'Friend, stay in peace. God keep your head, And mine, where I will go; For He is here and there,' he said. He passed the hill-side, slow, And stood below. The Queen sat idle by her loom : She heard the arras stir, And looked up sadly through the room The sweetness sickened her Her women, standing two and two, She answered, 'Peace.' Her eyes were like the wave within ; Of her soft body, dainty thin; And like the water's noise Her plaintive voice. For him, the stream had never well'd In desert tracts malign So sweet; nor had he ever felt So faint in the sunshine Of Palestine. Right so, he knew that he saw weep Not known to him. 'Lady,' he said, 'your lands lie burnt And waste to meet your foe All fear this I have seen and learnt. Say that it shall be so, And I will go.' She gazed at him. 'Your cause is just, For I have heard the same:' He said: 'God's strength shall be my trust. Fall it to good or grame, 'Tis in His name.' 'Sir, you are thanked. My cause is dead. Why should you toil to break A grave, and fall therein ?' she said. He did not pause but spake : 'For my vow's sake.' 6 Can such vows be, Sir-to God's ear, Not to God's will?' 'My vow Remains God heard me there as here,' He said with reverent brow, 'Both then and now.' They gazed together, he and she, 'Fight, Sir,' she said; 'my prayers in pain Shall be your fellowship.' He whispered one among her train, 'To-morrow bid her keep This staff and scrip.' She sent him a sharp sword, whose belt About his body there As sweet as her own arms he felt. He kissed its blade, all bare, She sent him a green banner wrought To bind his lance with when he fought. He writ upon the same And kissed her name. She sent him a white shield, whereon She bade that he should trace His will. He blent fair hues that shone, And in a golden space He kissed her face. Born of the day that died, that eve Now dying sank to rest; As he, in likewise taking leave, Once with a heaving breast Looked to the west. And there the sunset skies unseal'd, Like lands he never knew, Beyond to-morrow's battle-field Lay open out of view To ride into. Next day till dark the women pray'd: Nor any might know there How the fight went: the Queen has bade That there do come to her No messenger. The Queen is pale, her maidens ail; And to the organ-tones They sing but faintly, who sang well The matin-orisons, The lauds and nones. Lo, Father, is thine ear inclin'd, For these thy watchers now are blind With vigil, and at last Dizzy with fast. |