Читать книгу Poems - Arnold Matthew - Страница 17

I.
The Castle.

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Down the Savoy valleys sounding,

Echoing round this castle old,

’Mid the distant mountain-chalets

Hark! what bell for church is tolled?

In the bright October morning

Savoy’s Duke had left his bride.

From the castle, past the drawbridge,

Flowed the hunters’ merry tide.

Steeds are neighing, gallants glittering.

Gay, her smiling lord to greet,

From her mullioned chamber-casement

Smiles the Duchess Marguerite.

From Vienna, by the Danube,

Here she came, a bride, in spring.

Now the autumn crisps the forest;

Hunters gather, bugles ring.

Hounds are pulling, prickers swearing,

Horses fret, and boar-spears glance.

Off!—They sweep the marshy forests,

Westward on the side of France.

Hark! the game’s on foot; they scatter!

Down the forest-ridings lone,

Furious, single horsemen gallop.

Hark! a shout—a crash—a groan!

Pale and breathless, came the hunters—

On the turf dead lies the boar.

God! the duke lies stretched beside him,

Senseless, weltering in his gore.

In the dull October evening,

Down the leaf-strewn forest-road,

To the castle, past the drawbridge,

Came the hunters with their load.

In the hall, with sconces blazing,

Ladies waiting round her seat,

Clothed in smiles, beneath the dais

Sate the Duchess Marguerite.

Hark! below the gates unbarring!

Tramp of men, and quick commands!

“’Tis my lord come back from hunting;”

And the duchess claps her hands.

Slow and tired, came the hunters;

Stopped in darkness in the court.

“Ho, this way, ye laggard hunters!

To the hall! What sport, what sport?”

Slow they entered with their master;

In the hall they laid him down.

On his coat were leaves and blood-stains,

On his brow an angry frown.

Dead her princely youthful husband

Lay before his youthful wife,

Bloody ’neath the flaring sconces—

And the sight froze all her life.

In Vienna, by the Danube,

Kings hold revel, gallants meet.

Gay of old amid the gayest

Was the Duchess Marguerite.

In Vienna, by the Danube,

Feast and dance her youth beguiled.

Till that hour she never sorrowed;

But from then she never smiled.

’Mid the Savoy mountain-valleys,

Far from town or haunt of man,

Stands a lonely church, unfinished,

Which the Duchess Maud began.

Old, that duchess stern began it,

In gray age, with palsied hands;

But she died while it was building,

And the church unfinished stands—

Stands as erst the builders left it,

When she sank into her grave;

Mountain greensward paves the chancel,

Harebells flower in the nave.

“In my castle all is sorrow,”

Said the Duchess Marguerite then:

“Guide me, some one, to the mountain;

We will build the church again.”

Sandalled palmers, faring homeward,

Austrian knights from Syria came.

“Austrian wanderers bring, O warders!

Homage to your Austrian dame.”

From the gate the warders answered—

“Gone, O knights, is she you knew!

Dead our duke, and gone his duchess;

Seek her at the church of Brou.”

Austrian knights and march-worn palmers

Climb the winding mountain-way;

Reach the valley, where the fabric

Rises higher day by day.

Stones are sawing, hammers ringing;

On the work the bright sun shines;

In the Savoy mountain-meadows,

By the stream, below the pines.

On her palfrey white the duchess

Sate, and watched her working train—

Flemish carvers, Lombard gilders,

German masons, smiths from Spain.

Clad in black, on her white palfrey,

Her old architect beside—

There they found her in the mountains,

Morn and noon and eventide.

There she sate, and watched the builders,

Till the church was roofed and done;

Last of all, the builders reared her

In the nave a tomb of stone.

On the tomb two forms they sculptured,

Lifelike in the marble pale—

One, the duke in helm and armor;

One, the duchess in her veil.

Round the tomb the carved stone fret-work

Was at Easter-tide put on.

Then the duchess closed her labors;

And she died at the St. John.

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