst thou? having this fair thing,
 Thou, losing nought the beauty that thou hast,
 Mayst watch the vainly struggling world go past,
 Thyself unchanged." The Queen put forth her hand
 And took the ring, and there awhile did stand p. 661
 And strove to think of it, but still in her
 Such all-absorbing longings love did stir,
 So young she was, of death she could not think,
 Or what a cup eld gives to man to drink;
 Yet on her finger had she set the ring
 When now the life that hitherto did cling
 To Ogier's heart seemed fading quite away,
 And scarcely breathing with shut eyes he lay.
 Then, kneeling down, she murmured piteously,
 "Ah, wilt thou love me if I give it thee,
 And thou growst young again? what should I do
 If with the eyes thou thus shalt gain anew
 Thou shouldst look scorn on me?" But with that word
 The hedge behind her, by the west wind stirred
 Cast fear into her heart of some one nigh,
 And therewith on his finger hastily
 She set the ring, then rose and stood apart
 A little way, and in her doubtful heart
 With love and fear was mixed desire of life.
    But standing so, a look with great scorn rife
 The elder woman, turning, cast on her,
 Pointing to Ogier, who began to stir;
 She looked, and all she erst saw now did seem
 To have been nothing but a hideous dream,
 As fair and young he rose from off the ground
 And cast a dazed and puzzled look around,
 Like one just waked from sleep in some strange place;
 But soon his grave eyes rested on her face,
 And turned yet graver seeing her so pale, p. 662
 And that her eyes were pregnant with some tale
 Of love and fear; she neath his eyes the while
 Forced her pale lips to semblance of a smile,
 And said, "O Ancient Knight, thou sleepest then?
 While through this poor land range the heathen men,
 Unmet of any but my King and Lord:
 Nay, let us see the deeds of thine old sword."
    "Queen," said he, "bid me then unto this work,
 And certes I behind no wall would lurk,
 Nor send for succour, while a scanty folk
 Still followed after me to break the yoke:
 I pray thee grace for sleeping, and were fain
 That I might rather never sleep again
 Then have such wretched dreams as I een now
 Have waked from."
                        Lovelier she seemed to grow
 Unto him as he spoke; fresh colour came
 Into her face, as though for some sweet shame,
 While she with tearful eyes beheld him so,
 That somewhat even must his burnt cheek glow,
 His heart beat faster. But again she said,
 "Nay, will dreams burden such a mighty head?
 Then may I too have pardon for a dream;
 Last night in sleep I saw thee, who didst seem
 To be the King of France; and thou and I
 Were sitting at some great festivity
 Within the many-peopled gold-hung place."
    The blush of shame was gone as on his face
 She gazed, and saw him read her meaning clear p. 663
 And knew that no cold words she had to fear,
 But rather that for softer speech he yearned.
 Therefore, with love alone her smooth cheek burned;
 Her parted lips were hungry for his kiss,
 She trembled at the near approaching bliss;
    Nathless, she checked her love a little while,
 Because she felt the old dame's curious smile
 Upon her, and she said, "O Ancient Knight,
 If I then read my last night's dream aright,
 Thou art come here our very help to be,
 Perchance to give my husband back to me;
 Come then, if thou this land art fain to save,
 And show the wisdom thou must surely have
 Unto my council; I will give thee then
 What charge I may among my valiant men;
 And certes thou wilt do so well herein,
 That, ere long, something greater shalt thou win:
 Come, then, deliverer of my throne and land,
 And let me touch for once thy mighty hand
 With these weak fingers."
                              As she spoke, she met
 His eager hand, and all things did forget
 But for one moment, for too wise were they
 To cast the coming years of joy away;
 Then with her other hand her gown she raised
 And led him thence, and oer her shoulder gazed
 At her old follower with a doubtful smile,
 As though to say, "Be wise, I know thy guile!"
    But slowly she behind the lovers walked, p. 664
 Muttering, "So be it! thou shalt not be balked
 Of thy desire; be merry! I am wise,
 Nor will I rob thee of thy Paradise
 For any other than myself; and thou
 May'st even happen to have had enow
 Of this new love, before I get the ring,
 And I may work for thee no evil thing."
   Now ye shall know that the old chronicle,
 Wherein I read all this, doth duly tell
 Of all the gallant deeds that Ogier did,
 There may ye read them; nor let me be chid
 If I therefore say little of these things,
 Because the thought of Avallon still clings
 Unto my heart, and scarcely can I bear
 To think of that long, dragging, useless year,
 Through which, with dulled and glimmering memory,
 Ogier was grown content to live and die
 Like other men; but this I have to say,
 That in the council chamber on that day
 The Old Knight showed his wisdom well enow,
 While fainter still with love the Queen did grow
 Hearing his words, beholding his grey eyes
 Flashing with fire of warlike memories;
 Yea, at the last he seemed so wise indeed
 That she could give him now the charge, to lead
 One wing of the great army that set out
 From Paris gates, midst many a wavering shout,
 Midst trembling prayers, and unchecked wails and tears, p. 665
 And slender hopes and unresisted fears.
   Now ere he went, upon his bed he lay,
 Newly awakened at the dawn of day,
 Gathering perplexed thoughts of many a thing,
 When, midst the carol that the birds did sing
 Unto the coming of the hopeful sun,
 He heard a sudden lovesome song begun
 Twixt two young voices in the garden green,
 That seemed indeed the farewell of the Queen.
SONG.
HÆC.
ILLE.
HÆC.
ILLE.
Soothed by the pleasure that the music brought
 And sweet desire, and vague and dreamy thought
 Of happiness it seemed to promise him,
 He lay and listened till his eyes grew dim,
 And oer him gan forgetfulness to creep
 Till in the growing light he lay asleep,
 Nor woke until the clanging trumpet-blast
 Had summoned him all thought away to cast:
 Yet one more joy of love indeed he had
 Ere with the battle's noise he was made glad;
 For, as on that May morning forth they rode
 And passed before the Queen's most fair abode, p. 667
 There at a window was she waiting them
 In fair attire with gold in every hem,
 And as the Ancient Knight beneath her passed
 A wreath of flowering white-thorn down she cast,
 And looked farewell to him, and forth he set
 Thinking of all the pleasure he should get
 From love and war, forgetting Avallon
 And all that lovely life so lightly won;
 Yea, now indeed the earthly life oerpast
 Ere on the loadstone rock his ship was cast
 Was waxing dim, nor yet at all he learned
 To scape the fire that erst his heart had burned.
 And he forgat his deeds, forgat his fame,
 Forgat the letters of his ancient name
 As one waked fully shall forget a dream,
 That once to him a wondrous tale did seem.
   Now I, though writing here no chronicle
 Een as I said, must nathless shortly tell
 That, ere the army Rouen's gates could gain
 By a broad arrow had the King been slain,
 And helpless now the wretched country lay
 Beneath the yoke, until the glorious day
 When Ogier fell at last upon the foe,
 And scattered them as helplessly as though
 They had been beaten men without a name:
 So when to Paris town once more he came
 Few folk the memory of the King did keep
 Within their hearts, and if the folk did weep p. 668
 At his returning, twas for joy indeed
 That such a man had risen at their need
 To work for them so great deliverance,
 And loud they called on him for King of France.
   But if the Queen's heart were the more a-flame
 For all that she had heard of his great fame,
 I know not; rather with some hidden dread
 Of coming fate, she heard her lord was dead,
 And her false dream seemed coming true at last,
 For the clear sky of love seemed overcast
 With clouds of God's great judgments, and the fear
 Of hate and final parting drawing near.
    So now when he before her throne did stand
 Amidst the throng as saviour of the land,
 And she her eyes to his kind eyes did raise,
 And there before all her own love must praise;
 Then did she fall a-weeping, and folk said,
 "See, how she sorrows for the newly dead!
 Amidst our joy she needs must think of him;
 Let be, full surely shall her grief wax dim
 And she shall wed again."
                               So passed the year,
 While Ogier set himself the land to clear
 Of broken remnants of the heathen men,
 And at the last, when May-time came again,
 Must he be crowned King of the twice-saved land,
 And at the altar take the fair Queen's hand
 And wed her for his own. And now by this p. 669
 Had he forgotten clean the woe and bliss
 Of his old life, and still was he made glad
 As other men; and hopes and fears he had
 As others, and bethought him not at all
 Of what strange days upon him yet should fall
 When he should live and these again be dead.
   Now drew the time round when he should be wed,
 And in his palace on his bed he lay
 Upon the dawning of the very day:
 Twixt, sleep and waking was he, and could hear
 Een at that hour, through the bright morn and clear,
 The hammering of the folk who toiled to make
 Some well-wrought stages for the pageant's sake,
 Though hardly yet the sparrows had begun
 To twitter oer the coming of the sun,
 Nor through the palace did a creature move.
    There in the sweet entanglement of love
 Midst languid thoughts of greater bliss he lay,
 Remembering no more of that other day
 Than the hot noon remembereth of the night,
 Than summer thinketh of the winter white.
    In that sweet hour he heard a voice that cried,
 "Ogier, Ogier!" then, opening his eyes wide,
 And rising on his elbow, gazed around,
 And strange to him and empty was the sound
 Of his own name; "Whom callest thou?" he said,
 For I, the man who lies upon this bed,
 Am Charles of France, and shall be King to-day, p. 670
 But in a year that now is past away
 The Ancient Knight they called me: who is this,
 Thou tallest Ogier, then, what deeds are his?
 And who art thou?" But at that word a sigh,
 As of one grieved, came from some place anigh
 His bed-side, and a soft voice spake again,
 "This Ogier once was great amongst great men;
 To Italy a helpless hostage led;
 He saved the King when the false Lombard fled,
 Bore forth the Oriflamme and gained the day;
 Charlot he brought back, whom men led away,
 And fought a day-long fight with Caraheu.
 The ravager of Rome his right hand slew;
 Nor did he fear the might of Charlemaine,
 Who for a dreary year beset in vain
 His lonely castle; yet at last caught then,
 And shut in hold, needs must he come again
 To give an unhoped great deliverance
 Unto the burdened helpless land of France:
 Denmark he gained thereafter, and he wore
 The crown of England drawn from trouble sore;
 At Tyre then he reigned, and Babylon
 With mighty deeds he from the foemen won;
 And when scarce aught could give him greater fame,
 He left the world still thinking on his name.
    "These things did Ogier, and these things didst thou,
 Nor will I call thee by a new name now
 Since I have spoken words of love to thee
 Ogier, Ogier, dost thou remember me, p. 671
 Een if thou hast no thought of that past time
 Before thou camest to our happy clime?"
   As this was said, his mazed eyes saw indeed
 A lovely woman clad in dainty weed
 Beside his bed, and many a thought was stirred
 Within his heart by that last plaintive word,
 Though nought he said, but waited what should come.
 "Love," said she, "I am here to bring thee home;
 Well hast thou done all that thou camst to do,
 And if thou bidest here, for something new
 Will folk begin to cry, and all thy fame
 Shall then avail thee but for greater blame;
 Thy love shall cease to love thee, and the earth
 Thou lovest now shall be of little worth
 While still thou keepest life, abhorring it.
 Behold, in men's lives that so quickly flit
 Thus is it, how then shall it be with thee,
 Who some faint image of eternity
 Hast gained through me?alas, thou heedest not!
 On all these changing things thine heart is hot
 Take then this gift that I have brought from far,
 And then mayst thou remember what we are;
 The lover and the loved from long ago."
    He trembled, and more memory seemed to grow
 Within his heart as he beheld her stand,
 Holding a glittering crown in her right hand:
 "Ogier," she said, "arise and do on thee
 The emblems of thy worldly sovereignty, p. 672
 For we must pass oer many a sea this morn."
    He rose, and in the glittering tunic worn
 By Charlemaine he clad himself, and took
 The ivory hand, that Charlemaine once shook
 Over the people's head in days of old;
 Then on his feet he set the shoes of gold,
 And oer his shoulders threw the mantle fair,
 And set the gold crown on his golden hair:
 Then on the royal chair he sat him down,
 As though he deemed the elders of the town
 Should come to audience; and in all he seemed
 To do these things een as a man who dreamed.
   And now adown the Seine the golden sun
 Shone out, as toward him drew that lovely one
 And took from off his head the royal crown,
 And, smiling, on the pillow laid it down
 And said, "Lie there, O crown of Charlemaine,
 Worn by a mighty man, and worn in vain,
 Because he died, and all the things he did
 Were changed before his face by earth was hid;
 A better crown I have for my love's head,
 Whereby he yet shall live, when all are dead
 His hand has helped." Then on his head she set
 The wondrous crown, and said, "Forget, forget!
 Forget these weary things, for thou hast much
 Of happiness to think of."
                               At that touch
 He rose, a happy light gleamed in his eyes; p. 673
 And smitten by the rush of memories,
 He stammered out, "O love! how came we here?
 What do we in this land of Death and Fear?
 Have I not been from thee a weary while?
 Let us returnI dreamed about the isle;
 I dreamed of other years of strife and pain,
 Of new years full of struggles long and vain."
    She took him by the hand and said, "Come, love,
 I am not changed;" and therewith did they move
 Unto the door, and through the sleeping place
 Swiftly they went, and still was Ogier's face
 Turned on her beauty, and no thought was his
 Except the dear returning of his bliss.
    But at the threshold of the palace-gate
 That opened to them, she awhile did wait,
 And turned her eyes unto the rippling Seine
 And said, "O love, behold it once again!"
 He turned, and gazed upon the city grey
 Smit by the gold of that sweet morn of May;
 He heard faint noises as of wakening folk
 As on their heads his day of glory broke;
 He heard the changing rush of the swift stream
 Against the bridge-piers. All was grown a dream,
 His work was over, his reward was come,
 Why should he loiter longer from his home?
   A little while she watched him silently,
 Then beckoned him to follow with a sigh,
 And, raising up the raiment from her feet, p. 674
 Across the threshold stepped into the street;
 One moment on the twain the low sun shone,
 And then the place was void, and they were gone
 How I know not; but this I know indeed,
 That in whatso great trouble or sore need
 The land of France since that fair day has been,
 No more the sword of Ogier has she seen.
SUCH was the tale he told of Avallon,
 Een such an one as in days past had won
 His youthful heart to think upon the quest;
 But to those old hearts nigh in reach of rest,
 Not much to be desired now it seemed
 Perchance the heart that of such things had dreamed
 Had found no words in this death-laden tongue
 We speak on earth, wherewith they might be sung;
 Perchance the changing years that changed his heart
 Een in the words of that old tale had part,
 Changing its sweet to bitter, to despair
 The foolish hope that once had glittered there
 Or think, that in some bay of that far home
 They then had sat, and watched the green waves come
 Up to their feet with many promises;
 Or the light wind midst blossom-laden trees,
 In the sweet Spring had weighted many a word
 Of no worth now, and many a hope had stirred
 Long dead for ever.
                        Howsoeer that be
 Among strange folk they now sat quietly,
 As though that tale with them had nought to do,
 As though its hopes and fears were something new. p. 676
    But though, indeed, the outworn, dwindled band
 Hail no tears left for that once longed-for land,
 The very wind must moan for their decay,
 And from the sky, grown dull, and low, and grey,
 Cold tears must fall upon the lonely field,
 That such fair golden hopes erewhile did yield;
 And on the blackening woods, wherein the doves
 Sat silent now, forgetful of their loves.
 Yet, since a little life at least was left,
 They were not yet of every joy bereft,
 For long ago was past the agony,
 Midst which they found that they indeed must die;
 And now well nigh as much their pain was past
 As though death's veil already had been cast
 Over their headsso, midst some little mirth,
 They watched the dark night hide the gloomy earth.
LONDON:
 STRANGEWAYS AND WALDEN, PRINTERS,
 Castle St. Leicester Sq.