The Earthly Paradise, (March-August), by William Morris, [1868], at sacred-texts.com
CERTAIN gentlemen and mariners of Norway, having considered all that they had heard of the Earthly Paradise, set sail to find it, and after many troubles and the lapse of many years came old men to some Western land, of which they had never before heard: there they died, when they had dwelt there certain years, much honoured of the strange people.
FORGET six counties overhung with smoke,
 Forget the snorting steam and piston stroke,
 Forget the spreading of the hideous town;
 Think rather of the pack-horse on the down,
 And dream of London, small, and white, and clean,
 The clear Thames bordered by its gardens green;
 Think, that below bridge the green lapping waves
 Smite some few keels that bear Levantine staves,
 Cut from the yew wood on the burnt-up hill,
 And pointed jars that Greek hands toiled to fill,
 And treasured scanty spice from some far sea,
 Florence gold cloth, and Ypres napery,
 And cloth of Bruges, and hogsheads of Guienne;
 While nigh the thronged wharf Geoffrey Chaucer's pen
 Moves over bills of ladingmid such times
 Shall dwell the hollow puppets of my rhymes. p. 4
    A nameless city in a distant sea,
 White as the changing walls of faërie,
 Thronged with much people clad in ancient guise
 I now am fain to set before your eyes;
 There, leave the clear green water and the quays,
 And pass betwixt its marble palaces,
 Until ye come unto the chiefest square;
 A bubbling conduit is set midmost there,
 And round about it now the maidens throng,
 With jest and laughter, and sweet broken song,
 Making but light of labour new begun
 While in their vessels gleams the morning sun.
    On one side of the square a temple stands,
 Wherein the gods worshipped in ancient lands
 Still have their altars, a great market-place
 Upon two other sides fills all the space,
 And thence the busy hum of men comes forth;
 But on the cold side looking toward the north
 A pillared council-house may you behold,
 Within whose porch are images of gold,
 Gods of the nations who dwelt anciently
 About the borders of the Grecian sea.
   Pass now between them, push the brazen door,
 And standing on the polished marble floor
 Leave all the noises of the square behind;
 Most calm that reverent chamber shall ye find,
 Silent at first, but for the noise you made
 When on the brazen door your hand you laid p. 5
 To shut it after youbut now behold
 The city rulers on their thrones of gold,
 Clad in most fair attire, and in their hands
 Long carven silver-banded ebony wands;
 Then from the dais drop your eyes and see
 Soldiers and peasants standing reverently
 Before those elders, round a little band
 Who bear such arms as guard the English land,
 But battered, rent, and rusted sore, and they,
 The men themselves, are shrivelled, bent, and grey;
 And as they lean with pain upon their spears
 Their brows seem furrowed deep with more than years;
 For sorrow dulls their heavy sunken eyes,
 Bent are they less with time than miseries.
   Pondering on them the city grey-beards gaze
 Through kindly eyes, midst thoughts of other days,
 And pity for poor souls, and vague regret
 For all the things that might have happened yet,
 Until, their wonder gathering to a head,
 The wisest man, who long that land has led,
 Breaks the deep silence, unto whom again
 A wanderer answers. Slowly as in pain,
 And with a hollow voice as from a tomb
 At first he tells the story of his doom,
 But as it grows and once more hopes and fears,
 Both measureless, are ringing round his ears,
 His eyes grow bright, his seeming days decrease,
 For grief once told brings somewhat back of peace. p. 6
THE ELDER OF THE CITY.
   From what unheard-of world, in what strange keel,
 Have ye come hither to our commonweal?
 No barbarous race, as these our peasants say,
 But learned in memories of a long-past day,
 Speaking, some few at least, the ancient tongue
 That through the lapse of ages still has clung
 To us, the seed of the Ionian race.
    Speak out and fear not; if ye need a place
 Wherein to pass the end of life away,
 That shall ye gain from us from this same day,
 Unless the enemies of God ye are;
 We fear not you and yours to bear us war,
 And scarce can think that ye will try again
 Across the perils of the shifting plain
 To seek your own land whereso that may be:
 For folk of ours bearing the memory
 Of our old land, in days past oft have striven
 To reach it, unto none of whom was given
 To come again and tell us of the tale,
 Therefore our ships are now content to sail,
 About these happy islands that we know.
THE WANDERER.
Masters, I have to tell a tale of woe,
 A tale of folly and of wasted life,
 Hope against hope, the bitter dregs of strife,
 Ending, where all things end, in death at last: p. 7
 So if I tell the story of the past,
 Let it be worth some little rest, I pray,
 A little slumber ere the end of day.
No wonder if the Grecian tongue I know,
 Since at Byzantium many a year ago
 My father bore the twibil valiantly;
 There did he marry, and get me, and die,
 And I went back to Norway to my kin,
 Long ere this beard ye see did first begin
 To shade my mouth, but nathless not before
 Among the Greeks I gathered some small lore,
 And standing midst the Væringers, still heard
 From this or that man many a wondrous word;
 For ye shall know that though we worshipped God,
 And heard mass duly, still of Swithiod
 The Greater, Odin and his house of gold,
 The noble stories ceased not to be told;
 These moved me more than words of mine can say
 Een while at Micklegarth my folks did stay;
 But when I reached one dying autumn-tide
 My uncle's dwelling near the forest side,
 And saw the land so scanty and so bare,
 And all the hard things men contend with there,
 A little and unworthy land it seemed,
 And yet the more of Asagard I dreamed,
 And worthier seemed the ancient faith of praise.
But now, but nowwhen one of all those days p. 8
 Like Lazarus' finger on my heart should be
 Breaking the fiery fixed eternity,
 But for one momentcould I see once more
 The grey-roofed sea-port sloping towards the shore,
 Or note the brown boats standing in from sea,
 Or the great dromond swinging from the quay,
 Or in the beech-woods watch the screaming jay
 Shoot up betwixt the tall trunks, smooth and grey
 Yea, could I see the days before distress
 When very longing was but happiness.
   Within our house there was a Breton squire
 Well learned, who fail'd not to fan the fire
 That evermore unholpen burned in me
 Strange lands and things beyond belief to see;
 Much lore of many lands this Breton knew;
 And for one tale I told, he told me two.
 He, counting Asagard a new-told thing,
 Yet spoke of gardens ever blossoming
 Across the western sea where none grew old,
 Een as the books at Micklegarth had told,
 And said moreover that an English knight
 Had had the Earthly Paradise in sight,
 And heard the songs of those that dwelt therein,
 But entered not, being hindered by his sin.
 Shortly, so much of this and that he said
 That in my heart the sharp barb entered,
 And like real life would empty stories seem,
 And life from day to day an empty dream. p. 9
    Another man there was, a Swabian priest,
 Who knew the maladies of man and beast,
 And what things helped them; he the stone still sought
 Whereby base metal into gold is brought,
 And strove to gain the precious draught, whereby
 Men live midst mortal men yet never die;
 Tales of the Kaiser Redbeard could he tell
 Who neither went to Heaven nor yet to Hell,
 When from that fight upon the Asian plain
 He vanished, but still lives to come again
 Men know not how or when; but I listening
 Unto this tale thought it a certain thing
 That in some hidden vale of Swithiod
 Across the golden pavement still he trod.
   But while our longing for such things so grew,
 And ever more and more we deemed them true,
 Upon the land a pestilence there fell
 Unheard-of yet in any chronicle,
 And, as the people died full fast of it,
 With these two men it chanced me once to sit,
 This learned squire whose name was Nicholas,
 And Swabian Laurence, as our manner was;
 For could we help it scarcely did we part
 From dawn to dusk: so heavy, sad at heart,
 We from the castle yard beheld the bay
 Upon that neer-to-be-forgotten day;
 Little we said amidst that dreary mood
 And certes nought that we could say was good. p. 10
    It was a bright September afternoon,
 The parched-up beech trees would be yellowing soon;
 The yellow flowers grown deeper with the sun
 Were letting fall their petals one by one;
 No wind there was, a haze was gathering oer
 The furthest bound of the faint yellow shore;
 And in the oily waters of the bay
 Scarce moving aught some fisher-cobles lay,
 And all seemed peace; and had been peace indeed
 But that we young men of our life had need,
 And to our listening ears a sound was borne
 That made the sunlight wretched and forlorn
 The heavy tolling of the minster bell
 And nigher yet a tinkling sound did tell
 That through the streets they bore our Saviour Christ
 By dying lips in anguish to be kissed.
   At last spoke Nicholas, "How long shall we
 Abide here, looking forth into the sea
 Expecting when our turn shall come to die?
 Fair fellows, will ye come with me and try
 Now at our worst that long desired quest,
 Nowwhen our worst is death, and life our best."
    "Nay, but thou knowst," I said, "that I but wait
 The coming of some man, the turn of fate,
 To make this voyagebut I die meanwhile
 For I am poor, though my blood be not vile,
 Nor yet for all his lore doth Laurence hold
 Within his crucibles aught like to gold; p. 11
 And what hast thou, whose father driven forth
 By Charles of Blois, found shelter in the North?
 But little riches as I needs must deem."
    "Well," said he, "things are better than they seem,
 For neath my bed an iron chest I have
 That holdeth things I have made shift to save
 Een for this end; moreover, hark to this,
 In the next firth a fair long ship there is
 Well victualled, ready even now for sea,
 And I may say it longeth unto me;
 Since Marcus Erling, late its owner, lies
 Dead at the end of many miseries,
 And little Kirstin, as thou well mayst know,
 Would be content throughout the world to go
 If I but took her hand, and now still more
 Hath heart to leave this poor death-stricken shore.
 Therefore my gold shall buy us Bordeaux swords
 And Bordeaux wine as we go oceanwards.
    "What say ye, will ye go with me to-night,
 Setting your faces to undreamed delight,
 Turning your backs unto this troublous hell,
 Or is the time too short to say farewell?
   "Not so," I said, "rather would I depart
 Now while thou speakest, never has my heart
 Been set on anything within this land."
    Then said the Swabian, "Let us now take hand
 And swear to follow evermore this quest
 Till death or life have set our hearts at rest." p. 12
    So with joined hands we swore, and Nicholas said,
 "To-night, fair friends, be ye apparelled
 To leave this land, bring all the arms ye can
 And such men as ye trust, my own good man
 Guards the small postern looking towards St. Bride,
 And good it were ye should not be espied,
 Since mayhap freely ye should not go hence,
 Thou Rolf in special, for this pestilence
 Makes all men hard and cruel, nor are they
 Willing that folk should scape if they must stay:
 Be wise; I bid you for a while farewell,
 Leave ye this stronghold when St. Peter's bell
 Strikes midnight, all will surely then be still,
 And I will bide you at King Tryggve's hill
 Outside the city gates."
                          Each went his way
 Therewith, and I the remnant of that day
 Gained for the quest three men that I deemed true,
 And did such other things as I must do,
 And still was ever listening for the chime
 Half maddened by the lazy lapse of time,
 Yea, scarce I thought indeed that I should live
 Till the great tower the joyful sound should give
 That set us free: and so the hours went past,
 Till startled by the echoing clang at last
 That told of midnight, armed from head to heel
 Down to the open postern did I steal,
 Bearing small wealththis sword that yet hangs here
 Worn thin and narrow with so many a year, p. 13
 My father's axe that from Byzantium,
 With some few gems my pouch yet held, had come,
 Nought else that shone with silver or with gold.
    But by the postern gate could I behold
 Laurence the priest all armed as if for war,
 And my three men were standing not right far
 From off the town-wall, having some small store
 Of arms and furs and raiment: then once more
 I turned, and saw the autumn moonlight fall
 Upon the new-built bastions of the wall,
 Strange with black shadow and grey flood of light,
 And further off I saw the lead shine bright
 On tower and turret-roof against the sky,
 And looking down I saw the old town lie
 Black in the shade of the oer-hanging hill,
 Stricken with death, and dreary, but all still
 Until it reached the water of the bay,
 That in the dead night smote against the quay
 Not all unheard, though there was little wind.
 But as I turned to leave the place behind,
 The wind's light sound, the slowly falling swell,
 Were hushed at once by that shrill-tinkling bell,
 That in that stillness jarring on mine ears,
 With sudden jangle checked the rising tears,
 And now the freshness of the open sea
 Seemed ease and joy and very life to me.
    So greeting my new mates with little sound,
 We made good haste to reach King Tryggve's mound,
 And there the Breton Nicholas beheld. p. 14
 Who by the hand fair Kirstin Erling held,
 And round about them twenty men there stood,
 Of whom the more part on the holy rood
 Were sworn till death to follow up the quest,
 And Kirstin was the mistress of the rest.
    Again betwixt us was there little speech,
 But swiftly did we set on toward the beach, .
 And coming there our keel, the Fighting Man,
 We boarded, and the long oars out we ran,
 And swept from out the firth, and sped so well
 That scarcely could we hear St. Peter's bell
 Toll one, although the light wind blew from land;
 Then hoisting sail southward we gan to stand,
 And much I joyed beneath the moon to see
 The lessening land that might have been to me
 A kindly giver of wife, child, and friend,
 And happy life, or at the worser end
 A quiet grave till doomsday rend the earth.
Night passed, day dawned, and we grew full of mirth
 As with the ever-rising morning wind
 Still further lay our threatened death behind,
 Or so we thought: some eighty men we were,
 Of whom but fifty knew the shipman's gear,
 The rest were uplanders; midst such of these
 As knew not of our quest, with promises
 Went Nicholas dealing florins round about,
 With still a fresh tale for each new man's doubt,
 Till all were fairly won or seemed to be p. 15
 To that strange desperate voyage oer the sea.
Now if ye ask me from what land I come
 With all my folly,Viken is my home
 Where Tryggve Olaf's son and Olaf's sire
 Lit to the ancient Gods the sacred fire,
 Unto whose line am I myself akin,
 Through him who Astrid in old time did win,
 King Olaf's widow: let all that go by,
 Since I was born at least to misery.
   Now Nicholas came to Laurence and to me
 To talk of what he deemed our course should be,
 To whom agape I listened, since I knew
 Nought but old tales, nor aught of false and true
 Amid these, for but one kind seemed to be
 The Vineland voyage oer the unknown sea
 And Swegder's search for Godheim, when he found
 The entrance to a new world underground;
 But Nicholas oer many books had pored
 And this and that thing in his mind had stored,
 And idle tales from true report he knew.
 Would he were living now, to tell to you
 This story that my feeble lips must tell!
    Now he indeed of Vineland knew full well,
 Both from my tales where truth perchance touched lies,
 And from the ancient written histories;
 But now he said, "The land was good enow
 That Leif the son of Eric came unto, p. 16
 But this was not our world, nay scarce could be
 The door into a place so heavenly
 As that we seek, therefore my rede is this,
 That we to gain that sure abode of bliss
 Risk dying in an unknown landless sea;
 Although full certainly it seems to me
 All that we long for there we needs must find.
    "Therefore, O friends, if ye are of my mind,
 When we are passed the French and English strait
 Let us seek news of that desired gate
 To immortality and blessed rest
 Within the landless waters of the west,
 But still a little to the southward steer.
 Certes no Greenland winter waits us there,
 No year-long night, but rather we shall find
 Spice-trees set waving by the western wind,
 And gentle folk who know no guile at least,
 And many a bright-winged bird and soft-skinned beast,
 For gently must the year upon them fall.
    "Now since the Fighting Man is over small
 To hold the mighty stores that we shall need,
 To turn as now to Bremen is my rede,
 And there to buy a new keel with my gold,
 And fill her with such things as she may hold;
 And thou thenceforward, Rolf, her lord shalt be,
 Since thou art not unskilled upon the sea."
But unto me most fair his saying seemed,
 For of a land unknown to all I dreamed, p. 17
 And certainly by some warm sea I thought
 That we the soonest thereto should be brought.
 Therefore with mirth enow passed every day
 Till in the Weser stream at last we lay
 Hearkening the bells of Bremen ring to mass,
 For on a Sunday morn our coming was.
    There in a while to chaffer did we fall,
 And of the merchants bought a dromond tall
 They called the Rose-Garland, and her we stored
 With such like victuals as we well might hoard,
 And arms and raiment; also there we gained
 Some few men more by stories true and feigned,
 And by that time, now needing nought at all,
 We weighed, well armed, with good hope not to fall
 Into the hands of rovers of the sea,
 Since at that time had we heard certainly
 Edward of England drew all men to him,
 And that his fleet held whatso keel could swim
 From Jutland to Land's End; for all that, we
 Thought it but wise to keep the open sea
 And give to warring lands a full wide berth;
 Since unto all of us our lives seemed worth
 A better purchase than they erst had been.
   So it befell that we no sail had seen
 Till the sixth day at morn, when we drew near
 The land at last and saw the French coast clear,
 The high land over Guines our pilot said.
 There at the day-break, we, apparelled p. 18
 Like merchant ships in seeming, now perforce
 Must meet a navy drawing thwart our course,
 Whose sails and painted hulls not far away
 Rolled slowly oer the leaden sea and grey,
 Beneath the night-clouds by no sun yet cleared;
 But we with anxious hearts this navy neared,
 For we sailed deep and heavy, and to fly
 Would nought avail since we were drawn so nigh,
 And fighting, must we meet but certain death.
    Soon with amazement did I hold my breath
 As from the wide bows of the Rose-Garland,
 I saw the sun, new risen oer the land,
 Light up the shield-hung side of keel on keel,
 Their sails like knights coats, and the points of steel
 Glittering from waist and castle and high top.
 And well indeed awhile my heart might stop
 As heading all the crowded van I saw,
 Huge, swelling out without a crease or flaw,
 A sail where, on the quartered blue and red,
 In silk and gold right well apparelled,
 The lilies gleamed, the thin gaunt leopards glared
 Out toward the land where even now there flared
 The dying beacons. Ah, with such an one
 Could I from town to town of France have run
 To end my life upon some glorious day
 Where stand the banners brighter than the May
 Above the deeds of men, as certainly
 This king himself has full oft wished to die.
    And who knows now beneath what field he lies, p. 19
 Amidst what mighty bones of enemies?
 Ah, surely it had been a glorious thing
 From such a field to lead forth such a king,
 That he might live again with happy days,
 And more than ever win the people's praise.
 Nor had it been an evil lot to stand
 On the worse side, with people of the land
 Gainst such a man, when even this might fall,
 That it might be my luck some day to call
 My battle-cry oer his low lying head,
 And I be evermore remembered.
    Well as we neared and neared, such thoughts I had
 Whereby perchance I was the less a-drad
 Of what might come, and at the worst we deemed
 They would not scorn our swords; but as I dreamed
 Of fair towns won and desperate feats of war,
 And my old follies now were driven afar
 By that most glorious sight, a loud halloo
 Came down the wind, and one by me who knew
 The English tongue cried that they bade us run
 Close up and board, nor was there any one
 Who durst say nay to that, so presently
 Both keels were underneath the big ship's lee;
 While Nicholas and I together passed
 Betwixt the crowd of archers by the mast
 Unto the poop, where neath his canopy
 The king sat, eyeing us as we drew nigh.
   Broad-browed he was, hook-nosed, with wide grey eyes p. 20
 No longer eager for the coming prize,
 But keen and steadfast, many an ageing line,
 Half hidden by his sweeping beard and fine,
 Ploughed his thin cheeks, his hair was more than grey,
 And like to one he seemed whose better day
 Is over to himself, though foolish fame
 Shouts louder year by year his empty name.
 Unarmed he was, nor clad upon that morn
 Much like a king, an ivory hunting-horn
 Was slung about him, rich with gems and gold,
 And a great white ger-falcon did he hold
 Upon his fist; before his feet there sat
 A scrivener making notes of this or that
 As the king bade him, and behind his chair
 His captains stood in armour rich and fair;
 And by his side unhelmed, but armed, stood one
 I deemed none other than the prince his son;
 For in a coat of England was he clad,
 And on his head a coronel he had.
 Tall was he, slim, made apt for feats of war,
 A splendid lord, yea, he seemed prouder far
 Than was his sire, yet his eyes therewithal
 With languid careless glance seemed wont to fall
 On things about, as though he deemed that nought
 Could fail unbidden to do all his thought.
 But close by him stood a war-beaten knight,
 Whose coat of war bore on a field of white
 A sharp red pile, and he of all men there
 Methought would be the one that I should fear p. 21
 If I led men.
                But midst my thoughts I heard
 The king's voice as the high seat now we neared,
 And knew his speech because in French it was,
 That erewhile I had learnt of Nicholas.
 "Fair sirs, what are ye? for on this one day,
 I rule the narrow seas mine ancient way.
 Me seemeth in the highest bark I know
 The Flemish handiwork, but yet ye show
 Unlike to merchants, though your ships are deep
 And slowly through the water do ye creep;
 And thou, fair sir, seemst journeying from the north
 With peltries Bordeaux-ward? Nay then go forth
 Thou wilt not harm us: yet if ye be men
 Well-born and warlike, these are fair days, when
 The good heart wins more than the merchant keeps,
 And safest still in steel the young head sleeps;
 And here are banners thou mayest stand beneath
 And not be shamed either in life or death
 What, man, thou reddenest, wouldst thou say me no,
 If underneath my banner thou shouldst go?
 Nay, thou mayest speak, or let thy fellow say
 What he is stuffed with, be it yea or nay."
    For as he spoke my fellow gazed on me
 With something like to fear, and hurriedly
 As I bent forward, thrust me on one side,
 And scarce the king's last word would he abide
 But gan to say, "Sire, from the north we come,
 Though as for me far nigher is my home. p. 22
 Thy foes, my Lord, drove out my kin and me,
 Ere yet thine armed hand was upon the sea;
 Chandos shall surely know my father's name,
 Loys of Dinan, which ill-luck, sword, and flame,
 Lord Charles of Blois, the French king, and the pest
 In this and that land now have laid to rest,
 Except for me alone. And now, my Lord,
 If I shall seem to speak an idle word
 To such as thou art, pardon me therefore;
 But we, part taught by ancient books and lore,
 And part by what, nor yet so long ago,
 This man's own countrymen have come to do,
 Have gathered hope to find across the sea
 A land where we shall gain felicity
 Past tongue of man to tell of; and our life
 Is not so sweet here, or so free from strife,
 Or glorious deeds so common, that, if we
 Should think a certain path at last to see
 To such a place, men then could think us wise
 To turn away therefrom, and shut our eyes,
 Because at many a turning here and there
 Swift death might lurk, or unaccustomed fear.
 O King, I pray thee in this young man's face
 Flash not thy banner, nor with thy frank grace
 Tear him from life; but go thy way, let us
 Find hidden death, or life more glorious
 Than thou durst think of, knowing not the gate
 Whereby to flee from that all-shadowing fate.
    "O King, since I could walk a yard or twain, p. 23
 Or utter anything but cries of pain,
 Death was before me; yea, on the first morn
 That I remember aught, among the corn
 I wandered with my nurse, behind us lay
 The walls of Vannes, white in the summer day,
 The reapers whistled, the brown maidens sung,
 As on the wain the topmost sheaf they hung,
 The swallow wheeled above high up in air,
 And midst the labour all was sweet and fair;
 When on the winding road between the fields
 I saw a glittering line of spears and shields,
 And pleased therewith called out to some one by
 Een as I could; he scarce for fear could cry
 'The French, the French!' and turned and ran his best
 Toward the town gates, and we ran with the rest,
 I wailing loud who knew not why at all,
 But ere we reached the gates my nurse did fall,
 I with her, and I wondered much that she
 Just as she fell should still lie quietly;
 Nor did the coloured feathers that I found
 Stuck in her side, as frightened I crawled round,
 Tell me the tale, though I was sore afeard
 At all the cries and wailing that I heard.
    "I say, my Lord, that arrow-flight now seems
 The first thing rising clear from feeble dreams,
 And that was death; and the next thing was death,
 For through our house all spoke with bated breath
 And wore black clothes, withal they came to me
 A little child, and did off hastily p. 24
 My shoon and hosen, and with that I heard
 The sound of doleful singing, and afeard
 Forebore to question, when I saw the feet
 Of all were bare, like mine, as toward the street
 We passed, and joined a crowd in such-like guise
 Who through the town sang woeful litanies,
 Pressing the stones with feet unused and soft,
 And bearing images of saints aloft,
 In hope gainst hope to save us from the rage
 Of that fell pest, that as an unseen cage
 Hemmed France about, and me and such as me
 They made partakers of their misery.
    "Lo death again, and if the time served now
 Full many another picture could I show
 Of death and death, and men who ever strive
 Through every misery at least to live.
 The priest within the minster preaches it,
 And brooding oer it doth the wise man sit
 Letting life's joys go by. Well, blame me then,
 If I who love this changing life of men,
 And every minute of whose life were bliss
 Too great to long for greater, but for this
 Mock me, who take this death-bound life in hand
 And risk the rag to find a happy land,
 Where at the worst death is so far away
 No man need think of him from day to day
 Mock me, but let us go, for I am fain
 Our restless road, the landless sea, to gain." p. 25
    His words nigh made me weep, but while he spoke
 I noted how a mocking smile just broke
 The thin line of the Prince's lips, and he
 Who carried the afore-named armoury
 Puffed out his wind-beat cheeks and whistled low:
 But the king smiled, and said, "Can it be so?
 I know not, and ye twain are such as find
 The things whereto old kings must needs be blind.
 For you the world is widebut not for me,
 Who once had dreams of one great victory
 Wherein that world lay vanquished by my throne,
 And now, the victor in so many an one,
 Find that in Asia Alexander died
 And will not live again; the world is wide
 For you I say,for me a narrow space
 Betwixt the four walls of a fighting place.
    "Poor man, why should I stay thee; live thy fill,
 Of that fair life, wherein thou seest no ill
 But fear of that fair rest I hope to win
 One day, when I have purged me of my sin.
    "Farewell, it yet may hap that I a king
 Shall be remembered but by this one thing,
 That on the morn before ye crossed the sea
 Ye gave and took in common talk with me;
 But with this ring keep memory of the morn,
 O Breton, and thou Northman, by this horn
 Remember me, who am of Odin's blood,
 As heralds say: moreover it were good
 Ye had some lines of writing neath my seal, p. 26
 Or ye might find it somewhat hard to deal
 With some of mine, who pass not for a word
 Whateer they deem may hold a hostile sword."
   So as we kneeled this royal man to thank,
 A clerk brought forth two passes sealed and blank,
 And when we had them, with the horn and ring,
 With few words did we leave the noble king,
 And as adown the gangway steps we passed,
 We saw the yards swing creaking round the mast,
 And heard the shipman's ho, for one by one
 The van outsailed before, by him had run
 Een as he stayed for us, and now indeed
 Of his main battle must he take good heed:
 But as from off the mighty side we pushed,
 And in between us the green water rushed,
 I heard his scalds strike up triumphantly
 Some song that told not of the weary sea,
 But rather of the mead and fair green-wood,
 And as we leaned oer to the wind, I stood
 And saw the bright sails leave us, and soon lost
 The pensive music by the strong wind tossed
 From wave to wave, then turning I espied
 Glittering and white upon the weather side
 The land he came from, oer the bright green sea,
 Scarce duller than the land upon our lee,
 For now the clouds had fled before the sun
 And the bright autumn day was well begun.
 Then I cried out for music too, and heard p. 27
 The minstrels sing some well-remembered word,
 And while they sung, before me still I gazed,
 Silent with thought of many things, and mazed
 With many longings; when I looked again
 To see those lands, nought but the restless plain
 With some far-off small fisher-boat was left;
 A little hour for evermore had reft
 The sight of Europe from my helpless eyes,
 And crowned my store of hapless memories.
THE ELDER OF THE CITY.
   Sit friends, and tell your tale which seems to us
 Shall be a strange tale and a piteous,
 Nor shall it lack our pity for its woe,
 Nor ye due thanks for all the things ye show
 Of kingdoms nigh forgot that once were great,
 And small lands come to glorious estate.
    But, sirs, ye faint, behold these maidens stand
 Bearing the blood of this our sunburnt land
 In well-wrought cups,drink now of this, that while
 Ye poor folk wandered, had from fortune's smile
 Abode your coming, hidden none the less
 Below the earth from summer's happiness.
THE WANDERERS.
   Fair sirs, we thank you, hoping we have cone
 Through many wanderings to a quiet home
 Befitting dying menGood health and peace p. 28
 To you and to this land, and fair increase
 Of everything that ye can wish to have!
   But to my tale: A fair south-east wind drave
 Our ships for ten days more, and ever we
 Sailed mile for mile together steadily,
 But the tenth day I saw the Fighting Man
 Brought up to wait me, and when nigh I ran
 Her captain hailed me, saying that he thought
 That we too far to northward had been brought,
 And we must do our southing while we could,
 So as his will to me was ever good
 In such like things, we changed our course straightway,
 And as we might till the eleventh day
 Stretched somewhat south, then baffling grew the wind,
 But as we still were ignorant and blind
 Nor knew our port, we sailed on helplessly
 Oer a smooth sea, beneath a lovely sky,
 And westward ever, but no signs of land
 All through these days we saw on either hand,
 Nor indeed hoped to see, because we knew
 Some watery desert we must journey through,
 That had been huge enough to keep all men
 From gaining that we sought for until then.
   Yet when I grew downcast, I did not fail
 To call to mind, how from our land set sail
 A certain man, and, after he had passed
 Through many unknown seas, did reach at last p. 29
 A rocky island's shore one foggy day,
 And while a little off the land he lay
 As in a dream he heard the folk call out
 In his own tongue, but mazed and all in doubt
 He turned therefrom, and afterwards in strife
 With winds and waters, much of precious life
 He wasted utterly, for when again
 He reached his port after long months of pain,
 Unto Biarmeland he chanced to go,
 And there the isle he left so long ago
 He knew at once, where many Northmen were.
    And such a fate I could not choose but fear
 For us sometimes; and sometimes when at night
 Beneath the moon I watched the foam fly white
 From off our bows, and thought how weak and small
 Showed the Rose-Garland's mast that looked so tall
 Beside the quays of Bremen; when I saw
 With measured steps the watch on toward me draw,
 And in the moon the helmsman's peering face,
 And twixt the cordage strained across my place
 Beheld the white sail of the Fighting Man
 Lead down the pathway of the moonlight wan
 Then when the ocean seemed so measureless
 The very sky itself might well be less,
 When midst the changeless piping of the wind,
 The intertwined slow waves pressed on behind
 Rolled oer our wake and made it nought again,
 Then would it seem an ill thing and a vain
 To leave the hopeful world that we had known, p. 30
 When all was oer, hopeless to die alone
 Within this changeless world of waters grey.
    But hope would come back to me with the day,
 The talk of men, the viol's quivering strings,
 Would bring my heart to think of better things.
 Nor were our folk down-hearted through all this;
 For partly with the hope of that vague bliss
 Were they made happy, partly the soft air
 And idle days wherethrough we then did fare
 Were joy enow to rude sea-faring folk.
   But this our ease at last a tempest broke
 And we must scud before it helplessly,
 Fearing each moment lest some climbing sea
 Should topple oer our poop and end us there,
 Nathless we scaped, and still the wind blew fair
 For what we deemed was our right course; but when
 On the third eve, we, as delivered men,
 Took breath because the gale was now blown out,
 And from our rolling deck we looked about
 Over the ridges of the dark grey seas,
 And saw the sun, setting in golden ease,
 Smile out at last from out the just-cleared sky
 Over the ocean's weltering misery,
 Still nothing of the Fighting Man we saw,
 Which last was seen when the first gusty flaw
 Smote them and us; but nothing would avail
 To mend the thing, so onward did we sail,
 But slowly, through the moonlit night and fair, p. 31
 With all sails set that we could hoist in air,
 And rolling heavily at first, for still
 Each wave came on a glittering rippled hill,
 And lifting us aloft, showed from its height
 The waste of waves, and then to lightless night
 Dropped us adown, and much ado had we
 To ride unspilt the wallow of the sea.
    But the sun rose up in a cloudless sky,
 And from the east the wind blew cheerily,
 And southwest still we steered; till on a day
 As nigh the mast deep in dull thoughts I lay,
 I heard a shout, and turning could I see
 One of the shipmen hurrying fast to me
 With something in his 1 and, who cast adown
 Close to my hand a mass of sea-weed brown
 Without more words, then knew I certainly
 The wrack, that oft before I had seen lie
 In sandy bights of Norway, and that eve
 Just as the sun the ridgy sea would leave,
 Shore birds we saw, that flew so nigh, we heard
 Their hoarse loud voice that seemed a heavenly word.
    Then all were glad, but I a fool and young
 Slept not that night, but walked the deck and sung
 Snatches of songs, and verily I think
 I thought next morn of some fresh stream to drink.
 What say I? next morn did I think to be
 Set in my godless fair eternity.
   Sirs, ye are old, and ye have seen perchance p. 32
 Some little child for very gladness dance
 Over a scarcely-noticed worthless thing,
 Worth more to him than ransom of a king,
 Did not a pang of more than pity take
 Your heart thereat, not for the youngling's sake,
 But for your own, for man that passes by,
 So like to God, so like the beasts that die.
 Lo, sirs, my pity for myself is such,
 When like an image that my hand can touch
 My old self grows unto myself grown old.
 Sirs, I forget my story is not told.
   Next morn more wrack we saw, more birds, but still
 No land as yet either for good or ill,
 But with the light increased the favouring breeze,
 And smoothly did we mount the ridgy seas.
 Then as a-nigh the good ship's stern I stood
 Gazing adown, a piece of rough-hewn wood
 On a wave's crest I saw, and loud I cried,
 "Drift-wood! drift-wood!" and one from by my side,
 Maddened with joy, made for the shrouds, and clomb
 Up to the top to look on his new home,
 For sure he thought the green earth soon to see;
 But gazing thence about him, presently
 He shouted out, "a sail astern, a sail!"
 Freshening the hope that now had 'gun to fail
 Of seeing our fellows with the earth new found;
 Wherefore we shortened sail, and sweeping round
 The hazy edges of the sea and sky p. 33
 Soon from the deck could see that sail draw nigh,
 Half fearful lest she yet might chance to be
 The floating house of some strange enemy,
 Till on her sail we could at last behold
 The ruddy lion with the axe of gold,
 And Marcus Erling's sign set corner-wise,
 The green, gold-fruited tree of Paradise.
 Ah, what a meeting as she drew anigh,
 Greeted with ringing shouts and minstrelsy;
 Alas, the joyful fever of that day,
 When all we met still told of land that lay
 Not far ahead! Yet at our joyous feast
 A word of warning spoke the Swabian priest
 To me and Nicholas, for, "O friends," he said,
 "Right welcome is the land that lies ahead
 To us who cannot turn, and in this air,
 Washed by this sea, it cannot but be fair,
 And good for us poor men I make no doubt;
 Yet, fellows, must I warn you not to shout
 Ere we have left the troublous wood behind
 Wherein we wander desperate and blind:
 Think what may dwell there! Call to mind the tale
 We heard last winter oer the Yule-tide ale,
 When that small, withered, black-eyed Genoese
 Told of the island in the outer seas
 He and his fellows reached upon a tide,
 And how, as lying by a streamlet's side,
 With ripe fruits ready unto every hand,
 They lacked not for fair women of the land, p. 34
 The devils came and slew them, all but him,
 Who, how he scarce knew, made a shift to swim
 Off to his ship: nor must ye, fellows, fear
 Such things alone, for mayhap men dwell here
 Who worship dreadful gods, and sacrifice
 Poor travellers to them in such horrid wise
 As I have heard of; or let this go by,
 Yet we may chance to come to slavery,
 Or all our strength and weapons be too poor
 To conquer such beasts as the unknown shore
 May breed; or set all these ill things aside,
 It yet may be our lot to wander wide
 Through many lands before at last we come
 Unto the gates of our enduring home."
   But what availed such warning unto us
 Who by this change made nigh delirious
 Spake wisdom outward from the teeth, but thought
 That in a little hour we should be brought
 Unto that bliss our hearts were set upon,
 That more than very Heaven we now had won.
   Well, the next morn unto our land we came,
 And even now my cheeks grow red with shame,
 To think what words I said to Nicholas,
 (Since on that night in the great ship I was,)
 Asking him questions, as if he were God,
 Or at the least in that fair land had trod,
 And knew it well, and still he answered me p. 35
 As some great doctor in theology
 Might his poor scholar, asking him of heaven.
    But unto me next morn the grace was given
 To see land first, and when men certainly
 That blessed sight of all sights could descry,
 All hearts were melted, and with happy tears,
 Born of the death of all our doubts and fears,
 Yea, with loud weeping, each did each embrace
 For joy that we had gained the glorious place.
 Then must the minstrels sing, then must they play
 Some joyous strain to welcome in the day,
 But for hot tears could see nor bow nor string,
 Nor for the rising sobs make shift to sing;
 Yea, some of us in that first ecstasy
 For joy of scaping death went near to die.
    Then might be seen how hard is this world's lot
 When such a marvel was our grief forgot,
 And what a thing the world's joy is to bear,
 When on our hearts the broken bonds of care
 Had left such scars, no man of us could say
 The burning words upon his lips that lay;
 Since, trained to hide the depths of misery,
 Amidst that joy no more our tongues were free.
 Ah, then it was indeed when first I knew,
 When all our wildest dreams seemed coming true,
 And we had reached the gates of Paradise
 And endless bliss, at what unmeasured price
 Man sets his life, and drawing happy breath,
 I shuddered at the once familiar death. p. 36
    Alas, the happy day! the foolish day!
 Alas, the sweet time, too soon passed away!
   Well, in a while I gained the Rose Garland,
 And as toward shore we steadily did stand
 With all sail set, the wind, which had been light,
 Since the beginning of the just past night,
 Failed utterly, and the sharp ripple slept,
 Then toiling hard forward our keels we swept,
 Making small way, until night fell again,
 And then, although of landing we were fain,
 Needs must we wait, but when the sun was set
 Then the cool night a light air did beget,
 And neath the stars slowly we moved along,
 And found ourselves within a current strong
 At daybreak, and the land beneath our lee.
    There a long line of breakers could we see,
 That on a yellow sandy beach did fall,
 And then a belt of grass, and then a wall
 Of green trees, rising dark against the sky.
 Not long we looked, but anchored presently
 A furlong from the shore, and then, all armed,
 Into the boats the most part of us swarmed,
 And pulled with eager hands unto the beach,
 But when the seething surf our prow did reach
 From off the bows I leapt into the sea
 Waist deep, and, wading, was the first to be
 Upon that land; then to the flowers I ran,
 And cried aloud like to a drunken man p. 37
 Words without meaning, whereof none took heed,
 For all across the yellow beach made speed
 To roll among the fair flowers and the grass.
    But when our folly somewhat tempered was,
 And we could talk like men, we thought it good
 To try if we could pierce the thick black wood,
 And see what men might dwell in that new land;
 But when we entered it, on either hand
 Uprose the trunks, with underwood entwined
 Making one thicket, thorny, dense, and blind;
 Where with our axes, labouring half the day,
 We scarcely made some half a rod of way;
    Therefore, we left that place and tried again,
 Yea, many times, but yet was all in vain;
 So to the ships we went, when we had been
 A long way in our arms, nor yet had seen
 A sign of man, but as for living things,
 Gay birds with many-coloured crests and wings,
 Conies anigh the beach, and while we hacked
 Within the wood, grey serpents, yellow-backed,
 And monstrous lizards; yea, and one man said
 That midst the thorns he saw a dragon's head;
 And keeping still his eyes on it he felt
 For a stout shaft he had within his belt;
 But just as he had got it to the string
 And drawn his hand aback, the loathly thing
 Vanished away, and how he could not tell.
   Now spite of all, little our courage fell, p. 38
 For this day's work, nay rather, all things seemed
 To show that we no foolish dream had dreamed
 The pathless, fearful sea, the land that lay
 So strange, so hard to find, so far away,
 The lovely summer air, the while we knew
 That unto winter now at home it grew,
 The flowery shore, the dragon-guarded wood,
 So hard to pierceeach one of these made good
 The foolish hope that led us from our home,
 That we to other misery might come.
   Now next morn when the tide began to flow
 We weighed, and somewhat northward did we go
 Coasting that land, and every now and then
 We went ashore to try the woods again,
 But little change we found in them, until
 Inland we saw a bare and scarped white hill
 Rise oer their tops, and going further on
 Until a broad green river's mouth we won,
 And entering there ran up it with the flood,
 For it was deep although twixt walls of wood
 Darkly enough its shaded stream did flow,
 And high trees hid the hill we saw just now.
    So as we peered about from side to side
 A path upon the right bank we espied
 Through the thick wood, and mooring hastily
 Our ships unto the trunks of trees thereby,
 Laurence and I with sixty men took land
 With bow or cutting sword or bill in hand, p. 39
 And bearing food to last till the third day;
    But with the others there did Nicholas stay
 To guard the ships, with whom was Kirstin still,
 Who now seemed pining for old things and ill,
 Spite of the sea-breeze and the lovely air.
 But as for us, we followed up with care
 A winding path, looking from left to right
 Lest any deadly thing should come in sight;
 And certainly our path a dragon crossed
 That in the thicket presently we lost;
 And some men said a leopard they espied,.
 And further on we heard a beast that cried;
 Serpents we saw, like those we erst had seen,,
 And many-coloured birds, and lizards green,
 And apes that chattered from amidst the trees..
    So on we went until a dying breeze
 We felt upon our faces, and soon grew
 The forest thinner, till at last we knew .
 The great scarped hill, which if we now could scale
 The sight of much far country would avail;
 But coming there we climbed it easily,
 For though escarped and rough toward the sea,
 The beaten path we followed led us round
 To where a soft and grassy slope we found,
 And there it forked, one arm led up the hill
 Another through the forest wound on still;
 Which last we left, in good hope soon to see
 Some signs of man, which happened presently;
 For two-thirds up the hill we reached a space p. 40
 Levelled by man's hand in the mountain's face,
 And there a rude shrine stood, of unhewn stones
 Both walls and roof, with a great heap of bones
 Piled up outside it: there awhile we stood
 In doubt, for something there made cold our blood,
 Till brother Laurence, with a whispered word,
 Crossed himself thrice, and drawing forth his sword
 Entered alone, but therewith presently
 From the inside called out aloud to me
 To follow, so I trembling, yet went in
 To that abode of unknown monstrous sin,
 And others followed: therein could we see,
 Amidst the gloom by peering steadily,
 An altar of rough stones, and over it
 We saw a god of yellow metal sit,
 A cubit long, which Laurence with his tongue
 Had touched and found pure gold; withal there hung
 Against the wall men's bodies brown and dry,
 Which gaudy rags of raiment wretchedly
 Did wrap about, and all their heads were wreathed
 With golden chaplets; and meanwhile we breathed
 A heavy, faint, and sweet spice-laden air,
 As though that incense late were scattered there.
    But from that house of devils soon we passed
 Trembling and pale, Laurence the priest, the last,
 And got away in haste, nor durst we take
 Those golden chaplets for their wearers sake,
 Or that grim golden devil whose they were;
 Yet for the rest, although they brought us fear p. 41
 They did but seem to show our heaven anigh
 Because we deemed these might have come to die
 In seeking it, being slain for fatal sin.
    And now we set ourselves in haste to win
 Up to that mountain's top, and on the way
 Looked backward oft upon the land that lay
 Beneath the hill, and still on every hand
 The forest seemed to cover all the land,
 But that some four leagues off we saw a space
 Cleared of the trees, and in that open place
 Houses we seemed to see, and rising smoke
 That told where dwelt the unknown, unseen folk.
    But when at last the utmost top we won
 A dismal sight our eyes must look upon;
 The mountain's summit, levelled by man's art,
 Was hedged by high stones set some yard apart
 All round a smooth paved space, and midst of these
 We saw a group of well-wrought images,
 Or so they seemed at first, who stood around
 An old hoar man laid on the rocky ground
 Who seemed to live as yet; now drawing near
 We saw indeed what things these figures were;
 Dead corpses, by some deft embalmer dried,
 And on this mountain after they had died
 Set up like players on a yule-tide feast;
 Here stood a hunter, with a spotted beast
 Most like a leopard, writhing up his spear;
 Nigh the old man stood one as if drawn near
 To give him drink, and on each side his head p. 42
 Two damsels daintily apparelled;
 And then again, nigh him who bore the cup,
 Were two who twixt them bore a litter up
 As though upon a journey he should go,
 And round about stood men with spear and bow,
 And painted targets as the guard to all,
 Headed by one beyond man's stature tall,
 Who, half turned round, as though he gave the word;
 Seemed as he once had been a mighty lord.
    But the live man amid the corpses laid,
 Turning from side to side, some faint word said
 Now and again, but kept his eyes shut fast,
 And we when from the green slope we had passed
 On to this dreadful stage, awe-struck and scared,
 Awhile upon the ghastly puppets stared,
 Then trembling, with drawn swords, came close anigh
 To where the hapless ancient man did lie,
 Who at the noise we made now oped his eyes
 And fixing them upon us did uprise,
 And with a fearful scream stretched out his hand,
 While upright on his head his hair did stand
 For very terror, while we none the less
 Were rooted to the ground for fearfulness,
 And scarce our weapons could make shift to hold.
 But as we stood and gazed, over he rolled
 Like a death-stricken bull, and there he lay,
 With his long-hoarded life quite past away.
    Then in our hearts did wonder conquer fear,
 And to the dead men did we draw anear p. 43
 And found them such-like things as I have said,
 But he, their master, was apparelled
 Like to those others that we saw een now
 Hung up within the dreary house below.
   Right little courage had we there to stay,
 So down the hill again we took our way,
 When looking landward thence we had but seen,
 All round about, the forest dull and green,
 Pierced by the river where our ships we left,
 And bounded by far-off blue mountains, cleft
 By passes here and there; but we went by
 The chapel of the gold god silently,
 For doubts had risen in our hearts at last
 If yet the bitterness of death were past.
    But having come again into the wood,
 We there took council whether it were good
 To turn back to the ships, or push on still
 Till we had reached the place that from the hill
 We had beheld, and since the last seemed best
 Onward we marched, scarce staying to take rest
 And eat some food, for feverish did we grow
 For haste the best or worst of all to know.
    Along the path that, as I said before,
 Led from the hill, we went, and laboured sore
 To gain the open ere the night should fall,
 But yet in vain, for like a dreary pall
 Cast oer the world, the darkness hemmed us in,
 And though we struggled desperately to win p. 44
 From out the forest through the very night,
 Yet did that labour so abate our might,
 We thought it good to rest among the trees,
 Nor come on those who might be enemies
 In the thick darkness, neither did we dare
 To light a fire lest folk should slay us there
 Mazed and defenceless; so the one half slept
 As they might do, the while the others kept
 Good guard in turn; and as we watched we heard
 Sounds that might well have made bold men afeard,
 And cowards die of fear, but we, alone,
 Apart from all, such desperate men were grown,
 If we should fail to win our Paradise,
 That common life we now might well despise.
    So by the day-break on our way we were
 When we had seen to all our fighting gear;
 And soon we came unto that open space,
 And here and there about a grassy place
 Saw houses scattered, neither great nor fair,
 For they were framed of trees as they grew there,
 And walled with wattle-work from tree to tree;
 And thereabout beasts unknown did we see,
 Four-footed, tame; and soon a man came out
 From the first house, and with a startled shout
 Took to his heels, and soon from far and near,
 The folk swarmed out, and still as in great fear
 Gave us no second look, but ran their best,
 And they being clad but lightly for the rest,
 To follow them seemed little mastery. p. 45.
 So to their houses gat we speedily
 To see if we might take some loiterer;
 And some few feeble folk we did find there,
 Though most had fled, and unto these with pain
 We made some little of our meaning plain,
 And sent an old man forth into the wood
 To show his fellows that our will was good.
 Who going from us came back presently
 His message done, and with him two or three
 The boldest of his folk, and they in turn
 A little of us by our signs did learn,
 Then went their way: and so at last all fear
 Was laid aside, and thronging they drew near
 To look upon us; and at last came one
 Who had upon his breast a golden sun,
 And in strange glittering gay attire was clad;
 He let us know our coming made him glad,
 And bade us come with him; so thereon we,
 Thinking him some one in authority,
 Rose up and followed him, who with glad face
 Led us through closer streets of that strange place,
 And brought us lastly to a shapely hall
 Round and high-roofed, held up with tree trunks tall,
 And midst his lords the barbarous king sat there.
 Gold-crowned, in strange apparel rich and fair,
 Whereat we shuddered, for we saw that he
 Was clad like him that erewhile we did see
 Upon the hill, and like those other ones
 Hung in the dismal shrine of unhewn stones. p. 46
    Yet nought of evil did he seem to think,
 But bade us sit by him and eat and drink,
 So eating did we speak by signs meanwhile
 Each unto each, and they would laugh and smile
 As folk well-pleased; and with them all that day
 Well feasted, learning some things did we stay.
 And sure of all the folk I ever saw
 These were the gentlest: if they had a law
 We knew not then, but still they seemed to be
 Like the gold people of antiquity.
    Now when we tried to ask for that good land,
 Eastward and seaward did they point the hand;
 Yet if they knew what thing we meant thereby
 We knew not; but when we for our reply
 Said that we came thence, they made signs to say
 They knew it well, and kneeling down they lay
 Before our feet, as people worshipping.
    But we, though somewhat troubled at this thing,
 Failed not to hope, because it seemed to us
 That this so simple folk and virtuous,
 So happy midst their dreary forest bowers,
 Showed at the least a better land than ours,
 And some yet better thing far onward lay.
    Amidst all this we made a shift to pray
 That some of them would go with us, to be
 Our fellows on the perilous green sea,
 And much did they rejoice when this they knew,
 And straightway midst their young men lots they drew,
 And the next morn of these they gave us ten, p. 47
 And wept at our departing.
                               Now these men,
 Though brown indeed through dint of that hot sun,
 Were comely and well-knit, as any one
 I saw in Greece, and fit for deeds of war,
 Though as I said of all men gentlest far;
 Their arms were axe and spear, and shield and bow,
 But nought of iron did they seem to know,
 For all their cutting tools were edged with flint,
 Or with soft copper, that soon turned and bent;
 With cloths of cotton were their bodies clad,
 But other raiment for delight they had
 Most fairly woven of some unknown thing;
 And all of them from little child to king
 Had many ornaments of beaten gold:
 Certes, we might have gathered wealth untold
 Amongst them, had that then been in our thought,
 But none the glittering evil valued aught.
    Now of these foresters, we learned, that they
 Hemmed by the woods, went seldom a long way
 From where we saw them, and no boat they had,
 Or much of other people good or bad
 They knew, and ever had they little war:
 But now and then a folk would come from far
 In ships unlike to ours, and for their gold
 Would give them goods; and some men over bold
 Who dwelt beyond the great hill we had seen,
 Had waged them war, but these all slain had been
 Among the tangled woods by men who knew p. 48
 What tracks of beasts the thicket might pierce through.
    Such things they told us whom we brought away,
 But after this, for certes on that day
 Not much we gathered of their way of life.
    So to the ships we came at last, and rife
 With many things new learned, we told them all,
 And though our courage might begin to fall
 A little now, yet each to other we
 Made countenance of great felicity,
 And spoke as if the prize were well-nigh won.
   Behold then, sirs, how fortune led us on,
 Little by little till we reached the worst,
 And still our lives grew more and more accurst.
THE ELDER OF THE CITY.
   Nay, friends, believe your worser life now past,
 And that a little bliss is reached at last;
 Take heart, therefore, for like a tale so told
 Is each man's life: and ye, who have been bold
 To see and suffer such unheard-of things,
 Henceforth shall be more worshipped than the kings
 We hear you name; then since ye reach this day
 How are ye worse for what has passed away?
THE WANDERER.
   Kind folk, what words of ours can give you praise
 That fits your kindness; yet for those past days, p. 49
 If we bemoan our lot, think this at least:
 We are as men, who cast aside a feast
 Amidst their lowly fellows, that they may
 Eat with the king, and who at end of day, .
 Bearing sore stripes, with great humility
 Must pray the bedesmen of those men to be
 They scorned that day while yet the sun was high.
   Not long within the river did we lie,
 But put to sea intending as before
 To coast with watchful eyes the unknown shore,
 And strive to pierce the woods: three days we sailed,
 And little all our watchfulness availed,
 Though all that time the wind was fair enow;
 But on the fourth day it began to blow
 From off the land, and still increased on us
 Until the storm grown wild and furious,
 Although at anchor still we strove to ride,
 Had blown us out into the ocean wide,
 Far out of sight of land; and when at last,
 After three days, its fury was oerpast,
 Of all our counsels this one was the best
 To beat back blindly to the longed-for west;
 Baffling the wind was, toilsome was the way,
 Nor did we make land till the thirtieth day,
 When both flesh-meat and water were nigh spent,
 But anchoring at last, ashore we went,
 And found the land far better than the first.
 For this with no thick forest was accurst, p. 50
 Though here and there were scattered clumps of wood.
 The air was cooler, too, but soft and good,
 Fair streams we saw, and herds of goats and deer,
 But nothing noisome for a man to fear.
    So since at anchor safe our good ships lay
 Within the long horns of a sandy bay,
 We thought it good ashore to take our ease,
 And pitched our tents anigh some maple-trees
 Not far from shore, and there with little pain
 Enough of venison quickly did we gain
 To feast us all, and high feast did we hold
 Lighting great fires, for now the nights were cold,
 And we were fain a noble roast to eat;
 Nor did we lack for drink to better meat,
 For from the dark hold of the Rose Garland
 A well-hooped cask our shipmen brought aland,
 That knew some white-walled city of the Rhine.
    There crowned with flowers, and flushed with noble wine,
 Hearkening the distant murmur of the main,
 And safe upon our promised land again,
 What wonder if our vain hopes rose once more
 And Heaven seemed dull beside that twice-won shore.
    By midnight in our tents were we asleep,
 And little watch that night did any keep,
 For as our pleasance that fair land we deemed.
 But in my sleep of lovely things I dreamed,
 For I was back at Micklegarth once more,
 But not a court-man's son there as of yore, p. 51
 But the Greek king, or so I seemed to be,
 Set on the throne whose awe and majesty
 Gold lions guard; before whose moveless feet
 A damsel knelt, praying in words so sweet
 For what I know not now, that both mine eyes
 Grew full of tears, and I must bid her rise
 And sit beside me; step by step she came
 Up the gold stair, setting my heart a-flame
 With all her beauty, till she reached the throne
 And there sat down, but as with her alone
 In that vast hall, my hand her hand did seek,
 And on my face I felt her balmy cheek,
 Throughout my heart there shot a dreadful pang,
 And down below us, with a sudden clang
 The golden lions rose, and roared aloud,
 And in at every door did armed men crowd,
 Shouting out death and curses, and I fell
 Dreaming indeed that this at last was hell.
   But therewithal I woke, and through the night
 Heard shrieks and shouts and clamour as of fight,
 And snatching up my axe, unarmed beside
 Nor scarce awaked, my rallying cry I cried,
 And with good haste unto the hubbub went;
 But even in the entry of the tent
 Some dark mass hid the star-besprinkled sky,
 And whistling past my head a spear did fly,
 And striking out I saw a naked man
 Fall neath my blow, nor heeded him, but ran p. 52
 Unto the captain's tent, for there indeed
 I saw my fellows stand at desperate need,
 Beset with foes, nor yet armed more than I,
 Though on the way I rallied hastily
 Some better armed, with whom I straightway fell
 Upon the foe, who with a hideous yell
 Turned round upon us; but we desperate
 And fresh, and dangerous for our axes weight,
 Fought so that they must needs give back a pace
 And yield our fellows some small breathing space;
 Then gathering all together, side by side
 We laid our weapons, and our cries we cried
 And rushed upon them, who abode no more
 Our levelled points, but scattering from the shore
 Ran here and there, but when some two or three
 We in the chase had slain right easily,
 We held our hands, nor followed more their flight,
 Fearing the many chances of the night.
    Then did we light our watch-fires up again
 And armed us all, and found three good men slain;
 Ten wounded, among whom was Nicholas,
 Though little heedful of these things he was,
 For in his tent he sat upon the ground,
 Holding fair Kirstin's hand, whom he had found
 Dead, with a feathered javelin in her breast.
    But taking counsel now, we thought it best
 To gather up our goods and get away
 Unto the ships, and there to wait the day;
 Nor did we loiter, fearful lest the foe, p. 53
 Who somewhat now our feebleness must know,
 Should come on us with force made manifold,
 And all our story quickly should be told.
 So to our boats in haste the others gat,
 But in his tent, not speaking, Nicholas sat,
 Nor moved when oer his head we struck the tent..
 But when all things were ready, then I went
 And raised the body up, and silently
 Walked with it down the beach unto the sea;
 Then he arose and followed me, and when
 He reached at last the now embarking men,
 And in a boat my burden I had laid,
 He sat beside; but no word had he said
 Since first he knew her slain. Such ending had
 The night at whose beginning all were glad.
   One wounded man of theirs we brought with us
 Hoping for news, but he grew furious
 When he awoke aboard from out his swoon,
 And tore his wounds, and smote himself, and soon.
 Died outright, though his hurts were slight enow,
 So nought from him of that land could we know.
 But now as we that luckless country scanned,
 Just at the daybreak did we see a band
 Of these barbarians come with shout and yell
 Across the place where all these things befell,
 Down to the very edges of the sea;
 But though armed now, by day, we easily
 Had made a shift no few of them to slay, p. 54
 It seemed to us the better course to weigh
 And try another entry to that land;
 So southward with a light wind did we stand,
 Not losing sight of shore, and now and then
 I led ashore the more part of our men
 Well armed, by daylight, and the barbarous folk
 Once and again from bushments on us broke,
 Whom without loss of men we brushed away.
 But in our turn it happed to us one day
 Upon a knot of them unwares to come,
 These we bore back with us, the most of whom
 Would neither eat nor drink, but sullenly
 Sat in a corner of the ship to die;
 But mongst them was a woman, who at last,
 Won by the glitter of some toy we cast
 About her neck, by soft words and by wine,
 Began to answer us by sign to sign;
 Of whom we learned not much indeed, but when
 We set on shore those tameless savage men,
 And would have left her too, she seemed to pray,
 For terror of her folk, with us to stay:
 Therefore we took her back with us, and she,
 Though learning not our tongue too easily,
 Unto the forest-folk began to speak.
   Now midst all this passed many a weary week,
 And we no nigher all the time had come
 Unto the portal of our blissful home,
 And needs our bright hope somewhat must decay; p. 55
 Yet none the less as dull day passed by day,
 Still onward by our folly were we led,
 And still with lies our wavering hearts we fed.
    Happy we were in this, that still the wind
 Blew as we wished, and still the air was kind;
 Nor failed we of fresh water as we went
 Along the coast, and oft our bows we bent
 On beast and fowl, and had no lack of food.
    Upon a day it chanced, that as we stood
 Somewhat off shore to fetch about a ness,
 Although the wind was blowing less and less,
 We were entrapped into a fearful sea,
 And carried by a current furiously
 Away from shore, and there were we so tost
 That for awhile we deemed ourselves but lost
 Amid those tumbling waves; but now at last,
 When out of sight of land we long had passed,
 The sea fell, and again toward land we stood,
 Which, reached upon the tenth day, seemed right good,
 But still untilled, and mountains rose up high
 Far inland, mingling with the cloudy sky.
    Once more we took the land, and since we found
 That, more than ever, beasts did there abound,
 We pitched our camp beside a little stream,
 But scarcely there of Paradise did dream
 As heretofore. Our camp we fortified
 With wall and dyke, and then the land we tried,
 And found the people most untaught and wild,
 Nigh void of arts, but harmless, good, and mild, p. 56
 Nor fearing us: with some of these we went
 Back to our camp and people, with intent
 To question them, by her we last had got.
 But when she heard their tongue she knew it not,
 Nor did those others: but they seemed to say,
 That oer the mountains other lands there lay
 Where folk dwelt, clothed and armed like unto us,
 But made withal as they were timorous
 And feared them much. Then we made signs that we,
 So little feared by all that tumbling sea,
 Would go to seek them; but they still would stay
 Our journey; nathless what they meant to say
 We scarce knew yet: howbeit, since these men
 Were friendly, and the weather, which till then
 Had been most fair, now grew to storm and rain,
 And the wind blew on land, and not in vain
 To us poor fools, that tale, half understood
 Those folk had told: midst all, we thought it good
 To haul our ships ashore, and build us there
 A place where we might dwell, till we could fare
 Along the coast, or inland it might be,
 That fertile realm, those goodly men to see.
    Right foul the weather was a dreary space
 While we abode with people of that place,
 And built them huts, as well we could, for we
 Who dwell in Norway have great mastery
 In woodwright's craft; but they in turn would bring
 Wild fruits to us, and many a woodland thing,
 And catch us fish, and show us how to take p. 57
 The smaller beasts, and meanwhile for our sake
 They learned our tongue, and we too somewhat learned
 Of words of theirs; but day by day we yearned
 To cross those mountains, and I woke no morn,
 To find myself lost, wretched, and forlorn,
 But those far-off white summits gave me heart;
 Now too those folk their story could impart
 Concerning them, and that in short was this
 Beyond them lay a fair abode of bliss
 Where dwelt men like the Gods, and clad as we,
 Who doubtless lived on through eternity
 Unless the very world should come to nought;
 But never had they had the impious thought
 To scale those mountains, since most surely, none
 Could follow over them the fearful sun
 And live, of men they knew; but as for us
 They said, who were so wise and glorious
 It might not be so.
                      Thus they spoke one eve
 When the black rain-clouds for a while did leave
 Upon the fresh and teeming earth to frown,
 And we they spoke to, had just set us down
 Midmost their village: from the resting earth
 Sweet odours rose, and in their noisy mirth
 The women played, as rising from the brook
 Off their long locks the glittering drops they shook;
 Betwixt the huts the children raced along;
 Some man was singing a wild barbarous song
 Anigh us, and these folk possessing nought, p. 58
 And lacking nought, lived happy, free from thought,
 Or so it seemedbut we, what thing could pay
 For all that we had left so far away?
    Such thoughts as these I uttered murmuringly,
 But lifting up mine eyes, against the sky
 Beheld the snowy peaks brought near to us
 By a strange sunset, red and glorious,
 That seemed as through the much-praised land it lit,
 And would do, long hours after we must sit
 Beneath the twinkling stars with none to heed:
 And though I knew it was not so indeed,
 Yet did it seem to answer me, as though
 It called us once more on our quest to go.
    Then springing up I raised my voice and said,
 "What is it fellows, fear ye to be dead
 Upon those peaks, when, if ye loiter here
 Half dead, with very death still drawing near,
 Your lives are wasted all the more for this,
 That ye in this world thought to garner bliss;
 Unless indeed ye chance to think it well
 With this unclad and barbarous folk to dwell,
 Deedless and hopeless; ye, to whom the land,
 That oer the world has sent so many a band
 Of conquering men, was not yet good enough.
    "Did ye then deem the way would not be rough
 Unto the lovely land ye so desire?
 Did ye not rather swear through blood and fire,
 And all ill things to follow up this quest
 Till life or death your longing laid to rest? p. 59
    "Let us not linger here then, until fate
 Make longing unavailing, hope too late,
 And turn to lamentations all our prayers,
 But with to-morrow cast aside your cares,
 And stout of heart make ready for the strife
 Twixt this short time of dreaming and real life.
    "Lo now, if but the half will come with me,
 The summit of those mountains will I see,
 Or, else die first, yea, if but twenty men
 Will follow me; nor will I stay if ten
 Will share my trouble or felicity
 What do I say? alone, O friends, will I
 Seek for my life, for no man can die twice,
 And death or life may give me Paradise!"
   Then Nicholas said, "Rolf, I will go with thee,
 For desperate do I think the quest to be,
 And I shall die, and that to me is well,
 Or else I may forget, I cannot tell
 Still I will go."
                   Then Laurence said, "I too
 Will go remembering what I said to you,
 When any land, the first to which we came
 Seemed that we sought, and set your hearts aflame,
 And all seemed won to you: but still I think,
 Perchance years hence, the fount of life to drink,
 Unless by some ill chance I first am slain,
 But boundless risk must pay for boundless gain."
    So most men said, but yet a few there were p. 60
 Who said, "Nay, soothly let us live on here,
 We have been fools and we must pay therefore
 With this dull life, and labour very sore
 Until we die; yet are we grown too wise
 Upon this earth to seek for Paradise;
 Leave us, but ye may yet come back again
 When ye have found your trouble nought and vain."
   Well, in three days we left those men behind,
 To dwell among the simple folk and kind
 Who were our guides at first, until that we
 Reached the green hills clustered confusedly
 About the mountains, then they turned, right glad
 That till that time no horrors they had had;
 But we still hopeful, making nought of time,
 The rugged rocks now set ourselves to climb,
 And lonely there for days and days and days
 We stumbled through the blind and bitter ways,
 Now rising to the never-melting snow,
 Now beaten thence, and fain to try below
 Another kingdom of that world of stone.
    At last when all our means of life were gone
 And some of us had fallen in the fight
 With cold and weariness, we came in sight
 Of what we hungered forwhat thenwhat then?
 A savage land, a land untilled again,
 No lack of food while lasted shaft or bow,
 But folk the worst of all we came to know;
 Scarce like to men, yea, worse than most of beasts, p. 61
 For of men slain they made their impious feasts;
 These, as I deem for our fresh blood athirst
 From out the thick wood often on us burst.
 Not heeding death, and in confused fight
 We spent full many a wretched day and night,
 That yet were happiest of the times we knew,
 For with our grief such fearful foes we grew,
 That Odin's gods had hardly scared men more
 As fearless through the naked press we bore.
    At first indeed some prisoners did we take,
 Asking them questions for our fair land's sake,
 Hoping gainst hope; but when in vain had been
 Our questioning, and we one day had seen
 Their way of banqueting, then axe and spear
 Ended the wretched life and sullen fear
 Of any wild man wounded in the fight.
    So with the failing of our hoped delight
 We grew to be like devilsthen I knew
 At my own cost, what each man cometh to
 When every pleasure from his life is gone,
 And hunger and desire of life alone,
 That still beget dull rage and bestial fears,
 Like gnawing serpents through the world he bears.
    What time we spent there? nay, I do not know:
 For happy folk no time can pass too slow
 Because they die; because at last they die
 And are at rest, no time too fast can fly
 For wretches; but eternity of woe
 Had hemmed us in, and neither fast or slow p. 62
 Passed the dull time as we held reckoning.
    Yet midst so many a wretched, hopeless thing
 One hope there was, if it was still a hope,
 At last, at last, to turn, and scale the cope
 Of those dread mountains we had clambered oer.
 And we did turn, and with what labour sore,
 What thirst, what hunger, and what wretchedness
 We struggled daily, how can words express?
 Yet amidst all, the kind God led us on
 Until at last a high raised pass we won
 And like grey clouds afar beheld the sea,
 And weakened with our toil and misery
 Wept at that sight, that like a friend did seem
 Forgotten long, beheld but in a dream
 When we know not if he be still alive.
    But thence descending, we with rocks did strive,
 Till dwindled, weary, did we reach the plain
 And came unto our untaught friends again,
 And those we left, who yet alive and well,
 Wedded to brown wives, fain would have us tell
 The story of our woes, which when they heard,
 The country people wondered at our word,
 But not our fellows; and so all being said
 A little there we gathered lustihead
 Still talking over what was best to do.
 And we the leaders yet were fain to go
 From sea to sea and take what God might send,
 Who at the worst our hopes and griefs would end
 With that same death we once had hoped to stay, p. 63
 Or even yet might send us such a day,
 That our past troubles should but make us glad
 As men rejoice in pensive songs and sad.
    This was our counsel; those that we had left
 Said, that they once before had been bereft
 Of friends and country by a sick man's dream,
 That this their life not evil did they deem
 Nor would they rashly cast it down the wind;
 But whoso went, that they would stay behind.
    Others there were who said, whateer might come
 They would at least seek for the happy home
 They had forgotten once, and there at last
 In penitence for sins and follies past
 Wait for the death that they in vain had fled.
   Well, when all things by all sides had been said
 We drew the ships again unto the sea,
 Which those who went not with us, carefully
 Had tended for those years we were away
 (Which still they said was ten months and a day);
 And these we rigged, and in a little while
 The Fighting Man looked oer the false sea's smile
 Unto the land of Norway, and our band
 Across the bulwarks of the Rose Garland,
 Amidst of tears and doubt and misery
 Sent after them a feeble farewell cry,
 And they returned a tremulous faint cheer,
 While from the sandy shell-strewn beach anear
 The soft west wind across the waves bore out p. 64
 A strange confused noise of wail and shout,
 For there the dark line of the outland folk
 A few familiar grey-eyed faces broke,
 That minded us of Norway left astern,
 Ere we began our heavy task to learn.
THE ELDER OF THE CITY.
   Sirs, by my deeming had ye still gone on
 When ye had crossed the mountains, ye had won
 Unto another sea at last, and there
 Had found clad folk, and cities great and fair
 Though not the deathless country of your thought.
THE WANDERER.
   Yea, sirs, and short of that we had deemed nought,
 Ere yet our hope of life had fully died,
 And for those cities scarce should we have tried,
 Een had we known of them, and certainly
 Nought but those bestial people did we see:
 But let me hasten now unto the end.
   Fair wind and lovely weather God did send
 To us deserted men, who but two score
 Now mustered, so we stood off from the shore
 Still stretching south till we lost land again,
 Because we deemed our labour would be vain
 Upon the land too near where we had been,
 Where nine of us as yet a sign had seen
 Of that which we desired. And now we few, p. 65
 Thus left alone, each unto other grew
 The dearer friends, and less accursed we seemed
 As still the less of scaping death we dreamed,
 And knew the lot of all men should be ours,
 A chequered day of sunshine and of showers
 Fading to twilight and dark night at last.
    Those forest folk with ours their lot had cast,
 And ever unto us were leal and true,
 And now when all our tongue at last they knew
 They told us tales, too long to tell as now;
 Yet this one thing I fain to you would show
 About the dying man our sight did kill
 Amidst the corpses on that dreary hill:
 Namely, that when their king drew nigh to death,
 But still had left in him some little breath,
 They bore him to that hill, when they had slain,
 By a wild root that killed with little pain,
 His servants and his wives like as we saw,
 Thinking that thence the gods his soul would draw
 To heaven; but the king being dead at last,
 The servants dead being taken down, they cast
 Into the river, but the king they hung
 I Embalmed within that chapel, where they sung
 Some office over him in solemn wise,
 Amidst the smoke of plenteous sacrifice.
   Well, though wild hope no longer in us burned,
 Unto the land within a while we turned,
 And found it much the same, and still untilled, p. 66
 And still its people of all arts unskilled;
 And some were dangerous and some were kind;
 But midst them no more tidings did we find
 Of what we once had deemed well-won, but now
 Was like the dream of some past kingly show.
    What shall I say of all these savages,
 Of these wide plains beset with unsown trees,
 Through which untamed man-fearing beasts did range?
 To us at least there seemed but little change,
 For we were growing weary of the world.
    Whiles did we dwell ashore, whiles were we hurled
 Out to the landless ocean, whiles we lay
 Long time within some river or deep bay;
 And so the months went by, until at last,
 When now three years were fully overpast
 Since we had left our fellows, and grown old
 Our leaky ship along the water rolled,
 Upon a day unto a land we came
 Whose people spoke a tongue well-nigh the same
 As that our forest people used, and who
 A little of the arts of mankind knew,
 And tilled the kind earth, certes not in vain;
 For wealth of melons we saw there, and grain
 Strange unto us. Now battered as we were,
 Grown old before our time, in worn-out gear,
 These people, when we first set foot ashore,
 Garlands of flowers and fruits unto us bore,
 And worshipped us as gods, and for no words
 That we could say would cease to call us Lords, p. 67
 And pray our help to give them bliss and peace,
 And fruitful seasons of the earth's increase.
    Withal at last, they, when in talk they fell
 With our good forest-folk, to them did tell
 That they were subject to a mighty king,
 Who, as they said, ruled over everything,
 And, dwelling in a glorious city, had
 All things that men desire to make them glad.
 "He," said they, "none the less shall be but slave
 Unto your lords, and all that he may have
 Will he but take as free gifts at their hands,
 If they will deign henceforth to bless his lands
 With their most godlike presence."
                                         Ye can think
 How we poor wretched souls outworn might shrink
 From such strange worship, that like mocking seemed
 To us, who of a godlike state had dreamed,
 And missed it in such wise; yet none the less
 An earthly haven to our wretchedness
 This city seemed, therefore we gan to pray
 That some of them would guide us on our way,
 Which words of ours they heard most joyously,
 And brought us to their houses nigh the sea,
 And feasted us with such things as they might.
    But almost ere the ending of the night
 We started on our journey, being up-borne
 In litters, like to kings, who so forlorn
 Had been erewhile; so in some ten days space
 They brought us nigh their king's abiding place; p. 68
 And as we went the land seemed fair enough,
 Though sometimes did we pass through forests rough,
 Deserts and fens, yet for the most, the way
 Through ordered villages and tilled land lay,
 Which after all the squalid miseries
 We had beheld, seemed heaven unto our eyes,
 Though strange to us it was.
                                But now when we
 From a hill-side the city well could see,
 Our guides there prayed us to abide awhile,
 Wherefore we stayed, though eager to beguile
 Our downcast hearts from brooding oer our woe
 By all the new things that abode might show;
 So while we bided on that flowery down
 The swiftest of them sped on toward the town
 To bear them news of this unhoped-for bliss;
 And we, who now some little happiness
 Could find in that fair place and pleasant air,
 Sat neath strange trees, on new flowers growing there
 Of scent unlike to those we knew of old,
 While unfamiliar tales the strange birds told.
 But certes seemed that city fair enow
 That spread out oer the well-tilled vale below,
 Though nowise built like such as we had seen;
 Walled with white walls it was, and gardens green
 Were set between the houses everywhere;
 And now and then rose up a tower foursquare
 Lessening in stage on stage: with many a hue
 The house walls glowed, of red and green and blue, p. 69
 And some with gold were well adorned, and one
 From roofs of gold flashed back the noontide sun.
 Had we seen such a place not long ago
 We should have made great haste to get thereto,
 Deeming that it must be the heaven we sought.
    But now while quietly we sat, and thought
 Of many things, the gate wherein that road
 Had end, was opened wide, and thereout flowed
 A glittering throng of people, young and old,
 And men and women, much adorned with gold;
 Wherefore we rose to meet them, who stood still
 When they beheld us winding down the hill,
 And lined both sides of the grey road, but we
 Now drawing nigh them, first of all could see
 Old men in venerable raiment clad,
 White bearded, who sweet flowering branches had
 In their right hands, then young men armed right well
 After their way, which now were long to tell,
 Then damsels clad in radiant gold array,
 Who with sweet-smelling blossoms strewed the way
 Before our feet, then men with gleaming swords
 And glittering robes, and crowned like mighty lords,
 And last of all; within the very gate
 The king himself, round whom our guides did wait,
 Kneeling with humble faces downward bent.
    What wonder if, as twixt these folk we went,
 Hearkening their singing and sweet minstrelsy,
 A little nigher seemed our heaven to be
 Alas, a fair folk, a sweet spot of earth, p. 70
 A land where many a lovely thing has birth,
 But where all fair things come at last to die.
    Now when we three unto the king drew nigh
 Before our fellows, he, adored of all,
 Spared not before us on his knees to fall,
 And as we deemed who knew his speech but ill,
 Began to pray us to bide with him still,
 Speaking withal of some old prophecy
 Which seemed to say that there we should not die.
    What could we do amidst these splendid lords?
 No time it was to doubt or make long words,
 Nor with a short but happy life at hand
 Durst we to ask about the perfect land,
 Though well we felt the life whereof he spoke,
 Could never be among those mortal folk.
 Therefore we way-worn, disappointed men,
 So richly dowered with three-score years and ten,
 Vouchsafed to grant the king his whole request,
 Thinking within that town awhile to rest,
 And gather news about the hope that fled
 Still on before us, risen from the dead,
 From out its tomb of toil and misery,
 That held it while we saw but sea and sky,
 Or untilled lands and people void of bliss,
 And our own faces heavy with distress.
   But entering now that town, what huge delight
 We had therein, how lovely to our sight
 Was the well-ordered life of people there, p. 71
 Who on that night within a palace fair
 Made us a feast with great solemnity,
 Till we forgot that we came there to die
 If we should leave our quest, for as great kings
 They treated us, and whatsoever things
 We asked for, or could think of, those were ours.
    Houses we had, noble with walls and towers,
 Lovely with gardens, cooled with running streams,
 And rich with gold beyond a miser's dreams,
 And men and women slaves, whose very lives
 Were in our hands; and fair and princely wives
 If so we would; and all things for delight,
 Good to the taste or beautiful to sight
 The land might yield. They taught us of their law,
 The muster of their men-at-arms we saw,
 As men who owned them; in their judgment-place
 Our lightest word made glad the pleader's face,
 And the judge trembled at our faintest frown.
    Think then, if we, late driven up and down
 Upon the uncertain sea, or struggling sore
 With barbarous men upon an untilled shore,
 Or at the best, midst people ignorant
 Of arts and letters, fighting against want
 Of very foodthink if we now were glad
 From day to day, and as folk crazed and mad
 Deemed our old selves, the wanderers on the sea.
    And if at whiles midst our felicity
 We yet remembered us of that past day
 When in the long swell off the land we lay, p. 72
 Weeping for joy at our accomplished dream,
 And each to each a very god did seem,
 For fear was deadif we remembered this,
 Yet after all, was this our life of bliss,
 A little thing that we had gained at last?
 And must we sorrow for the idle past,
 Or think it ill that thither we were led?
 Thus seemed our old desire quite quenched and dead.
    You must remember though, that we were young,
 Five years had passed since the grey fieldfare sung
 To me a dreaming youth laid neath the thorn,
 And though while we were wandering and forlorn
 I seemed grown old and withered suddenly,
 But twenty summers had I seen go by
 When I left Viken on that desperate cruise.
 But now again our wrinkles did we lose
 With memory of our ills, and like a dream
 Our fevered quest with its bad days did seem,
 And many things grew fresh again, forgot
 While in our hearts that wild desire was hot:
 Yea, though at thought of Norway we might sigh,
 Small was the pain which that sweet memory
 Brought with its images seen fresh and clear,
 And many an old familiar thing grown dear,
 We loved but little while we lived with it.
   So smoothly oer our heads the days did flit,
 Yet not eventless either, for we taught
 Such lore as we from our own land had brought p. 73
 Unto this folk, who when they wrote must draw
 Such draughts as erst at Micklegarth I saw,
 Writ for the evil Pharaoh-kings of old;
 Their arms were edged with copper or with gold,
 Whereof they had great plenty, or with flint;
 No armour had they fit to bear the dint
 Of tools like ours, and little could avail
 Their archer craft; their boats knew nought of sail,
 And many a feat of building could we show,
 Which midst their splendour still they did not know.
    And midst of all, war fell upon the land,
 And in forefront of battle must we stand,
 To do our best, though little mastery
 We thought it then to make such foemen flee
 As there we met; but when again we came
 Into the town, with something like to shame
 We took the worship of that simple folk
 Rejoicing for their freedom from the yoke
 That round about their necks had hung so long.
    For thus that war began: some monarch strong
 Conquered their land of old, and thereon laid
 A dreadful tribute, which they still had paid
 With tears and curses; for as each fifth year
 Came round, this heavy shame they needs must bear:
 Ten youths, ten maidens must they choose by lot
 Among the fairest that they then had got.
 Who a long journey oer the hills must go
 Unto the tyrant, nor with signs of woe
 Enter his city, but in bright array, p. 74
 And harbingered by songs and carols gay,
 Betake them to the temple of his god;
 But when the streets their weary feet had trod
 Their wails must crown the long festivity,
 For on the golden altar must they die.
    Such was the sentence till the year we came,
 And counselled them to put away this shame
 If they must die therefore, so on that year
 Barren of blood the devil's altars were,
 Wherefore a herald clad in strange attire
 The tyrant sent them, and but blood and fire
 His best words were; him they sent back again
 Defied by us, who made his threats but vain,
 When face to face with those ill folk we stood
 Ready to seal our counsel with our blood.
    Past all belief they loved us for all this,
 And if it would have added to our bliss
 That they should die, this surely they had done;
 So smoothly slipped the years past one by one,
 And we had lived and died as happy there
 As any men the labouring earth may bear,
 But for the poison of that wickedness
 That led us on God's edicts to redress.
 At first indeed death seemed so far away,
 So sweet in our new home was every day,
 That we forgot death like the most of men
 Who cannot count the threescore years and ten;
 Yet we grew fearful as the time drew on,
 And needs must think of all we might have won, p. 75
 Yea, by so much the happier that we were
 By just so much increased on us our fear,
 And those old times of our past misery
 Seemed not so evil as the days went by
 Faster and faster with the year's increase,
 For loss of youth to us was loss of peace.
   Two gates unto the road of life there are,
 And to the happy youth both seem afar,
 Both seem afar, so far the past one seems,
 The gate of birth, made dim with many dreams,
 Bright with remembered hopes, beset with flowers;
 So far it seems he cannot count the hours
 That to this midway path have led him on
 Where every joy of life now seemeth won
 So far, he thinks not of the other gate,
 Within whose shade the ghosts of dead hopes wait
 To call upon him as he draws anear,
 Despoiled, alone, and dull with many a fear,
 "Where is thy work? how little thou hast done,
 Where are my friends, why art thou so alone?"
    How shall he weigh his life? slow goes the time
 The while the fresh dew-sprinkled hill we climb,
 Thinking of what shall be the other side,
 Slow pass perchance the minutes we abide
 On the gained summit, blinking at the sun;
 But when the downward journey is begun
 No more our feet may loiter, past our ears
 Shrieks the harsh wind scarce noted midst our fears, p. 76
 And battling with the hostile things we meet
 Till, ere we know it, our weak shrinking feet
 Have brought us to the end and all is done.
   And so with us it was, when youth twice won
 Now for the second time had passed away,
 And we unwitting were grown old and grey,
 And one by one, the death of some dear friend,
 Some cherished hope, brought to a troublous end
 Our joyous life; as in a dawn of June
 The lover, dreaming of the brown bird's tune
 And longing lips unto his own brought near,
 Wakes up the crashing thunder-peal to hear.
 So, sirs, when this world's pleasures came to nought
 Not upon God we set our wayward thought,
 But on the folly our own hearts had made;
 Once more the stories of the past we weighed
 With what we hitherto had found, once more
 We longed to be by some unknown far shore,
 Once more our life seemed trivial, poor, and vain,
 Till we our lost fool's paradise might gain,
 And we were like the felon doomed to die,
 Who when unto the sword he draws anigh
 Struggles and cries, though erewhile in his cell
 He heard the priest of heaven and pardon tell,
 Weeping and half-contented to be slain.
   Was I the first who thought of this again?
 Perchance I was, but howsoeer that be p. 77
 Long time I thought of these things certainly
 Ere I durst stir my fellows to the quest,
 Though secretly myself, with little rest
 For tidings of our lovely land I sought.
 Should prisoners from another folk be brought
 Unto our town, I questioned them of this;
 I asked the wandering merchants of a bliss
 They dreamed not of, in chaffering for their goods;
 The hunter in the far-off lonely woods,
 The fisher in the rivers nigh the sea,
 Must tell their wild strange stories unto me.
 Within the temples books of records lay
 Such as I told of, thereon day by day
 I pored, and got long stories from the priests
 Of many-handed gods with heads of beasts,
 And such like dreariness; and still, midst all
 Sometimes a glimmering light would seem to fall
 Upon my ignorance, and less content
 As time went on I grew, and ever went
 About my daily life distractedly,
 Until at last I felt that I must die
 Or to my fellows tell what in me was.
    So on a day I came to Nicholas
 And trembling gan to tell of this and that,
 And as I spoke with downcast eyes I sat
 Fearing to see some scorn within his eyes,
 Or horror at unhappy memories;
 But now, when mine eyes could no longer keep
 The tears from falling, he too, nigh to weep, p. 78
 Spoke out, "O Rolf; why hast thou come to me,
 Who thinking I was happy, now must see
 That only with the ending of our breath,
 Or by that fair escape from fear and death
 Can we forget the hope that erewhile led
 Our little band to woe and drearihead?
 But now are we grown old, Rolf; and to-day
 Life is a little thing to cast away,
 Nor can we suffer many years of it
 If all goes wrong, so no more will I sit,
 Praying for all the things that cannot be:
 Tell thou our fellows what thou tellest me,
 Nor fear that I will leave you in your need."
    Well, sirs, with all the rest I had such speed
 That men enough of us resolved to go
 The very bitterness of death to know
 Or else to conquer him; some idle tale
 With our kind hosts would plenteously avail,
 For of our quest we durst not tell them aught,
 Since something more than doubt was in our thought,
 Though unconfessed, that we should fail at last,
 Nor had we quite forgot our perils past.
   Alas! can weak men hide such thoughts as these?
 I think the summer wind that bows the trees
 Through which the dreamer wandereth muttering
 Will bear abroad some knowledge of the thing
 That so consumes him; howsoeer that be,
 We, born to drink the dregs of misery, p. 79
 Found in the end that some one knew our aim.
    For while we weighed the chances of the game
 That we must play, nor yet knew what to shun,
 Or what to do, there came a certain one,
 A young man strange within the place, to me,
 Who, swearing me at first to secrecy,
 Began to tell me of the hoped-for land.
 The trap I saw not, with a shaking hand
 And beating heart, unto the notes of years
 I turned, long parchments blotted with my tears,
 And tremulously read them out aloud;
 But still, because the hurrying thoughts would crowd
 My whirling brain, scarce heard the words I read.
 Yet in the end it seemed that what he said
 Tallied with that, heaped up so painfully.
    Now listen! this being done, he said to me,
 "O godlike Eastern man, believest thou
 That I who look so young and ruddy now
 Am very old? because in sooth I come
 To seek thee and to lead thee to our home
 With all thy fellows. But if thou dost not,
 Come now with me, for nigh unto this spot
 My brother, left behind, an ancient man
 Now dwelleth, but as grey-haired, weak and wan
 As I am fresh; of me he doth not know,
 So surely shall our speech together show,
 The truth of this my message." "Yea," said I,
 "I doubt thee not, yet would I certainly
 Hear the old man talk if he liveth yet. p. 80
 That I a clearer tale of this may set
 Before my fellows; come then, lead me there."
    Thus easily I fell into the snare;
 For as along the well-known streets we went,
 An old hoar man there met us, weak and bent,
 Who staying us, the while with age he shook,
 My lusty fellow by the shoulder took,
 And said, "Oh, stranger canst thou be the son,
 Or but the younger double of such an one,
 Who dwelt once in the weaver's street hereby?"
    But the young man looked on him lovingly,
 And said, "O certes, thou art now grown old
 That thou thy younger brother canst behold
 And call him stranger." "Yea, yea, old enow,"
 The other said, "what fables talkest thou?
 My brother has but three years less than I,
 Nor dealeth time with men so marvellously
 That he should seem like twenty, I fourscore:
 Thou art my nephew, let the jest pass oer."
    "Nay," said he, "but it is not good to talk
 Here in the crowded street, so let us walk
 Unto thine habitation; dost thou mind,
 When we were boys, how once we chanced to find
 That crock of copper money hid away
 Up in the loft, and how on that same day
 We bought this toy and that, thou a short sword
 And I a brazen boat."
                      But at that word
 The old man wildly on him gan to stare p. 81
 And said no more, the while we three did fare
 Unto his house, but there we being alone,
 Many undoubted signs the younger one
 Gave to his brother, saying withal, that he
 Had gained the land of all felicity,
 Where, after trials then too long to tell,
 The slough of grisly eld from off him fell,
 And left him strong, and fair, and young again;
 Neither from that time had he suffered pain
 Greater or less, or feared at all to die:
 And though, he said, he knew not certainly
 If he should live for ever, this he knew
 His days should not be full of pain and few
 As most men's lives were. Now when asked why he
 Had left his home, a deadly land to see,
 He said that people's chiefs had sent him there
 Moved by report that tall men, white and fair,
 Like to the Gods, had come across the sea
 Of whom old seers had told that they should be
 Lords of that land, therefore his charge was this,
 To lead us forth to that abode of bliss,
 But secretly, since for the other folk
 They were as beasts to toil beneath the yoke,
 "But," said he, "brother, thou shalt go with me,
 If now at last no doubt be left in thee
 Of who I am."
                    At that, to end it all
 The weak old man upon his neck did fall,
 Rejoicing for his lot with many tears: p. 82
 But I, rejoicing too, yet felt vague fears
 Within my heart, for now almost too nigh
 We seemed to that long sought felicity.
 What should I do though? What could it avail
 Unto these men, to make a feigned tale?
 Besides in all no faltering could I find,
 Nor did they go beyond, or fall behind,
 What in such cases such-like men would do,
 Therefore I needs must think their story true.
    So now unto my fellows did I go
 And all things in due order straight did show,
 And had the man who told the tale at hand;
 Of whom some made great question of the land,
 And where it was, and how he found it first;
 And still he answered boldly to the worst
 Of all their questions: then from out the place
 He went, and we were left there face to face.
    And joy it was to see the dark cheeks, tanned
 By many a summer of that fervent land,
 Flush up with joy, and see the grey eyes gleam
 Through the dull film of years, as that sweet dream
 Flickered before them, now grown real and true.
    But when the certainty of all we knew,
 Dreaming for sure our quest would not be vain,
 We got us ready for the sea again.
 But to the city's folk we told no more
 Than that we needs must make for some far shore,
 Whence we would come again to them, and bring
 For them and us, full many a wished-for thing p. 83
 To make them glad.
                     Then answered they indeed
 That our departing made their hearts to bleed,
 But with no long words prayed us still to stay,
 And I remembered me of that past day,
 And somewhat grieved I felt, that so it was:
 Not thinking how the deeds of men must pass,
 And their remembrance as their bodies die,
 Or, if their memories fade not utterly,
 Like curious pictures shall they be at best,
 For men to gaze at while they sit at rest,
 Talking of alien things and feasting well.
   Ah me! I loiter, being right loth to tell
 The things that happened to us in the end.
 Down to the noble river did we wend
 Where lay the ships we taught these folk to make,
 And there the fairest of them did we take
 And so began our voyage; thirty-three
 Were left of us, who erst had crossed the sea,
 Five of the forest people, and beside
 None but the fair young man, our new-found guide,
 And his old brother; setting sail with these
 We left astern our gilded palaces
 And all the good things God had given us there
 With small regret, however good they were.
    Well, in twelve days our vessel reached the sea,
 When turning round we ran on northerly
 In sight of land at whiles; what need to say p. 84
 How the time past from hopeful day to day?
 Suffice it that the wind was fair and good,
 And we most joyful, as still north we stood;
 Until when we a month at sea had been,
 And for six days no land at all had seen,
 We sighted it once more, whereon our guide
 Shouted, "O fellows, lay all fear aside,
 This is the land whereof I spake to you."
 But when the happy tidings all men knew,
 Trembling and pale we watched the land grow great,
 And when above the waves the noontide heat
 Had raised a vapour twixt us and the land
 That afternoon, we saw a high ness stand
 Out in the sea, and nigher when we came,
 And all the sky with sunset was a-flame,
 Neath the dark hill we saw a city lie,
 Washed by the waves, girt round with ramparts high.
    A little nigher yet, and then our guide
 Bade us to anchor, lowering from our side
 The sailless keel wherein he erst had come,
 Through many risks, to bring us to his home.
 But when our eager hands this thing had done,
 He and his brother gat therein alone.
 But first he said, "Abide here till the morn,
 And when ye hear the sound of harp and horn,
 And varied music, run out every oar,
 Up anchor, and make boldly for the shore.
 O happy men! well-nigh do I regret
 That I am not as you, to whom as yet p. 85
 That moment past all moments is unknown,
 When first unending life to you is shown.
 But now I go, that all in readiness
 May be, your souls with this delight to bless."
    He waved farewell to us and went, but we,
 As the night grew, beheld across the sea
 Lights moving on the quays, and now and then
 We heard the chanting of the outland men.
 How can I tell of that strange troublous night,
 Troublous and strange, though neath the moonshine white,
 Peace seemed upon the sea, the glimmering town,
 The shadows of the tree-besprinkled down,
 The moveless dewy folds of our loose sail?
 But how could these for peace to us avail?
    Weary with longing, blind with great amaze,
 We struggled now with past and future days;
 And not in vain our former joy we thought,
 Since thirty years our wandering feet had brought
 To this at lastand yet, what will you have?
 Can man be made content? We wished to save
 The bygone years; our hope, our painted toy,
 We feared to miss, drowned in that sea of joy.
 Old faces still reproached us: "We are gone,
 And ye are entering into bliss alone;
 And can ye now forget? Year passes year,
 And still ye live on joyous, free from fear;
 But where are we? where is the memory
 Of us, to whom ye once were drawn so nigh? p. 86
 Forgetting and alone ye enter in;
 Remembering all, alone we wail our sin,
 And cannot touch you."Ah, the blessed pain!
 When heaven just gained was scarcely all a gain.
 How could we weigh that boundless treasure then,
 Or count the sorrows of the sons of men?
 Ah, woe is me to think upon that night!
   Day came, and with the dawning of the light
 We were astir, and from our deck espied
 The people clustering by the water-side,
 As if to meet us; then across the sea
 We heard great horns strike up triumphantly,
 And then scarce knowing what we did, we weighed
 And running out the oars for shore we made,
 With banners fluttering out from yard and mast.
    We reached the well-built marble quays at last,
 Crowded with folk, and in the front of these
 There stood our guide, decked out with braveries,
 Holding his feeble brother by the hand,
 Then speechless, trembling, did we now take land,
 Leaving all woes behind, but when our feet
 The happy soil of that blest land did meet,
 Fast fell our tears, as on a July day
 The thunder-shower falls pattering on the way,
 And certes some one we desired to bless,
 But scarce knew whom midst all our thankfulness.
    Now the crowd opened, and an ordered band
 Of youths and damsels, flowering boughs in hand p. 87
 Came forth to meet us, just as long ago,
 When first we won some rest from pain and woe,
 Except that now eld chained not anyone,
 No man was wrinkled but ourselves alone,
 But smooth and beautiful, bright-eyed and glad,
 Were all we saw, in fair thin raiment clad
 Fit for the sunny place.
                             But now our friend,
 Our guide, who brought us to this glorious end,
 Led us amidst that band, who gan to sing
 Some hymn of welcome, midst whose carolling
 Faint-hearted men we must have been indeed
 To doubt that all was won; nor did we heed
 That, when we well were gotten from the quay,
 Armed men went past us, by the very way
 That we had come, nor thought of their intent,
 For armour unto us was ornament,
 And had been now, for many peaceful years,
 Since bow and axe had dried the people's tears.
    Let all that passwith song and minstrelsy
 Through many streets they led us, fair to see,
 For nowhere did we meet maimed, poor, or old,
 But all were young and clad in silk and gold.
 Like a king's court the common ways did seem
 On that fair morn of our accomplished dream.
    Far did we go, through market-place and square,
 Past fane and palace, till a temple fair
 We came to, set aback midst towering trees,
 But raised above the tallest of all these. p. 88
 So there we entered through a brazen gate,
 And all the thronging folk without did wait,
 Except the golden-clad melodious band.
 But when within the precinct we did stand,
 Another rampart girdled round the fane,
 And that being past another one again,
 And small space was betwixt them, all these three
 Of white stones laid in wondrous masonry
 Were builded, but the fourth we now passed through
 Was half of white and half of ruddy hue;
 Nor did we reach the temple through this one,
 For now a fifth wall came, of dark red stone
 With golden coping and wide doors of gold;
 And this being past, our eyes could then behold
 The marvellous temple, foursquare, rising high
 In stage on stage up toward the summer sky,
 Like the unfinished tower that Nimrod built
 Before the concord of the world was spilt.
    So now we came into the lowest hall,
 A mighty way across from wall to wall,
 Where carven pillars held a gold roof up,
 And silver walls fine as an Indian cup,
 With figures monstrous as a dream were wrought,
 And under foot the floor beyond all thought
 Was wonderful, for like the tumbling sea
 Beset with monsters did it seem to be;
 But in the midst a pool of ruddy gold
 Caught in its waves a glittering fountain cold,
 And through the bright shower of its silver spray p. 89
 Dimly we saw the high raised dais, gay
 With wondrous hangings, for high up and small
 The windows were within the dreamlike hall;
 Betwixt the pillars wandered damsels fair
 Crooning low songs, or filling all the air
 With incense wafted to strange images
 That made us tremble, since we saw in these
 The devils unto whom we now must cry
 Ere we began our new felicity:
 Nathless no altars did we see but one
 Which dimly from before the dais shone
 Built of green stone, with horns of copper bright.
    Now when we entered from the outer light
 And all the scents of the fresh day were past,
 With its sweet breezes, a dull shade seemed cast
 Over our joy; what then? not if we would
 Could we turn backand surely all was good,
    But now they brought us vestments rich and fair,
 And bade us our own raiment put off there,
 Which straight we did, and with a hollow sound
 Like mournful bells our armour smote the ground,
 And damsels took the weapons from our hands
 That might have gleamed with death in other lands,
 And won us praise; at last when all was done,
 And brighter than the Kaiser each man shone,
 Us unarmed helpless men the music led
 Up to the dais, and there our old guide said
 "Rest, happy men, the time will not be long
 Ere they will bring with incense, dance, and song p. 90
 The sacred cup, your life and happiness,
 And many a time this fair hour shall ye bless."
   Alas, sirs! words are weak to tell of it,
 I seemed to see a smile of mockery flit
 Across his face as from our thrones he turned,
 And in my heart a sudden fear there burned,
 The last, I said, for ever and a day;
 But even then with harsh and ominous bray
 A trumpet through the monstrous pillars rung,
 And to our feet with sudden fear we sprung
 Too late, too late! for through all doors did stream
 Armed men, that filled the place with clash and gleam,
 And when the dull sound of their moving feet
 Was still, a fearful sight our eyes did meet,
 A fearful sight to usold men and grey
 Betwixt the bands of soldiers took their way,
 And at their head in wonderful attire,
 Holding within his hand a pot of fire,
 Moved the false brother of the traitrous guide,
 Who with bowed head walked ever by his side;
 But as anigh the elders gan to draw,
 We, almost turned to stone by what we saw,
 Heard the old man say to the younger one,
 "Speak to them that thou knowest, O fair Son!"
    Then the wretch said, "O ye, who sought to find
 Unending life against the law of kind,
 Within this land, fear ye not now too much,
 For no man's hand your bodies here shall touch, p. 91
 But rather with all reverence folk shall tend
 Your daily lives, until at last they end
 By slow decay: and ye shall pardon us
 The trap whereby beings made so glorious
 As ye are made, we drew unto this place.
 Rest ye content then! for although your race
 Comes from the gods, yet are ye conquered here,
 As we would conquer them, if we knew where
 They dwell from day to day, and with what arms
 We, overcoming them, might win such charms
 That we might make the world what ye desire.
    "Rest then at ease, and if ye ere shall tire
 Of this abode, remember at the worst
 Life flitteth, whether it be blessed or cursed.
 But will ye tire? ye are our gods on earth
 Whiles that ye live, nor shall your lives lack mirth,
 For song, fair women, and heart-cheering wine
 The chain of solemn days shall here entwine
 With odorous flowers; ah, surely ye are come,
 When all is said, unto an envied home."
   Like an old dream, dreamed in another dream,
 I hear his voice now, see the hopeless gleam,
 Through the dark place of that thick wood of spears.
 That fountain's splash rings yet within mine ears
 I thought the fountain of eternal youth
 Yet I can scarce remember in good truth
 What then I felt: I should have felt as he,
 Who, waking after some festivity p. 92
 Sees a dim land, and things unspeakable,
 And comes to know at last that it is hell
 I cannot tell you, nor can tell you why
 Driven by what hope, I cried my battle cry
 And rushed upon him; this I know indeed
 My naked hands were good to me at need,
 That sent the traitor to his due reward,
 Ere I was dragged off by the hurrying guard,
 Who spite of all used neither sword nor spear,
 Nay as it seemed, touched us with awe and fear.
 Though at the last grown all to weak to strive
 They brought us to the dais scarce alive,
 And changed our tattered robes again, and there
 Bound did we sit, each in his golden chair,
 Beholding many mummeries that they wrought
 About the altar; till at last they brought,
 Crowned with fair flowers, and clad in robes of gold,
 The folk that from the wood we won of old
 Why make long words? before our very eyes
 Our friends they slew, a fitting sacrifice
 To us their new gained gods, who sought to find
 Within that land, a people just and kind
 Who could not die, or take away the breath
 From living men.
                     What thing but that same death
 Had we left now to hope for? death must come
 And find us somewhere an enduring home.
 Will grief kill men, as some folk think it will?
 Then are we of all men most hard to kill. p. 93
 The time went past, the dreary days went by
 In dull unvarying round of misery,
 Nor can I tell if it went fast or slow,
 What would it profit you the time to know
 That we spent there; all I can say to you
 Is, that no hope our prison wall shone through,
 That ever we were guarded carefully,
 While day and dark and dark and day went by
 Like such a dream, as in the early night
 The sleeper wakes from in such sore afright,
 Such panting horror, that to sleep again
 He will not turn, to meet such shameful pain.
   Lo such were we, but as we hoped before
 Where no hope was, so now, when all seemed oer
 But sorrow for our lives so cast away,
 Again the bright sun brought about the day.
    At last the temple's dull monotony
 Was broke by noise of armed men hurrying by
 Within the precinct, and we seemed to hear
 Shouts from without of anger and of fear,
 And noises as of battle; and red blaze
 The night sky showed; this lasted through two days.
 But on the third our guards were whispering
 Pale faced, as though they feared some coming thing,
 And when the din increased about noontide,
 No longer there with us would they abide,
 But left us free; judge then if our hearts beat,
 When any pain or death itself was sweet p. 94
 To hideous life within that wicked place,
 Where every day brought on its own disgrace.
    Few words betwixt us passed, we knew indeed
 Where our old armour once so good at need
 Hung up as relics nigh the altar-stead,
 Thither we hurried, and from heel to head
 Soon were we armed, and our old spears and swords
 Clashing gainst steel and stone, spoke hopeful words
 To us, the children of a warrior race.
 But round unto the hubbub did we face
 And through the precinct strove to make our way
 Set close together; in besmirked array
 Some met us, and some wounded very sore,
 And some who wounded men to harbour bore;
 But these too busy with their pain or woe
 To note us much, unchallenged let us go:
 Then here and there we passed some shrinking maid
 In a dark corner trembling and afraid,
 But eager for the news about the fight.
 Through trodden gardens then we came in sight
 Of the third rampart that begirt the fane,
 Which now the foemen seemed at point to gain,
 For oer the wall the ladders gan to show,
 And huge confusion was there down below
 Twixt wall and wall; but as the gate we passed
 A man from out the crowd came hurrying fast,
 But, drawing nigh us, stopped short suddenly,
 And cried, "O, masters, help us or we die!
 This impious people gainst their ancient lords p. 95
 Have turned, and in their madness drawn their swords.
 Yea, and they now prevail, and fearing not
 The dreadful gods still grows their wrath more hot.
 Wherefore to bring you here was my intent,
 But the kind gods themselves your hands have sent
 To save us all, and this fair holy house
 With your strange arms, and hearts most valorous."
    No word we said, for even as he spoke
 A frightful clamour from the wall outbroke,
 As the thin line of soldiers thereupon
 Crushed back, and broken, left the rampart won,
 And leapt and tumbled therefrom as they could,
 While in their place the conquering foemen stood:
 Then the weak, wavering, huddled crowd below
 Their weight upon the inner wall gan throw,
 And at the narrow gates by hundreds died;
 For not long did the enemy abide
 On the gained rampart, but by every way
 Got to the ground and gan all round to slay,
 Till great and grim the slaughter grew to be.
 But we well pleased our tyrants' end to see
 Still firm against the inner wall did stand,
 While round us surged the press on either hand.
 Nor did we fear, for what was left of life
 For us to fear for? so at last the strife
 Drawn inward, in that place did much abate,
 And we began to move unto the gate
 Betwixt the dead and living, and these last
 Ever with fearful glances by us passed p. 96
 Nor hindered aught; but mindful of the lore
 Our fathers gained on many a bloody shore,
 We, when unto the street we made our way,
 Moved as in fight nor broke our close array,
 Though no man harmed us of the troubled crowd
 That thronged the streets with shouts and curses loud,
 But rather when our clashing arms they heard
 Their hubbub lulled, and they as men afeard
 Drew back before us.
                          Well, as nigh we drew
 Unto the sea, the men showed sparse and few,
 Though frightened women standing in the street
 Before their doors we did not fail to meet,
 And passed by folk who at their doors laid down
 Men wounded in the fight; so through the town
 We reached the unguarded water-gate at last,
 And there, nigh weeping, saw the green waves cast
 Against the quays, whereby five tall ships lay:
 For in that devil's house, right many a day
 Had passed with all its dull obscenity
 We counted not, and while we longed to die,
 And by all men were now forgotten quite
 Except those priests, the people as they might
 Made ships like ours; in whose new handiwork
 Few mariners and fearful now did lurk,
 And these soon fled before us, therefore we
 Stayed not to think, but running hastily
 Down the lone quay, seized on the nighest ship,
 Nor yet till we had let the hawser slip p. 97
 Dared we be glad, and then indeed once more,
 Though we no longer hoped for our fair shore,
 Our past disgrace, worse than the very hell,
 Though hope was dead, made things seem more than well,
 For if we died that night, yet were we free.
    Ah! with what joy we sniffed the fresh salt sea
 After the musky odours of that place;
 With what delight each felt upon his face
 The careless wind, our master and our slave,
 As through the green seas fast from shore we drave,
 Scarce witting where we went.
                                   But now when we
 Beheld that city, far across the sea,
 A thing gone past, nor any more could hear
 The mingled shouts of victory and of fear,
 From out the midst thereof shot up a fire
 'In a long, wavering, murky, smoke-capped spire
 That still with every minute wider grew,
 So that the ending of the place we knew
 Where we had passed such days of misery,
 And still more glad turned round unto the sea.
   My tale grows near its ending, for we stood
 Southward to our kind folk een as we could,
 But made slow way, for ever heavily
 Our ship sailed, and she often needs must lie
 At anchor in some bay, the while with fear
 Ourselves, we followed up the fearful deer,
 Or filled our water-vessels, for indeed, p. 98
 Of meat and drink were we in bitter need,
 As well might be, for scarcely could we choose
 What ships from off that harbour to cast loose.
    Midst this there died the captain, Nicholas,
 Whom, though he brought us even to this pass,
 I loved the most of all men; even now
 When that seems long past, I can scarce tell how
 I bear to live, since he could live no more.
 Certes he took our failure very sore,
 And often do I think he fain had died,
 But yet for very love must needs abide
 A little while, and yet awhile again,
 As though to share the utmost of our pain,
 And miss the ray of comfort and sweet rest
 Wherewith ye end our long disastrous quest
 A drearier place than ever heretofore
 The world seemed, as from that far nameless shore
 We turned and left him neath the trees to bide;
 For midst our rest worn out at last he died.
    And such seemed like to hap to us as well,
 If any harder thing to us befell
 Than was our common life; and still we talked
 How our old friends would meet men foiled, and balked
 Of all the things that were to make them glad;
 Ah, sirs! no sight of them henceforth we had;
 A wind arose, which blowing furiously
 Drove us out helpless to the open sea;
 Eight days it blew, and when it fell, we lay
 Leaky, dismasted, a most helpless prey p. 99
 To winds and waves, and with but little food;
 Then with hard toil a feeble sail and rude
 We rigged up somehow, and nigh hopelessly,
 Expecting death, we staggered oer the sea
 For ten days more, but when all food and drink
 Were gone for three days, and we needs must think
 That in mid ocean we were doomed to die,
 One morn again did land before us lie:
 And we rejoiced, as much at least as he,
 Who tossing on his bed deliriously,
 Tortured with pain, hears the physician say
 That he shall have one quiet painless day
 Before he diesWhat more? we soon did stand
 In this your peaceful and delicious land
 Amongst the simple kindly country folk,
 But when I heard the language that they spoke,
 From out my heart a joyous cry there burst,
 So sore for friendly words was I athirst,
 And I must fall a-weeping, to have come
 To such a place that seemed a blissful home,
 After the tossing from rough sea to sea;
 So weak at last, so beaten down were we.
    What shall I say in these kind people's praise
 Who treated us like brothers for ten days,
 Till with their tending we grew strong again,
 And then withal in country cart and wain
 Brought us unto this city where we are;
 May God be good to them for all their care.
    And now, sirs, all our wanderings have ye heard, p. 100
 And all our story to the utmost word;
 And here hath ending all our foolish quest,
 Not at the worst if hardly at the best,
 Since ye are goodSirs, we are old and grey
 Before our time; in what coin shall we pay
 For this your goodness; take it not amiss
 That we, poor souls, must pay you back for this
 As good men pay back God Who, raised above
 The heavens and earth, yet needeth earthly love.
THE ELDER OF THE CITY.
   Oh, friends, content you! this is much indeed,
 And we are paid, thus garnering for our need
 Your blessings only, bringing in their train
 God's blessings as the south wind brings the rain.
 And for the rest, no little thing shall be
 (Since ye through all yet keep your memory)
 The gentle music of the bygone years,
 Long past to us with all their hopes and fears.
 Think, if the gods, who mayhap love us well,
 Sent to our gates some ancient chronicle
 Of that sweet unforgotten land long left,
 Of all the lands wherefrom we now are reft
 Think, with what joyous hearts, what reverence,
 What songs, what sweet flowers we should bring it thence,
 What images would guard it, what a shrine
 Above its well-loved black and white should shine!
 How should it pay our labour day by day p. 101
 To look upon the fair place where it lay;
 With what rejoicings even should we take
 Each well-writ copy that the scribes might make,
 And bear them forth to hear the people's shout,
 Een as good rulers children are borne out
 To take the people's blessing on their birth,
 When all the city falls to joy and mirth.
Such, sirs, are ye, our living chronicle,
 And scarce can we be grieved at what befell
 Your lives in that too hopeless quest of yours,
 Since it shall bring us wealth of happy hours
 Whiles that we live, and to our sons, delight,
 And their sons sons.
                           But now, sirs, let us go,
 That we your new abodes with us may show,
 And tell you what your life henceforth may be,
 But poor, alas, to that ye hoped to see.