Complete works of g k ch.., p.385

Complete Works of G K Chesterton, page 385

 

Complete Works of G K Chesterton
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  The rook croaked homeward heavily,

  The west was clear and warm,

  The smoke of evening food and ease

  Rose like a blue tree in the trees

  When he came to Eldred’s farm.

  But Eldred’s farm was fallen awry,

  Like an old cripple’s bones,

  And Eldred’s tools were red with rust,

  And on his well was a green crust,

  And purple thistles upward thrust,

  Between the kitchen stones.

  But smoke of some good feasting

  Went upwards evermore,

  And Eldred’s doors stood wide apart

  For loitering foot or labouring cart,

  And Eldred’s great and foolish heart

  Stood open like his door.

  A mighty man was Eldred,

  A bulk for casks to fill,

  His face a dreaming furnace,

  His body a walking hill.

  In the old wars of Wessex

  His sword had sunken deep,

  But all his friends, he signed and said,

  Were broken about Ethelred;

  And between the deep drink and the dead

  He had fallen upon sleep.

  “Come not to me, King Alfred, Save always for the ale:

  Why should my harmless hinds be slain

  Because the chiefs cry once again,

  As in all fights, that we shall gain,

  And in all fights we fail?

  “Your scalds still thunder and prophesy

  That crown that never comes;

  Friend, I will watch the certain things,

  Swine, and slow moons like silver rings,

  And the ripening of the plums.”

  And Alfred answered, drinking,

  And gravely, without blame,

  “Nor bear I boast of scald or king,

  The thing I bear is a lesser thing,

  But comes in a better name.

  “Out of the mouth of the Mother of God,

  More than the doors of doom,

  I call the muster of Wessex men

  From grassy hamlet or ditch or den,

  To break and be broken, God knows when,

  But I have seen for whom.

  “Out of the mouth of the Mother of God

  Like a little word come I;

  For I go gathering Christian men

  From sunken paving and ford and fen,

  To die in a battle, God knows when,

  By God, but I know why.

  “And this is the word of Mary,

  The word of the world’s desire

  ‘No more of comfort shall ye get,

  Save that the sky grows darker yet

  And the sea rises higher.’”

  Then silence sank. And slowly

  Arose the sea-land lord,

  Like some vast beast for mystery,

  He filled the room and porch and sky,

  And from a cobwebbed nail on high

  Unhooked his heavy sword.

  Up on the shrill sea-downs and up

  Went Alfred all alone,

  Turning but once e’er the door was shut,

  Shouting to Eldred over his butt,

  That he bring all spears to the woodman’s hut

  Hewn under Egbert’s Stone.

  And he turned his back and broke the fern,

  And fought the moths of dusk,

  And went on his way for other friends

  Friends fallen of all the wide world’s ends,

  From Rome that wrath and pardon sends

  And the grey tribes on Usk.

  He saw gigantic tracks of death

  And many a shape of doom,

  Good steadings to grey ashes gone

  And a monk’s house white like a skeleton

  In the green crypt of the combe.

  And in many a Roman villa

  Earth and her ivies eat,

  Saw coloured pavements sink and fade

  In flowers, and the windy colonnade

  Like the spectre of a street.

  But the cold stars clustered

  Among the cold pines

  Ere he was half on his pilgrimage

  Over the western lines.

  And the white dawn widened

  Ere he came to the last pine,

  Where Mark, the man from Italy,

  Still made the Christian sign.

  The long farm lay on the large hill-side,

  Flat like a painted plan,

  And by the side the low white house,

  Where dwelt the southland man.

  A bronzed man, with a bird’s bright eye,

  And a strong bird’s beak and brow,

  His skin was brown like buried gold,

  And of certain of his sires was told

  That they came in the shining ship of old,

  With Caesar in the prow.

  His fruit trees stood like soldiers

  Drilled in a straight line,

  His strange, stiff olives did not fail,

  And all the kings of the earth drank ale,

  But he drank wine.

  Wide over wasted British plains

  Stood never an arch or dome,

  Only the trees to toss and reel,

  The tribes to bicker, the beasts to squeal;

  But the eyes in his head were strong like steel,

  And his soul remembered Rome.

  Then Alfred of the lonely spear

  Lifted his lion head;

  And fronted with the Italian’s eye,

  Asking him of his whence and why,

  King Alfred stood and said:

  “I am that oft-defeated King

  Whose failure fills the land,

  Who fled before the Danes of old,

  Who chaffered with the Danes with gold,

  Who now upon the Wessex wold

  Hardly has feet to stand.

  “But out of the mouth of the Mother of God

  I have seen the truth like fire,

  This — that the sky grows darker yet

  And the sea rises higher.”

  Long looked the Roman on the land;

  The trees as golden crowns

  Blazed, drenched with dawn and dew-empearled

  While faintlier coloured, freshlier curled,

  The clouds from underneath the world

  Stood up over the downs.

  “These vines be ropes that drag me hard,”

  He said. “I go not far;

  Where would you meet? For you must hold

  Half Wiltshire and the White Horse wold,

  And the Thames bank to Owsenfold,

  If Wessex goes to war.

  “Guthrum sits strong on either bank

  And you must press his lines

  Inwards, and eastward drive him down;

  I doubt if you shall take the crown

  Till you have taken London town.

  For me, I have the vines.”

  “If each man on the Judgment Day

  Meet God on a plain alone,”

  Said Alfred, “I will speak for you

  As for myself, and call it true

  That you brought all fighting folk you knew

  Lined under Egbert’s Stone.

  “Though I be in the dust ere then,

  I know where you will be.”

  And shouldering suddenly his spear

  He faded like some elfin fear,

  Where the tall pines ran up, tier on tier

  Tree overtoppling tree.

  He shouldered his spear at morning

  And laughed to lay it on,

  But he leaned on his spear as on a staff,

  With might and little mood to laugh,

  Or ever he sighted chick or calf

  Of Colan of Caerleon.

  For the man dwelt in a lost land

  Of boulders and broken men,

  In a great grey cave far off to the south

  Where a thick green forest stopped the mouth,

  Giving darkness in his den.

  And the man was come like a shadow,

  From the shadow of Druid trees,

  Where Usk, with mighty murmurings,

  Past Caerleon of the fallen kings,

  Goes out to ghostly seas.

  Last of a race in ruin —

  He spoke the speech of the Gaels;

  His kin were in holy Ireland,

  Or up in the crags of Wales.

  But his soul stood with his mother’s folk,

  That were of the rain-wrapped isle,

  Where Patrick and Brandan westerly

  Looked out at last on a landless sea

  And the sun’s last smile.

  His harp was carved and cunning,

  As the Celtic craftsman makes,

  Graven all over with twisting shapes

  Like many headless snakes.

  His harp was carved and cunning,

  His sword prompt and sharp,

  And he was gay when he held the sword,

  Sad when he held the harp.

  For the great Gaels of Ireland

  Are the men that God made mad,

  For all their wars are merry,

  And all their songs are sad.

  He kept the Roman order,

  He made the Christian sign;

  But his eyes grew often blind and bright,

  And the sea that rose in the rocks at night

  Rose to his head like wine.

  He made the sign of the cross of God,

  He knew the Roman prayer,

  But he had unreason in his heart

  Because of the gods that were.

  Even they that walked on the high cliffs,

  High as the clouds were then,

  Gods of unbearable beauty,

  That broke the hearts of men.

  And whether in seat or saddle,

  Whether with frown or smile,

  Whether at feast or fight was he,

  He heard the noise of a nameless sea

  On an undiscovered isle.

  Lifting the great green ivy

  And the great spear lowering,

  One said, “I am Alfred of Wessex,

  And I am a conquered king.”

  And the man of the cave made answer,

  And his eyes were stars of scorn,

  “And better kings were conquered

  Or ever your sires were born.

  “What goddess was your mother,

  What fay your breed begot,

  That you should not die with Uther

  And Arthur and Lancelot?

  “But when you win you brag and blow,

  And when you lose you rail,

  Army of eastland yokels

  Not strong enough to fail.”

  “I bring not boast or railing,”

  Spake Alfred not in ire,

  “I bring of Our Lady a lesson set,

  This — that the sky grows darker yet

  And the sea rises higher.”

  Then Colan of the Sacred Tree

  Tossed his black mane on high,

  And cried, as rigidly he rose,

  “And if the sea and sky be foes,

  We will tame the sea and sky.”

  Smiled Alfred, “Seek ye a fable

  More dizzy and more dread

  Than all your mad barbarian tales

  Where the sky stands on its head?

  “A tale where a man looks down on the sky

  That has long looked down on him;

  A tale where a man can swallow a sea

  That might swallow the seraphim.

  “Bring to the hut by Egbert’s Stone

  All bills and bows ye have.”

  And Alfred strode off rapidly,

  And Colan of the Sacred Tree

  Went slowly to his cave.

  BOOK III. THE HARP OF ALFRED

  In a tree that yawned and twisted

  The King’s few goods were flung,

  A mass-book mildewed, line by line,

  And weapons and a skin of wine,

  And an old harp unstrung.

  By the yawning tree in the twilight

  The King unbound his sword,

  Severed the harp of all his goods,

  And there in the cool and soundless woods

  Sounded a single chord.

  Then laughed; and watched the finches flash,

  The sullen flies in swarm,

  And went unarmed over the hills,

  With the harp upon his arm,

  Until he came to the White Horse Vale

  And saw across the plains,

  In the twilight high and far and fell,

  Like the fiery terraces of hell,

  The camp fires of the Danes —

  The fires of the Great Army

  That was made of iron men,

  Whose lights of sacrilege and scorn

  Ran around England red as morn,

  Fires over Glastonbury Thorn —

  Fires out on Ely Fen.

  And as he went by White Horse Vale

  He saw lie wan and wide

  The old horse graven, God knows when,

  By gods or beasts or what things then

  Walked a new world instead of men

  And scrawled on the hill-side.

  And when he came to White Horse Down

  The great White Horse was grey,

  For it was ill scoured of the weed,

  And lichen and thorn could crawl and feed,

  Since the foes of settled house and creed

  Had swept old works away.

  King Alfred gazed all sorrowful

  At thistle and mosses grey,

  Till a rally of Danes with shield and bill

  Rolled drunk over the dome of the hill,

  And, hearing of his harp and skill,

  They dragged him to their play.

  And as they went through the high green grass

  They roared like the great green sea;

  But when they came to the red camp fire

  They were silent suddenly.

  And as they went up the wastes away

  They went reeling to and fro;

  But when they came to the red camp fire

  They stood all in a row.

  For golden in the firelight,

  With a smile carved on his lips,

  And a beard curled right cunningly,

  Was Guthrum of the Northern Sea,

  The emperor of the ships —

  With three great earls King Guthrum

  Went the rounds from fire to fire,

  With Harold, nephew of the King,

  And Ogier of the Stone and Sling,

  And Elf, whose gold lute had a string

  That sighed like all desire.

  The Earls of the Great Army

  That no men born could tire,

  Whose flames anear him or aloof

  Took hold of towers or walls of proof,

  Fire over Glastonbury roof

  And out on Ely, fire.

  And Guthrum heard the soldiers’ tale

  And bade the stranger play;

  Not harshly, but as one on high,

  On a marble pillar in the sky,

  Who sees all folk that live and die —

  Pigmy and far away.

  And Alfred, King of Wessex,

  Looked on his conqueror —

  And his hands hardened; but he played,

  And leaving all later hates unsaid,

  He sang of some old British raid

  On the wild west march of yore.

  He sang of war in the warm wet shires,

  Where rain nor fruitage fails,

  Where England of the motley states

  Deepens like a garden to the gates

  In the purple walls of Wales.

  He sang of the seas of savage heads

  And the seas and seas of spears,

  Boiling all over Offa’s Dyke,

  What time a Wessex club could strike

  The kings of the mountaineers.

  Till Harold laughed and snatched the harp,

  The kinsman of the King,

  A big youth, beardless like a child,

  Whom the new wine of war sent wild,

  Smote, and began to sing —

  And he cried of the ships as eagles

  That circle fiercely and fly,

  And sweep the seas and strike the towns

  From Cyprus round to Skye.

  How swiftly and with peril

  They gather all good things,

  The high horns of the forest beasts,

  Or the secret stones of kings.

  “For Rome was given to rule the world,

  And gat of it little joy —

  But we, but we shall enjoy the world,

  The whole huge world a toy.

  “Great wine like blood from Burgundy,

  Cloaks like the clouds from Tyre,

  And marble like solid moonlight,

  And gold like frozen fire.

  “Smells that a man might swill in a cup,

  Stones that a man might eat,

  And the great smooth women like ivory

  That the Turks sell in the street.”

  He sang the song of the thief of the world,

  And the gods that love the thief;

  And he yelled aloud at the cloister-yards,

  Where men go gathering grief.

  “Well have you sung, O stranger,

  Of death on the dyke in Wales,

  Your chief was a bracelet-giver;

  But the red unbroken river

  Of a race runs not for ever,

  But suddenly it fails.

  “Doubtless your sires were sword-swingers

  When they waded fresh from foam,

  Before they were turned to women

  By the god of the nails from Rome;

  “But since you bent to the shaven men,

  Who neither lust nor smite,

  Thunder of Thor, we hunt you

  A hare on the mountain height.”

 

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