Alfred, Lord Tennyson - Delphi Poets Series

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by Lord Tennyson Alfred

Baron of Barons,

  He with his brother,

  Edmund Atheling,

  Gaining a lifelong

  Glory in battle,

  Slew with the sword-edge

  There by Brunanburh,

  Brake the shield-wall,

  Hew’d the lindenwood,2

  Hack’d the battleshield,

  Sons of Edward with hammer’d brands.

  II.

  Theirs was a greatness

  Got from their Grandsires —

  Theirs that so often in

  Strife with their enemies

  Struck for their hoards and their hearths and their homes.

  III.

  Bow’d the spoiler,

  Bent the Scotsman,

  Fell the shipcrews

  Doom’d to the death.

  All the field with blood of the fighters

  Flow’d, from when first the great

  Sun-star of morningtide,

  Lamp of the Lord God

  Lord everlasting,

  Glode over earth till the glorious creature

  Sank to his setting.

  IV.

  There lay many a man

  Marr’d by the javelin,

  Men of the Northland

  Shot over shield.

  There was the Scotsman

  Weary of war.

  V.

  We the West-Saxons,

  Long as the daylight

  Lasted, in companies

  Troubled the track of the host that we hated,

  Grimly with swords that were sharp from the grindstone,

  Fiercely we hack’d at the flyers before us.

  VI.

  Mighty the Mercian,

  Hard was his hand-play,

  Sparing not any of

  Those that with Anlaf,

  Warriors over the

  Weltering waters

  Borne in the bark’s-bosom,

  Drew to this island:

  Doom’d to the death.

  VII.

  Five young kings put asleep by the sword-stroke,

  Seven strong Earls of the army of Anlaf

  Fell on the war-field, numberless numbers,

  Shipmen and Scotsmen.

  VIII.

  Then the Norse leader.

  Dire was his need of it,

  Few were his following,

  Fled to his warship

  Fleeted his vessel to sea with the king in it.

  Saving his life on the fallow flood.

  IX.

  Also the crafty one,

  Constantinus,

  Crept to his North again,

  Hoar-headed hero!

  X.

  Slender warrant had

  He to be proud of

  The welcome of war-knives —

  He that was reft of his

  Folk and his friends that had

  Fallen in conflict,

  Leaving his son too

  Lost in the carnage,

  Mangled to morsels,

  A youngster in war!

  XI.

  Slender reason had

  He to be glad of

  The clash of the war-glaive —

  Traitor and trickster

  And spurner of treaties —

  He nor had Anlaf

  With armies so broken

  A reason for bragging

  That they had the better

  In perils of battle

  On places of slaughter —

  The struggle of standards,

  The rush of the javelins,

  The crash of the charges,3

  The wielding of weapons —

  The play that they play’d with

  The children of Edward.

  XII.

  Then with their nail’d prows

  Parted the Norsemen, a

  Blood-redden’d relic of

  Javelins over

  The jarring breaker, the deep-sea billow,

  Shaping their way toward Dyflen4 again,

  Shamed in their souls.

  XIII.

  Also the brethren,

  King and Atheling,

  Each in his glory,

  Went to his own in his own West-Saxonland,

  Glad of the war.

  XIV.

  Many a carcase they left to be carrion,

  Many a livid one, many a sallow-skin —

  Left for the white-tail’d eagle to tear it, and

  Left for the horny-nibb’d raven to rend it, and

  Gave to the garbaging war-hawk to gorge it, and

  That gray beast, the wolf of the weald.

  XV.

  Never had huger

  Slaughter of heroes

  Slain by the sword-edge —

  Such as old writers

  Have writ of in histories —

  Hapt in this isle, since

  Up from the East hither

  Saxon and Angle from

  Over the broad billow

  Broke into Britain with

  Haughty war-workers who

  Harried the Welshman, when

  Earls that were lured by the

  Hunger of glory gat

  Hold of the land.

  Achilles Over the Trench

  ILIAD, XVIII. 2O2.

  SO SAYING, light-foot Iris pass’d away.

  Then rose Achilles dear to Zeus; and round

  The warrior’s puissant shoulders Pallas flung

  Her fringed ægis, and around his head

  The glorious goddess wreath’d a golden cloud,

  And from it lighted an all-shining flame.

  As when a smoke from a city goes to heaven

  Far off from out an island girt by foes,

  All day the men contend in grievous war

  From their own city, but with set of sun

  Their fires flame thickly, and aloft the glare

  Flies streaming, if perchance the neighbours round

  May see, and sail to help them in the war;

  So from his head the splendour went to heaven.

  From wall to dyke he stept, he stood, nor join’d

  The Achæans — honouring his wise mother’s word —

  There standing, shouted, and Pallas far away

  Call’d; and a boundless panic shook the foe.

  For like the clear voice when a trumpet shrills,

  Blown by the fierce beleaguerers of a town,

  So rang the clear voice of Æakidês;

  And when the brazen cry of Æakidês

  Was heard among the Trojans, all their hearts

  Were troubled, and the full-maned horses whirl’d

  The chariots backward, knowing griefs at hand;

  And sheer-astounded were the charioteers

  To see the dread, unweariable fire

  That always o’er the great Peleion’s head

  Burn’d, for the bright-eyed goddess made it burn.

  Thrice from the dyke he sent his mighty shout,

  Thrice backward reel’d the Trojans and allies;

  And there and then twelve of their noblest died

  Among their spears and chariots.

  To Princess Frederica on Her Marriage

  O YOU that were eyes and light to the King till he past away

  From the darkness of life —

  He saw not his daughter — he blest her: the blind King sees you to-day,

  He blesses the wife.

  Sir John Franklin

  On the Cenotaph in Westminster Abbey.

  NOT here! the white North has thy bones; and thou,

  Heroic sailor-soul,

  Art passing on thine happier voyage now

  Toward no earthly pole.

  To Dante

  (Written at Request of the Florentines.)

  KING, that hast reign’d six hundred years, and grown

  In power, and ever growest, since thine own

  Fair Florence honouring thy nativity,

  Thy Florence now the crown of Italy,

 
; Hath sought the tribute of a verse from me,

  I, wearing but the garland of a day,

  Cast at thy feet one flower that fades away.

  TIRESIAS AND OTHER POEMS

  CONTENTS

  To E. Fitzgerald

  Tiresias

  The Wreck

  Despair

  The Ancient Sage

  The Flight

  Tomorrow

  The Spinster’s Sweet-Arts

  The Charge of the Heavy Brigade at Balaclava, Prologue

  The Charge of the Heavy Brigade at Balaclava

  Epilogue

  To Virgil

  The Dead Prophet

  Early Spring

  Prefatory Poem to My Brother’s Sonnets

  Frater Ave atque Vale

  Helen’s Tower

  Epitaph on Lord Stratford de Redcliffe

  Epitaph on General Gordon

  Epitaph on Caxton

  To the Duke of Argyll

  Hands all Round

  Freedom

  Poets and their Bibliographies

  To H.R.H. Princess Beatrice

  To E. Fitzgerald

  OLD FITZ, who from your suburb grange,

  Where once I tarried for a while,

  Glance at the wheeling Orb of change,

  And greet it with a kindly smile;

  Whom yet I see as there you sit

  Beneath your sheltering garden-tree,

  And while your doves about you flit,

  And plant on shoulder, hand and knee,

  Or on your head their rosy feet,

  As if they knew your diet spares

  Whatever moved in that full sheet

  Let down to Peter at his prayers;

  Who live on milk and meal and grass;

  And once for ten long weeks I tried

  Your table of Pythagoras,

  And seem’d at first ‘a thing enskied’

  (As Shakespeare has it) airy-light

  To float above the ways of men,

  Then fell from that half-spiritual height

  Chill’d, till I tasted flesh again

  One night when earth was winter-black,

  And all the heavens flash’d in frost;

  And on me, half-asleep, came back

  That wholesome heat the blood had lost,

  And set me climbing icy capes

  And glaciers, over which there roll’d

  To meet me long-arm’d vines with grapes

  Of Eshcol hugeness; for the cold

  Without, and warmth within me, wrought

  To mould the dream; but none can say

  That Lenten fare makes Lenten thought,

  Who reads your golden Eastern lay,

  Than which I know no version done

  In English more divinely well;

  A planet equal to the sun

  Which cast it, that large infidel

  Your Omar; and your Omar drew

  Full-handed plaudits from our best

  In modern letters, and from two,

  Old friends outvaluing all the rest,

  Two voices heard on earth no more;

  But we old friends are still alive,

  And I am nearing seventy-four,

  While you have touch’d at seventy-five,

  And so I send a birthday line

  Of greeting; and my son, who dipt

  In some forgotten book of mine

  With sallow scraps of manuscript,

  And dating many a year ago,

  Has hit on this, which you will take

  My Fitz, and welcome, as I know

  Less for its own than for the sake

  Of one recalling gracious times,

  When, in our younger London days,

  You found some merit in my rhymes,

  And I more pleasure in your praise.

  Tiresias

  I WISH I were as in the years of old

  While yet the blessed daylight made itself

  Ruddy thro’ both the roofs of sight, and woke

  These eyes, now dull, but then so keen to seek

  The meanings ambush’d under all they saw,

  The flight of birds, the flame of sacrifice,

  What omens may foreshadow fate to man

  And woman, and the secret of the Gods.

  My son, the Gods, despite of human prayer,

  Are slower to forgive than human kings.

  The great God, Arês, burns in anger still

  Against the guiltless heirs of him from Tyre

  Our Cadmus, out of whom thou art, who found

  Beside the springs of Dircê, smote, and still’d

  Thro’ all its folds the multitudinous beast

  The dragon, which our trembling fathers call’d

  The God’s own son.

  A tale, that told to me,

  When but thine age, by age as winter-white

  As mine is now, amazed, but made me yearn

  For larger glimpses of that more than man

  Which rolls the heavens, and lifts and lays the deep,

  Yet loves and hates with mortal hates and loves,

  And moves unseen among the ways of men.

  Then, in my wanderings all the lands that lie

  Subjected to the Heliconian ridge

  Have heard this footstep fall, altho’ my wont

  Was more to scale the highest of the heights

  With some strange hope to see the nearer God.

  One naked peak — the sister of the Sun

  Would climb from out the dark, and linger there

  To silver all the valleys with her shafts —

  There once, but long ago, five-fold thy term

  Of years, I lay; the winds were dead for heat;

  The noonday crag made the hand burn; and sick

  For shadow — not one bush was near — I rose

  Following a torrent till its myriad falls

  Found silence in the hollows underneath.

  There in a secret olive-glade I saw

  Pallas Athene climbing from the bath

  In anger; yet one glittering foot disturb’d

  The lucid well; one snowy knee was prest

  Against the margin flowers; a dreadful light

  Came from her golden hair, her golden helm

  And all her golden armor on the grass,

  And from her virgin breast, and virgin eyes

  Remaining fixt on mine, till mine grew dark

  For ever, and I heard a voice that said

  “Henceforth be blind, for thou hast seen too much,

  And speak the truth that no man may believe.”

  Son, in the hidden world of sight that lives

  Behind this darkness, I behold her still

  Beyond all work of those who carve the stone

  Beyond all dreams of Godlike womanhood,

  Ineffable beauty, out of whom, at a glance

  And as it were, perforce, upon me flash’d

  The power of prophesying — but to me

  No power — so chain’d and coupled with the curse

  Of blindness and their unbelief who heard

  And heard not, when I spake of famine, plague

  Shrine-shattering earthquake, fire, flood, thunderbolt,

  And angers of the Gods for evil done

  And expiation lack’d — no power on Fate

  Theirs, or mine own! for when the crowd would roar

  For blood, for war, whose issue was their doom,

  To cast wise words among the multitude

  Was flinging fruit to lions; nor, in hours

  Of civil outbreak, when I knew the twain

  Would each waste each, and bring on both the yoke

  Of stronger states, was mine the voice to curb

  The madness of our cities and their kings.

  Who ever turn’d upon his heel to hear

  My warning that the tyranny of one

  Was prelude to the tyranny of all?

  My counsel that the tyranny of all
r />   Led backward to the tyranny of one?

  This power hath work’d no good to aught that lives

  And these blind hands were useless in their wars.

  O therefore, that the unfulfill’d desire,

  The grief for ever born from griefs to be

  The boundless yearning of the prophet’s heart —

  Could that stand forth, and like a statue, rear’d

  To some great citizen, win all praise from all

  Who past it, saying, “That was he!”

  In vain!

  Virtue must shape itself in deed, and those

  Whom weakness or necessity have cramp’d

  Within themselves, immerging, each, his urn

  In his own well, draws solace as he may.

  Menœceus, thou hast eyes, and I can hear

  Too plainly what full tides of onset sap

  Our seven high gates, and what a weight of war

  Rides on those ringing axles! jingle of bits,

  Shouts, arrows, tramp of the horn-footed horse

  That grind the glebe to powder! Stony showers

  Of that ear-stunning hail of Arês crash

  Along the sounding walls. Above, below

  Shock after shock, the song-built towers and gates

  Reel, bruised and butted with the shuddering

  War-thunder of iron rams; and from within

  The city comes a murmur void of joy,

  Lest she be taken captive — maidens, wives,

  And mothers with their babblers of the dawn,

  And oldest age in shadow from the night,

  Falling about their shrines before their Gods,

  And wailing, “Save us.”

  And they wail to thee!

  These eyeless eyes, that cannot see thine own,

  See this, that only in thy virtue lies

  The saving of our Thebes; for, yesternight,

  To me, the great God Arês, whose one bliss

  Is war and human sacrifice — himself

  Blood-red from battle, spear and helmet tipt

  With stormy light as on a mast at sea,

  Stood out before a darkness, crying, “Thebes,

  Thy Thebes shall fall and perish, for I loathe

  The seed of Cadmus — yet if one of these

  By his own hand — if one of these — —”

  My son,

  No sound is breathed so potent to coerce,

  And to conciliate, as their names who dare

  For that sweet mother land which gave them birth

  Nobly to do, nobly to die. Their names,

  Graven on memorial columns, are a song

  Heard in the future; few, but more than wall

  And rampart, their examples reach a hand

  Far thro’ all years, and everywhere they meet

  And kindle generous purpose, and the strength

  To mould it into action pure as theirs.

  Fairer thy fate than mine, if life’s best end

  Be to end well! and thou refusing this,

  Unvenerable will thy memory be

 

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