Had the knight looked up to the page's face, Had the knight looked back to the page's geste, I ween he had turned anon, For dread was the woe in the face so young, He clenched his hands as if to hold And is this the last, last look of thine "Yet God thee save, and mayst thou have More woman-proud and half as true And God me take with HIM to dwell- She looketh up, in earth's despair, Whereof her loved did speak: How bright the little cloud appears! Her eyelids fall upon the tears, And the tears down either cheek. The tramp of hoof, the flash of steel- She stands amid them all unmoved: "Ho, Christian page! art keeping sheep, ――― For warring, not for feasting; And if that here Sir Hubert were, My master brave, my master dear, Ye would not stay the questing." "Where is thy master, scornful page, That we may slay or bind him?""Now search the lea and search the wood, And see if ye can find him! Nathless, as hath been often tried, Your Paynim heroes faster ride Before him than behind him." "Give smoother answers, lying page, Or perish in the lying!""I trow that if the warrior brand Beside my foot, were in my hand, "Twere better at replying!" They cursed her deep, they smote her low, She felt the scimitar gleam down, With smile more bright in victory Than any sword from sheath,Which flashed across her lip serene, Most like the spirit-light between The darks of life and death. Ingemisco, ingemisco! From the convent on the sea, Now it sweepeth solemnly, And the weary nuns with hearts that faintly Ingemisco, ingemisco! Dirge for abbess laid in shroud All as sad if not as loud. Ingemisco, ingemisco! Is ever a lament begun By any mourner under sun, THE CRY OF THE HUMAN. "THERE is no God" the foolish saith, And nature oft the cry of faith The tempest stretches from the steep Yet, while the cloud-wheels roll and grind, Be pitiful, O God! The battle hurtles on the plains, Be pitiful, O God! The plague runs festering through the town, The strong man brings it weeping, The plague of gold strikes far and near, Our thoughts grow blank, our words grow strange, We cheer the pale gold-diggers, Each soul is worth so much on 'Change, And marked, like sheep, with figures. The curse of gold upon the land The lack of bread enforces; The rail-cars snort from strand to strand, Like more of Death's White Horses: The rich preach "rights" and "future days," And hear no angel scoffing, The poor die mute, with starving gaze On corn-ships in the offing. Be pitiful, O God! We meet together at the feast, Be pitiful, O God! We sit together, with the skies, "And how long will you love us?" The eyes grow dim with prophecy, The voices, low and breathless, "Till death us part!"-O words, to be Our best, for love the deathless! Be pitiful, O God! We tremble by the harmless bed |