ONCE, when the autumn fields were dim and wet, The trumpets rang; the tide of battle set Toward gray Broceliande, by the western sea. In the fore-front of conflict grimly stood, Clothed in dark armor, Tristram of the Wood, And round him ranged his knights of Brittany. Of lordlier frame than even the lordliest there, Firm as a tower, upon his vast @3destrere@1, He looked as one whose soul was steeped in trance. Ne'er spake nor stirred he, though the trumpet's sound Echoed abroad, and all the glittering ground Shook to the steel-clad warriors' swift advance; Ne'er spake nor stirred he, for the mystic hour Closed o'er him then; the glamour of its power Dream-wrought, and sadly beautiful with love -- Love of the lost Iseult. In marvellous stead Of thronging faces, with looks stern and dread, Through the dense dust, the hostile plumes above, He saw his fair, lost Iseult's passionate eyes, And o'er the crash of lances heard her cries, Shrill with despair, when last they twain did part. While others thrilled to strife, he, thrilled with woe, Felt his life-currents shuddering cold and low Round the worn bastions of his broken heart. Then rolled his way the battle's furious flood; Squadrons charged on him blindly; blows and blood Showered down like hail and water; vainly drew The whole war round him; still his broadsword's gleam Flashed in death's front, and still, as wrapped in dream, He fought and slew, witting not whom he slew, Nor knew whose arm had smitten him deep and sore -- So deep that Tristram never, never more Shone in the van of conflict; but the smart Of his fierce wound tortured him night and day, Till, through God's grace, his life-blood ebbed away, And death's sweet quiet healed his broken heart. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...LWONESOMENESS by WILLIAM BARNES AN ANGLER'S WISH by HENRY VAN DYKE A SONG FOR MY FELLOWS by ALEXANDER ANDERSON THE NIGHTINGALE THAT WAS DROWNED by PHILIP AYRES SONG OF AN ATOM by JOSEPHINE BARNETT TAKE YOUR CHOICE: NICHOLAS VACHEL LINDSAY WOULD SPEAK ... THIS MANNER by BERTON BRALEY |