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<h2> BOOK II. THE GATHERING OF THE CHIEFS </h2>
<p>Up across windy wastes and up<br/>
Went Alfred over the shaws,<br/>
Shaken of the joy of giants,<br/>
The joy without a cause.<br/>
In the slopes away to the western bays,<br/>
Where blows not ever a tree,<br/>
He washed his soul in the west wind<br/>
And his body in the sea.<br/>
And he set to rhyme his ale-measures,<br/>
And he sang aloud his laws,<br/>
Because of the joy of the giants,<br/>
The joy without a cause.<br/>
The King went gathering Wessex men,<br/>
As grain out of the chaff<br/>
The few that were alive to die,<br/>
Laughing, as littered skulls that lie<br/>
After lost battles turn to the sky<br/>
An everlasting laugh.<br/>
The King went gathering Christian men,<br/>
As wheat out of the husk;<br/>
Eldred, the Franklin by the sea,<br/>
And Mark, the man from Italy,<br/>
And Colan of the Sacred Tree,<br/>
From the old tribe on Usk.<br/>
The rook croaked homeward heavily,<br/>
The west was clear and warm,<br/>
The smoke of evening food and ease<br/>
Rose like a blue tree in the trees<br/>
When he came to Eldred's farm.<br/>
But Eldred's farm was fallen awry,<br/>
Like an old cripple's bones,<br/>
And Eldred's tools were red with rust,<br/>
And on his well was a green crust,<br/>
And purple thistles upward thrust,<br/>
Between the kitchen stones.<br/>
But smoke of some good feasting<br/>
Went upwards evermore,<br/>
And Eldred's doors stood wide apart<br/>
For loitering foot or labouring cart,<br/>
And Eldred's great and foolish heart<br/>
Stood open like his door.<br/>
A mighty man was Eldred,<br/>
A bulk for casks to fill,<br/>
His face a dreaming furnace,<br/>
His body a walking hill.<br/>
In the old wars of Wessex<br/>
His sword had sunken deep,<br/>
But all his friends, he signed and said,<br/>
Were broken about Ethelred;<br/>
And between the deep drink and the dead<br/>
He had fallen upon sleep.<br/>
"Come not to me, King Alfred, Save always for the ale:<br/>
Why should my harmless hinds be slain<br/>
Because the chiefs cry once again,<br/>
As in all fights, that we shall gain,<br/>
And in all fights we fail?<br/>
"Your scalds still thunder and prophesy<br/>
That crown that never comes;<br/>
Friend, I will watch the certain things,<br/>
Swine, and slow moons like silver rings,<br/>
And the ripening of the plums."<br/>
And Alfred answered, drinking,<br/>
And gravely, without blame,<br/>
"Nor bear I boast of scald or king,<br/>
The thing I bear is a lesser thing,<br/>
But comes in a better name.<br/>
"Out of the mouth of the Mother of God,<br/>
More than the doors of doom,<br/>
I call the muster of Wessex men<br/>
From grassy hamlet or ditch or den,<br/>
To break and be broken, God knows when,<br/>
But I have seen for whom.<br/>
"Out of the mouth of the Mother of God<br/>
Like a little word come I;<br/>
For I go gathering Christian men<br/>
From sunken paving and ford and fen,<br/>
To die in a battle, God knows when,<br/>
By God, but I know why.<br/>
"And this is the word of Mary,<br/>
The word of the world's desire<br/>
'No more of comfort shall ye get,<br/>
Save that the sky grows darker yet<br/>
And the sea rises higher.'"<br/>
Then silence sank. And slowly<br/>
Arose the sea-land lord,<br/>
Like some vast beast for mystery,<br/>
He filled the room and porch and sky,<br/>
And from a cobwebbed nail on high<br/>
Unhooked his heavy sword.<br/>
Up on the shrill sea-downs and up<br/>
Went Alfred all alone,<br/>
Turning but once e'er the door was shut,<br/>
Shouting to Eldred over his butt,<br/>
That he bring all spears to the woodman's hut<br/>
Hewn under Egbert's Stone.<br/>
And he turned his back and broke the fern,<br/>
And fought the moths of dusk,<br/>
And went on his way for other friends<br/>
Friends fallen of all the wide world's ends,<br/>
From Rome that wrath and pardon sends<br/>
And the grey tribes on Usk.<br/>
He saw gigantic tracks of death<br/>
And many a shape of doom,<br/>
Good steadings to grey ashes gone<br/>
And a monk's house white like a skeleton<br/>
In the green crypt of the combe.<br/>
And in many a Roman villa<br/>
Earth and her ivies eat,<br/>
Saw coloured pavements sink and fade<br/>
In flowers, and the windy colonnade<br/>
Like the spectre of a street.<br/>
But the cold stars clustered<br/>
Among the cold pines<br/>
Ere he was half on his pilgrimage<br/>
Over the western lines.<br/>
And the white dawn widened<br/>
Ere he came to the last pine,<br/>
Where Mark, the man from Italy,<br/>
Still made the Christian sign.<br/>
The long farm lay on the large hill-side,<br/>
Flat like a painted plan,<br/>
And by the side the low white house,<br/>
Where dwelt the southland man.<br/>
A bronzed man, with a bird's bright eye,<br/>
And a strong bird's beak and brow,<br/>
His skin was brown like buried gold,<br/>
And of certain of his sires was told<br/>
That they came in the shining ship of old,<br/>
With Caesar in the prow.<br/>
His fruit trees stood like soldiers<br/>
Drilled in a straight line,<br/>
His strange, stiff olives did not fail,<br/>
And all the kings of the earth drank ale,<br/>
But he drank wine.<br/>
Wide over wasted British plains<br/>
Stood never an arch or dome,<br/>
Only the trees to toss and reel,<br/>
The tribes to bicker, the beasts to squeal;<br/>
But the eyes in his head were strong like steel,<br/>
And his soul remembered Rome.<br/>
Then Alfred of the lonely spear<br/>
Lifted his lion head;<br/>
And fronted with the Italian's eye,<br/>
Asking him of his whence and why,<br/>
King Alfred stood and said:<br/>
"I am that oft-defeated King<br/>
Whose failure fills the land,<br/>
Who fled before the Danes of old,<br/>
Who chaffered with the Danes with gold,<br/>
Who now upon the Wessex wold<br/>
Hardly has feet to stand.<br/>
"But out of the mouth of the Mother of God<br/>
I have seen the truth like fire,<br/>
This—that the sky grows darker yet<br/>
And the sea rises higher."<br/>
Long looked the Roman on the land;<br/>
The trees as golden crowns<br/>
Blazed, drenched with dawn and dew-empearled<br/>
While faintlier coloured, freshlier curled,<br/>
The clouds from underneath the world<br/>
Stood up over the downs.<br/>
"These vines be ropes that drag me hard,"<br/>
He said. "I go not far;<br/>
Where would you meet? For you must hold<br/>
Half Wiltshire and the White Horse wold,<br/>
And the Thames bank to Owsenfold,<br/>
If Wessex goes to war.<br/>
"Guthrum sits strong on either bank<br/>
And you must press his lines<br/>
Inwards, and eastward drive him down;<br/>
I doubt if you shall take the crown<br/>
Till you have taken London town.<br/>
For me, I have the vines."<br/>
"If each man on the Judgment Day<br/>
Meet God on a plain alone,"<br/>
Said Alfred, "I will speak for you<br/>
As for myself, and call it true<br/>
That you brought all fighting folk you knew<br/>
Lined under Egbert's Stone.<br/>
"Though I be in the dust ere then,<br/>
I know where you will be."<br/>
And shouldering suddenly his spear<br/>
He faded like some elfin fear,<br/>
Where the tall pines ran up, tier on tier<br/>
Tree overtoppling tree.<br/>
He shouldered his spear at morning<br/>
And laughed to lay it on,<br/>
But he leaned on his spear as on a staff,<br/>
With might and little mood to laugh,<br/>
Or ever he sighted chick or calf<br/>
Of Colan of Caerleon.<br/>
For the man dwelt in a lost land<br/>
Of boulders and broken men,<br/>
In a great grey cave far off to the south<br/>
Where a thick green forest stopped the mouth,<br/>
Giving darkness in his den.<br/>
And the man was come like a shadow,<br/>
From the shadow of Druid trees,<br/>
Where Usk, with mighty murmurings,<br/>
Past Caerleon of the fallen kings,<br/>
Goes out to ghostly seas.<br/>
Last of a race in ruin—<br/>
He spoke the speech of the Gaels;<br/>
His kin were in holy Ireland,<br/>
Or up in the crags of Wales.<br/>
But his soul stood with his mother's folk,<br/>
That were of the rain-wrapped isle,<br/>
Where Patrick and Brandan westerly<br/>
Looked out at last on a landless sea<br/>
And the sun's last smile.<br/>
His harp was carved and cunning,<br/>
As the Celtic craftsman makes,<br/>
Graven all over with twisting shapes<br/>
Like many headless snakes.<br/>
His harp was carved and cunning,<br/>
His sword prompt and sharp,<br/>
And he was gay when he held the sword,<br/>
Sad when he held the harp.<br/>
For the great Gaels of Ireland<br/>
Are the men that God made mad,<br/>
For all their wars are merry,<br/>
And all their songs are sad.<br/>
He kept the Roman order,<br/>
He made the Christian sign;<br/>
But his eyes grew often blind and bright,<br/>
And the sea that rose in the rocks at night<br/>
Rose to his head like wine.<br/>
He made the sign of the cross of God,<br/>
He knew the Roman prayer,<br/>
But he had unreason in his heart<br/>
Because of the gods that were.<br/>
Even they that walked on the high cliffs,<br/>
High as the clouds were then,<br/>
Gods of unbearable beauty,<br/>
That broke the hearts of men.<br/>
And whether in seat or saddle,<br/>
Whether with frown or smile,<br/>
Whether at feast or fight was he,<br/>
He heard the noise of a nameless sea<br/>
On an undiscovered isle.<br/>
Lifting the great green ivy<br/>
And the great spear lowering,<br/>
One said, "I am Alfred of Wessex,<br/>
And I am a conquered king."<br/>
And the man of the cave made answer,<br/>
And his eyes were stars of scorn,<br/>
"And better kings were conquered<br/>
Or ever your sires were born.<br/>
"What goddess was your mother,<br/>
What fay your breed begot,<br/>
That you should not die with Uther<br/>
And Arthur and Lancelot?<br/>
"But when you win you brag and blow,<br/>
And when you lose you rail,<br/>
Army of eastland yokels<br/>
Not strong enough to fail."<br/>
"I bring not boast or railing,"<br/>
Spake Alfred not in ire,<br/>
"I bring of Our Lady a lesson set,<br/>
This—that the sky grows darker yet<br/>
And the sea rises higher."<br/>
Then Colan of the Sacred Tree<br/>
Tossed his black mane on high,<br/>
And cried, as rigidly he rose,<br/>
"And if the sea and sky be foes,<br/>
We will tame the sea and sky."<br/>
Smiled Alfred, "Seek ye a fable<br/>
More dizzy and more dread<br/>
Than all your mad barbarian tales<br/>
Where the sky stands on its head?<br/>
"A tale where a man looks down on the sky<br/>
That has long looked down on him;<br/>
A tale where a man can swallow a sea<br/>
That might swallow the seraphim.<br/>
"Bring to the hut by Egbert's Stone<br/>
All bills and bows ye have."<br/>
And Alfred strode off rapidly,<br/>
And Colan of the Sacred Tree<br/>
Went slowly to his cave.<br/></p>
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