Classic and Contemporary Poetry
THE ROMAUNT OF THE PAGE, by ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING Poet Analysis Poet's Biography First Line: A knight of gallant deeds Last Line: Which, ere it endeth, suits but one? Subject(s): Knights & Knighthood | ||||||||
I A KNIGHT of gallant deeds And a young page at his side, From the holy war in Palestine Did slow and thoughtful ride, As each were a palmer and told for beads The dews of the eventide. II 'O young page,' said the knight, 'A noble page art thou! Thou fearest not to steep in blood The curls upon thy brow; And once in the tent, and twice in the fight, Didst ward me a mortal blow.' III 'O brave knight,' said the page, 'Or ere we hither came, We talked in tent, we talked in field, Of the bloody battle-game; But here, below this greenwood bough, I cannot speak the same. IV 'Our troop is far behind, The woodland calm is new; Our steeds, with slow grass-muffled hoofs Tread deep the shadows through; And, in my mind, some blessing kind Is dropping with the dew. V 'The woodland calm is pure -- I cannot choose but have A thought from these, o' the beechen-trees, Which in our England wave, And of the little finches fine Which sang there while in Palestine The warrior-hilt we drave. VI 'Methinks, a moment gone, I heard my mother pray! I heard, sir knight, the prayer for me Wherein she passed away; And I know the heavens are leaning down To hear what I shall say.' VII The page spake calm and high, As of no mean degree; Perhaps he felt in nature's broad Full heart, his own was free: And the knight looked up to his lifted eye, Then answered smilingly -- VIII 'Sir page, I pray your grace! Certes, I meant not so To cross your pastoral mood, sir page, With the crook of the battle-bow; But a knight may speak of a lady's face, I ween, in any mood or place, If the grasses die or grow. IX 'And this I meant to say -- My lady's face shall shine As ladies' faces use, to greet My page from Palestine; Or, speak she fair or prank she gay, She is no lady of mine. X 'And this I meant to fear -- Her bower may suit thee ill; For, sooth, in that same field and tent, Thy talk was somewhat still: And fitter thy hand for my knightly spear Than thy tongue for my lady's will!' XI Slowly and thankfully The young page bowed his head; His large eyes seemed to muse a smile, Until he blushed instead, And no lady in her bower, pardie, Could blush more sudden red: 'Sir Knight, -- thy lady's bower to me Is suited well,' he said. XII Beati, beati, mortui! From the convent on the sea, One mile off, or scarce so nigh, Swells the dirge as clear and high As if that, over brake and lea, Bodily the wind did carry The great altar of Saint Mary, And the fifty tapers burning o'er it, And the Lady Abbess dead before it, And the chanting nuns whom yesterweek Her voice did charge and bless, -- Chanting steady, chanting meek, Chanting with a solemn breath, Because that they are thinking less Upon the dead than upon death. Beati, beati, mortui! Now the vision in the sound Wheeleth on the wind around; Now it sweepeth back, away -- The uplands will not let it stay To dark the western sun: Mortui! -- away at last, -- Or ere the page's blush is past! And the knight heard all, and the page heard none. XIII 'A boon, thou noble knight, If ever I served thee! Though thou art a knight and I am a page, Now grant a boon to me; And tell me sooth, if dark or bright, If little loved or loved aright Be the face of thy ladye.' XIV Gloomily looked the knight -- 'As a son thou hast served me, And would to none I had granted boon Except to only thee! For haply then I should love aright, For then I should know if dark or bright Were the face of my ladye. XV 'Yet it ill suits my knightly tongue To grudge that granted boon, That heavy price from heart and life I paid in silence down; The hand that claimed it, cleared in fine My father's fame: I swear by mine, That price was nobly won! XVI 'Earl Walter was a brave old earl, He was my father's friend; And while I rode the lists at court And little guessed the end, My noble father in his shroud Against a slanderer lying loud, He rose up to defend. XVII 'Oh, calm below the marble gray My father's dust was strown! Oh, meek above the marble gray His image prayed alone! The slanderer lied: the wretch was brave: For, looking up the minister-nave, He saw my father's knightly glaive Was changed from steel to stone. XVIII 'Earl Walter's glaive was steel, With a brave old hand to wear it, And dashed the lie back in the mouth Which lied against the godly truth And against the knightly merit: The slanderer, 'neath the avenger's heel, Struck up the dagger in appeal From stealthy lie to brutal force -- And out upon the traitor's corse Was yielded the true spirit. XIX 'I would mine hand had fought that fight And justified my father! I would mine heart had caught that wound And slept beside him rather! I think it were a better thing Than murdered friend and marriage ring Forced on my life together. XX 'Wail shook Earl Walter's house; His true wife shed no tear; She lay upon her bed as mute As the earl did on his bier: Till -- "Ride, ride fast," she said at last, "And bring the avenged's son anear! Ride fast, ride free, as a dart can flee, For white of blee with waiting for me Is the corse in the next chambere." XXI 'I came, I knelt beside her bed; Her calm was worse than strife: "My husband, for thy father dear, Gave freely when thou wast not here His own and eke my life. A boon! Of that sweet child we make An orphan for thy father's sake, Make thou, for ours, a wife." XXII 'I said, "My steed neighs in the court, My bark rocks on the brine, And the warrior's vow I am under now To free the pilgrim's shrine; But fetch the ring and fetch the priest And call that daughter of thine, And rule she wide from my castle on Nyde While I am in Palestine." XXIII 'In the dark chambere, if the bride was fair, Ye wis, I could not see, But the steed thrice neighed, and the priest fast prayed, And wedded fast were we. Her mother smiled upon her bed As at its side we knelt to wed, And the bride rose from her knee And kissed the smile of her mother dead, Or ever she kissed me. XXIV 'My page, my page, what grieves thee so, That the tears run down thy face?' -- 'Alas, alas! mine own sister Was in thy lady's case: But she laid down the silks she wore And followed him she wed before, Disguised as his true servitor, To the very battle-place.' XXV And wept the page, but laughed the knight, A careless laugh laughed he: 'Well done it were for thy sister, But not for my ladye! My love, so please you, shall requite No woman, whether dark or bright, Unwomaned if she be.' XXVI The page stopped weeping and smiled cold -- 'Your wisdom may declare That womanhood is proved the best By golden brooch and glossy vest The mincing ladies wear; Yet is it proved, and was of old, Anear as well, I dare to hold, By truth, or by despair.' XXVII He smiled no more, he wept no more, But passionate he spake -- 'Oh, womanly she prayed in tent, When none beside did wake! Oh, womanly she paled in fight, For one beloved's sake -- And her little hand, defiled with blood, Her tender tears of womanhood Most woman-pure did make!' XXVIII -- 'Well done it were for thy sister, Thou tellest well her tale! But for my lady, she shall pray I' the kirk of Nydesdale. Not dread for me but love for me Shall make my lady pale; No casque shall hide her woman's tear -- It shall have room to trickle clear Behind her woman's veil.' XXIX -- 'But what if she mistook thy mind And followed thee to strife, Then kneeling did entreat thy love As Paynims ask for life?' -- 'I would forgive, and evermore Would love her as my servitor, But little as my wife. XXX 'Look up -- there is a small bright cloud Alone amid the skies! So high, so pure, and so apart, A woman's honor lies.' The page looked up -- the cloud was sheen -- A sadder cloud did rush, I ween, Betwixt it and his eyes. XXXI Then dimly dropped his eyes away From welkin unto hill -- Ha! who rides there? -- the page is 'ware, Though the cry at his heart is still: And the page seeth all and the knight seeth none, Though banner and spear do fleck the sun, And the Saracens ride at will. XXXII He speaketh calm, he speaketh low, -- 'Ride fast, my master, ride, Or ere within the broadening dark The narrow shadows hide.' 'Yea, fast, my page, I will do so, And keep thou at my side.' XXXIII 'Now nay, now nay, ride on thy way, Thy faithful page precede. For I must loose on saddle-bow My battle-casque that galls, I trow, The shoulder of my steed; And I must pray, as I did vow, For one in bitter need. XXXIV 'Ere night I shall be near to thee, -- Now ride, my master, ride! Ere night, as parted spirits cleave To mortals too beloved to leave, I shall be at thy side.' The knight smiled free at the fantasy, And adown the dell did ride. XXXV Had the knight looked up to the page's face, No smile the word had won; Had the knight looked up to the page's face, I ween he had never gone: 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, And wild was the silent geste that flung Casque, sword to earth, as the boy down-sprung And stood -- alone, alone. XXXVI He clenched his hands as if to hold His soul's great agony -- 'Have I renounced my womanhood, For wifehood unto thee, And is this the last, last look of thine That ever I shall see? XXXVII 'Yet God thee save, and mayst thou have A lady to thy mind, More woman-proud and half as true As one thou leav'st behind! And God me take with HIM to dwell -- For HIM I cannot love too well, As I have loved my kind.' XXXVIII She looketh up, in earth's despair, The hopeful heavens to seek; That little cloud still floateth there, Whereof her loved did speak: How bright the little cloud appears! Her eyelids fall upon the tears, And the tears down either cheek. XXXIX The tramp of hoof, the flash of steel -- The Paynims round her coming! The sound and sight have made her calm, -- False page, but truthful woman; She stands amid them all unmoved: A heart once broken by the loved Is strong to meet the foeman. XL 'Ho, Christian page! art keeping sheep, From pouring wine-cups resting?' -- 'I keep my master's noble name, For warring, not for feasting; And if that here Sir Hubert were, My master brave, my master dear, Ye would not stay the questing.' XLI '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 Paymm heroes faster ride Before him than behind him.' XLII 'Give smoother answers, lying page, Or perish in the lying!' -- 'I trow that if the warrior brand Beside my foot, were in my hand, 'T were better at replying!' They cursed her deep, they smote her low, They cleft her golden ringlets through; The Loving is the Dying. XLIII She felt the scimitar gleam down, And met it from beneath 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. XLIV Ingemisco, ingemisco! From the convent on the sea, Now it sweepeth solemnly, As over wood and over lea Bodily the wind did carry The great altar of St. Mary, And the fifty tapers paling o'er it, And the Lady Abbess stark before it, And the weary nuns with hearts that faintly Beat along their voices saintly -- Ingemisco, ingemisco! Dirge for abbess laid in shroud Sweepeth o'er the shroudless dead, Page or lady, as we said, With the dews upon her head, All as sad if not as loud. Ingemisco, ingemisco! Is ever a lament begun By any mourner under sun, Which, ere it endeth, suits but one? | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE WILD RIDE by LOUISE IMOGEN GUINEY LA BELLE DAME SANS MERCI by JOHN KEATS THE GILLYFLOWER OF GOLD by WILLIAM MORRIS (1834-1896) THE HAYSTACK IN THE FLOODS by WILLIAM MORRIS (1834-1896) TO A CHILD OF QUALITY, FIVE YEARS OLD. THE AUTHOR THAN FORTY by MATTHEW PRIOR MAIDEN MELANCHOLY by RAINER MARIA RILKE TWO POEMS TO HANS THOMA ON HIS SIXIETH BIRTHDAY: 2. THE KNIGHT by RAINER MARIA RILKE SIR GAWAINE AND THE GREEN KNIGHT by YVOR WINTERS THE RHYME OF SIR LAUNCELOT BOGLE; A LEGEND OF GLASGOW by WILLIAM EDMONSTOUNE AYTOUN A CHILD'S THOUGHT OF GOD by ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING |
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