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<h2> V </h2>
<p>Now, scarce three paces measured from the mound,<br/>
We stumbled on a stationary voice,<br/>
And 'Stand, who goes?' 'Two from the palace' I.<br/>
'The second two: they wait,' he said, 'pass on;<br/>
His Highness wakes:' and one, that clashed in arms,<br/>
By glimmering lanes and walls of canvas led<br/>
Threading the soldier-city, till we heard<br/>
The drowsy folds of our great ensign shake<br/>
From blazoned lions o'er the imperial tent<br/>
Whispers of war.<br/>
Entering, the sudden light<br/>
Dazed me half-blind: I stood and seemed to hear,<br/>
As in a poplar grove when a light wind wakes<br/>
A lisping of the innumerous leaf and dies,<br/>
Each hissing in his neighbour's ear; and then<br/>
A strangled titter, out of which there brake<br/>
On all sides, clamouring etiquette to death,<br/>
Unmeasured mirth; while now the two old kings<br/>
Began to wag their baldness up and down,<br/>
The fresh young captains flashed their glittering teeth,<br/>
The huge bush-bearded Barons heaved and blew,<br/>
And slain with laughter rolled the gilded Squire.<br/>
<br/>
At length my Sire, his rough cheek wet with tears,<br/>
Panted from weary sides 'King, you are free!<br/>
We did but keep you surety for our son,<br/>
If this be he,—or a dragged mawkin, thou,<br/>
That tends to her bristled grunters in the sludge:'<br/>
For I was drenched with ooze, and torn with briers,<br/>
More crumpled than a poppy from the sheath,<br/>
And all one rag, disprinced from head to heel.<br/>
Then some one sent beneath his vaulted palm<br/>
A whispered jest to some one near him, 'Look,<br/>
He has been among his shadows.' 'Satan take<br/>
The old women and their shadows! (thus the King<br/>
Roared) make yourself a man to fight with men.<br/>
Go: Cyril told us all.'<br/>
As boys that slink<br/>
From ferule and the trespass-chiding eye,<br/>
Away we stole, and transient in a trice<br/>
From what was left of faded woman-slough<br/>
To sheathing splendours and the golden scale<br/>
Of harness, issued in the sun, that now<br/>
Leapt from the dewy shoulders of the Earth,<br/>
And hit the Northern hills. Here Cyril met us.<br/>
A little shy at first, but by and by<br/>
We twain, with mutual pardon asked and given<br/>
For stroke and song, resoldered peace, whereon<br/>
Followed his tale. Amazed he fled away<br/>
Through the dark land, and later in the night<br/>
Had come on Psyche weeping: 'then we fell<br/>
Into your father's hand, and there she lies,<br/>
But will not speak, or stir.'<br/>
He showed a tent<br/>
A stone-shot off: we entered in, and there<br/>
Among piled arms and rough accoutrements,<br/>
Pitiful sight, wrapped in a soldier's cloak,<br/>
Like some sweet sculpture draped from head to foot,<br/>
And pushed by rude hands from its pedestal,<br/>
All her fair length upon the ground she lay:<br/>
And at her head a follower of the camp,<br/>
A charred and wrinkled piece of womanhood,<br/>
Sat watching like the watcher by the dead.<br/>
<br/>
Then Florian knelt, and 'Come' he whispered to her,<br/>
'Lift up your head, sweet sister: lie not thus.<br/>
What have you done but right? you could not slay<br/>
Me, nor your prince: look up: be comforted:<br/>
Sweet is it to have done the thing one ought,<br/>
When fallen in darker ways.' And likewise I:<br/>
'Be comforted: have I not lost her too,<br/>
In whose least act abides the nameless charm<br/>
That none has else for me?' She heard, she moved,<br/>
She moaned, a folded voice; and up she sat,<br/>
And raised the cloak from brows as pale and smooth<br/>
As those that mourn half-shrouded over death<br/>
In deathless marble. 'Her,' she said, 'my friend—<br/>
Parted from her—betrayed her cause and mine—<br/>
Where shall I breathe? why kept ye not your faith?<br/>
O base and bad! what comfort? none for me!'<br/>
To whom remorseful Cyril, 'Yet I pray<br/>
Take comfort: live, dear lady, for your child!'<br/>
At which she lifted up her voice and cried.<br/>
<br/>
'Ah me, my babe, my blossom, ah, my child,<br/>
My one sweet child, whom I shall see no more!<br/>
For now will cruel Ida keep her back;<br/>
And either she will die from want of care,<br/>
Or sicken with ill-usage, when they say<br/>
The child is hers—for every little fault,<br/>
The child is hers; and they will beat my girl<br/>
Remembering her mother: O my flower!<br/>
Or they will take her, they will make her hard,<br/>
And she will pass me by in after-life<br/>
With some cold reverence worse than were she dead.<br/>
Ill mother that I was to leave her there,<br/>
To lag behind, scared by the cry they made,<br/>
The horror of the shame among them all:<br/>
But I will go and sit beside the doors,<br/>
And make a wild petition night and day,<br/>
Until they hate to hear me like a wind<br/>
Wailing for ever, till they open to me,<br/>
And lay my little blossom at my feet,<br/>
My babe, my sweet Agla�a, my one child:<br/>
And I will take her up and go my way,<br/>
And satisfy my soul with kissing her:<br/>
Ah! what might that man not deserve of me<br/>
Who gave me back my child?' 'Be comforted,'<br/>
Said Cyril, 'you shall have it:' but again<br/>
She veiled her brows, and prone she sank, and so<br/>
Like tender things that being caught feign death,<br/>
Spoke not, nor stirred.<br/>
By this a murmur ran<br/>
Through all the camp and inward raced the scouts<br/>
With rumour of Prince Arab hard at hand.<br/>
We left her by the woman, and without<br/>
Found the gray kings at parle: and 'Look you' cried<br/>
My father 'that our compact be fulfilled:<br/>
You have spoilt this child; she laughs at you and man:<br/>
She wrongs herself, her sex, and me, and him:<br/>
But red-faced war has rods of steel and fire;<br/>
She yields, or war.'<br/>
Then Gama turned to me:<br/>
'We fear, indeed, you spent a stormy time<br/>
With our strange girl: and yet they say that still<br/>
You love her. Give us, then, your mind at large:<br/>
How say you, war or not?'<br/>
'Not war, if possible,<br/>
O king,' I said, 'lest from the abuse of war,<br/>
The desecrated shrine, the trampled year,<br/>
The smouldering homestead, and the household flower<br/>
Torn from the lintel—all the common wrong—<br/>
A smoke go up through which I loom to her<br/>
Three times a monster: now she lightens scorn<br/>
At him that mars her plan, but then would hate<br/>
(And every voice she talked with ratify it,<br/>
And every face she looked on justify it)<br/>
The general foe. More soluble is this knot,<br/>
By gentleness than war. I want her love.<br/>
What were I nigher this although we dashed<br/>
Your cities into shards with catapults,<br/>
She would not love;—or brought her chained, a slave,<br/>
The lifting of whose eyelash is my lord,<br/>
Not ever would she love; but brooding turn<br/>
The book of scorn, till all my flitting chance<br/>
Were caught within the record of her wrongs,<br/>
And crushed to death: and rather, Sire, than this<br/>
I would the old God of war himself were dead,<br/>
Forgotten, rusting on his iron hills,<br/>
Rotting on some wild shore with ribs of wreck,<br/>
Or like an old-world mammoth bulked in ice,<br/>
Not to be molten out.'<br/>
And roughly spake<br/>
My father, 'Tut, you know them not, the girls.<br/>
Boy, when I hear you prate I almost think<br/>
That idiot legend credible. Look you, Sir!<br/>
Man is the hunter; woman is his game:<br/>
The sleek and shining creatures of the chase,<br/>
We hunt them for the beauty of their skins;<br/>
They love us for it, and we ride them down.<br/>
Wheedling and siding with them! Out! for shame!<br/>
Boy, there's no rose that's half so dear to them<br/>
As he that does the thing they dare not do,<br/>
Breathing and sounding beauteous battle, comes<br/>
With the air of the trumpet round him, and leaps in<br/>
Among the women, snares them by the score<br/>
Flattered and flustered, wins, though dashed with death<br/>
He reddens what he kisses: thus I won<br/>
You mother, a good mother, a good wife,<br/>
Worth winning; but this firebrand—gentleness<br/>
To such as her! if Cyril spake her true,<br/>
To catch a dragon in a cherry net,<br/>
To trip a tigress with a gossamer<br/>
Were wisdom to it.'<br/>
'Yea but Sire,' I cried,<br/>
'Wild natures need wise curbs. The soldier? No:<br/>
What dares not Ida do that she should prize<br/>
The soldier? I beheld her, when she rose<br/>
The yesternight, and storming in extremes,<br/>
Stood for her cause, and flung defiance down<br/>
Gagelike to man, and had not shunned the death,<br/>
No, not the soldier's: yet I hold her, king,<br/>
True woman: you clash them all in one,<br/>
That have as many differences as we.<br/>
The violet varies from the lily as far<br/>
As oak from elm: one loves the soldier, one<br/>
The silken priest of peace, one this, one that,<br/>
And some unworthily; their sinless faith,<br/>
A maiden moon that sparkles on a sty,<br/>
Glorifying clown and satyr; whence they need<br/>
More breadth of culture: is not Ida right?<br/>
They worth it? truer to the law within?<br/>
Severer in the logic of a life?<br/>
Twice as magnetic to sweet influences<br/>
Of earth and heaven? and she of whom you speak,<br/>
My mother, looks as whole as some serene<br/>
Creation minted in the golden moods<br/>
Of sovereign artists; not a thought, a touch,<br/>
But pure as lines of green that streak the white<br/>
Of the first snowdrop's inner leaves; I say,<br/>
Not like the piebald miscellany, man,<br/>
Bursts of great heart and slips in sensual mire,<br/>
But whole and one: and take them all-in-all,<br/>
Were we ourselves but half as good, as kind,<br/>
As truthful, much that Ida claims as right<br/>
Had ne'er been mooted, but as frankly theirs<br/>
As dues of Nature. To our point: not war:<br/>
Lest I lose all.'<br/>
'Nay, nay, you spake but sense'<br/>
Said Gama. 'We remember love ourself<br/>
In our sweet youth; we did not rate him then<br/>
This red-hot iron to be shaped with blows.<br/>
You talk almost like Ida: <i>she</i> can talk;<br/>
And there is something in it as you say:<br/>
But you talk kindlier: we esteem you for it.—<br/>
He seems a gracious and a gallant Prince,<br/>
I would he had our daughter: for the rest,<br/>
Our own detention, why, the causes weighed,<br/>
Fatherly fears—you used us courteously—<br/>
We would do much to gratify your Prince—<br/>
We pardon it; and for your ingress here<br/>
Upon the skirt and fringe of our fair land,<br/>
you did but come as goblins in the night,<br/>
Nor in the furrow broke the ploughman's head,<br/>
Nor burnt the grange, nor bussed the milking-maid,<br/>
Nor robbed the farmer of his bowl of cream:<br/>
But let your Prince (our royal word upon it,<br/>
He comes back safe) ride with us to our lines,<br/>
And speak with Arac: Arac's word is thrice<br/>
As ours with Ida: something may be done—<br/>
I know not what—and ours shall see us friends.<br/>
You, likewise, our late guests, if so you will,<br/>
Follow us: who knows? we four may build some plan<br/>
Foursquare to opposition.'<br/>
Here he reached<br/>
White hands of farewell to my sire, who growled<br/>
An answer which, half-muffled in his beard,<br/>
Let so much out as gave us leave to go.<br/>
<br/>
Then rode we with the old king across the lawns<br/>
Beneath huge trees, a thousand rings of Spring<br/>
In every bole, a song on every spray<br/>
Of birds that piped their Valentines, and woke<br/>
Desire in me to infuse my tale of love<br/>
In the old king's ears, who promised help, and oozed<br/>
All o'er with honeyed answer as we rode<br/>
And blossom-fragrant slipt the heavy dews<br/>
Gathered by night and peace, with each light air<br/>
On our mailed heads: but other thoughts than Peace<br/>
Burnt in us, when we saw the embattled squares,<br/>
And squadrons of the Prince, trampling the flowers<br/>
With clamour: for among them rose a cry<br/>
As if to greet the king; they made a halt;<br/>
The horses yelled; they clashed their arms; the drum<br/>
Beat; merrily-blowing shrilled the martial fife;<br/>
And in the blast and bray of the long horn<br/>
And serpent-throated bugle, undulated<br/>
The banner: anon to meet us lightly pranced<br/>
Three captains out; nor ever had I seen<br/>
Such thews of men: the midmost and the highest<br/>
Was Arac: all about his motion clung<br/>
The shadow of his sister, as the beam<br/>
Of the East, that played upon them, made them glance<br/>
Like those three stars of the airy Giant's zone,<br/>
That glitter burnished by the frosty dark;<br/>
And as the fiery Sirius alters hue,<br/>
And bickers into red and emerald, shone<br/>
Their morions, washed with morning, as they came.<br/>
<br/>
And I that prated peace, when first I heard<br/>
War-music, felt the blind wildbeast of force,<br/>
Whose home is in the sinews of a man,<br/>
Stir in me as to strike: then took the king<br/>
His three broad sons; with now a wandering hand<br/>
And now a pointed finger, told them all:<br/>
A common light of smiles at our disguise<br/>
Broke from their lips, and, ere the windy jest<br/>
Had laboured down within his ample lungs,<br/>
The genial giant, Arac, rolled himself<br/>
Thrice in the saddle, then burst out in words.<br/>
<br/>
'Our land invaded, 'sdeath! and he himself<br/>
Your captive, yet my father wills not war:<br/>
And, 'sdeath! myself, what care I, war or no?<br/>
but then this question of your troth remains:<br/>
And there's a downright honest meaning in her;<br/>
She flies too high, she flies too high! and yet<br/>
She asked but space and fairplay for her scheme;<br/>
She prest and prest it on me—I myself,<br/>
What know I of these things? but, life and soul!<br/>
I thought her half-right talking of her wrongs;<br/>
I say she flies too high, 'sdeath! what of that?<br/>
I take her for the flower of womankind,<br/>
And so I often told her, right or wrong,<br/>
And, Prince, she can be sweet to those she loves,<br/>
And, right or wrong, I care not: this is all,<br/>
I stand upon her side: she made me swear it—<br/>
'Sdeath—and with solemn rites by candle-light—<br/>
Swear by St something—I forget her name—<br/>
Her that talked down the fifty wisest men;<br/>
<i>She</i> was a princess too; and so I swore.<br/>
Come, this is all; she will not: waive your claim:<br/>
If not, the foughten field, what else, at once<br/>
Decides it, 'sdeath! against my father's will.'<br/>
<br/>
I lagged in answer loth to render up<br/>
My precontract, and loth by brainless war<br/>
To cleave the rift of difference deeper yet;<br/>
Till one of those two brothers, half aside<br/>
And fingering at the hair about his lip,<br/>
To prick us on to combat 'Like to like!<br/>
The woman's garment hid the woman's heart.'<br/>
A taunt that clenched his purpose like a blow!<br/>
For fiery-short was Cyril's counter-scoff,<br/>
And sharp I answered, touched upon the point<br/>
Where idle boys are cowards to their shame,<br/>
'Decide it here: why not? we are three to three.'<br/>
<br/>
Then spake the third 'But three to three? no more?<br/>
No more, and in our noble sister's cause?<br/>
More, more, for honour: every captain waits<br/>
Hungry for honour, angry for his king.<br/>
More, more some fifty on a side, that each<br/>
May breathe himself, and quick! by overthrow<br/>
Of these or those, the question settled die.'<br/>
<br/>
'Yea,' answered I, 'for this wreath of air,<br/>
This flake of rainbow flying on the highest<br/>
Foam of men's deeds—this honour, if ye will.<br/>
It needs must be for honour if at all:<br/>
Since, what decision? if we fail, we fail,<br/>
And if we win, we fail: she would not keep<br/>
Her compact.' ''Sdeath! but we will send to her,'<br/>
Said Arac, 'worthy reasons why she should<br/>
Bide by this issue: let our missive through,<br/>
And you shall have her answer by the word.'<br/>
<br/>
'Boys!' shrieked the old king, but vainlier than a hen<br/>
To her false daughters in the pool; for none<br/>
Regarded; neither seemed there more to say:<br/>
Back rode we to my father's camp, and found<br/>
He thrice had sent a herald to the gates,<br/>
To learn if Ida yet would cede our claim,<br/>
Or by denial flush her babbling wells<br/>
With her own people's life: three times he went:<br/>
The first, he blew and blew, but none appeared:<br/>
He battered at the doors; none came: the next,<br/>
An awful voice within had warned him thence:<br/>
The third, and those eight daughters of the plough<br/>
Came sallying through the gates, and caught his hair,<br/>
And so belaboured him on rib and cheek<br/>
They made him wild: not less one glance he caught<br/>
Through open doors of Ida stationed there<br/>
Unshaken, clinging to her purpose, firm<br/>
Though compassed by two armies and the noise<br/>
Of arms; and standing like a stately Pine<br/>
Set in a cataract on an island-crag,<br/>
When storm is on the heights, and right and left<br/>
Sucked from the dark heart of the long hills roll<br/>
The torrents, dashed to the vale: and yet her will<br/>
Bred will in me to overcome it or fall.<br/>
<br/>
But when I told the king that I was pledged<br/>
To fight in tourney for my bride, he clashed<br/>
His iron palms together with a cry;<br/>
Himself would tilt it out among the lads:<br/>
But overborne by all his bearded lords<br/>
With reasons drawn from age and state, perforce<br/>
He yielded, wroth and red, with fierce demur:<br/>
And many a bold knight started up in heat,<br/>
And sware to combat for my claim till death.<br/>
<br/>
All on this side the palace ran the field<br/>
Flat to the garden-wall: and likewise here,<br/>
Above the garden's glowing blossom-belts,<br/>
A columned entry shone and marble stairs,<br/>
And great bronze valves, embossed with Tomyris<br/>
And what she did to Cyrus after fight,<br/>
But now fast barred: so here upon the flat<br/>
All that long morn the lists were hammered up,<br/>
And all that morn the heralds to and fro,<br/>
With message and defiance, went and came;<br/>
Last, Ida's answer, in a royal hand,<br/>
But shaken here and there, and rolling words<br/>
Oration-like. I kissed it and I read.<br/>
<br/>
'O brother, you have known the pangs we felt,<br/>
What heats of indignation when we heard<br/>
Of those that iron-cramped their women's feet;<br/>
Of lands in which at the altar the poor bride<br/>
Gives her harsh groom for bridal-gift a scourge;<br/>
Of living hearts that crack within the fire<br/>
Where smoulder their dead despots; and of those,—<br/>
Mothers,—that, with all prophetic pity, fling<br/>
Their pretty maids in the running flood, and swoops<br/>
The vulture, beak and talon, at the heart<br/>
Made for all noble motion: and I saw<br/>
That equal baseness lived in sleeker times<br/>
With smoother men: the old leaven leavened all:<br/>
Millions of throats would bawl for civil rights,<br/>
No woman named: therefore I set my face<br/>
Against all men, and lived but for mine own.<br/>
Far off from men I built a fold for them:<br/>
I stored it full of rich memorial:<br/>
I fenced it round with gallant institutes,<br/>
And biting laws to scare the beasts of prey<br/>
And prospered; till a rout of saucy boys<br/>
Brake on us at our books, and marred our peace,<br/>
Masked like our maids, blustering I know not what<br/>
Of insolence and love, some pretext held<br/>
Of baby troth, invalid, since my will<br/>
Sealed not the bond—the striplings! for their sport!—<br/>
I tamed my leopards: shall I not tame these?<br/>
Or you? or I? for since you think me touched<br/>
In honour—what, I would not aught of false—<br/>
Is not our case pure? and whereas I know<br/>
Your prowess, Arac, and what mother's blood<br/>
You draw from, fight; you failing, I abide<br/>
What end soever: fail you will not. Still<br/>
Take not his life: he risked it for my own;<br/>
His mother lives: yet whatsoe'er you do,<br/>
Fight and fight well; strike and strike him. O dear<br/>
Brothers, the woman's Angel guards you, you<br/>
The sole men to be mingled with our cause,<br/>
The sole men we shall prize in the after-time,<br/>
Your very armour hallowed, and your statues<br/>
Reared, sung to, when, this gad-fly brushed aside,<br/>
We plant a solid foot into the Time,<br/>
And mould a generation strong to move<br/>
With claim on claim from right to right, till she<br/>
Whose name is yoked with children's, know herself;<br/>
And Knowledge in our own land make her free,<br/>
And, ever following those two crown�d twins,<br/>
Commerce and conquest, shower the fiery grain<br/>
Of freedom broadcast over all the orbs<br/>
Between the Northern and the Southern morn.'<br/>
<br/>
Then came a postscript dashed across the rest.<br/>
See that there be no traitors in your camp:<br/>
We seem a nest of traitors—none to trust<br/>
Since our arms failed—this Egypt-plague of men!<br/>
Almost our maids were better at their homes,<br/>
Than thus man-girdled here: indeed I think<br/>
Our chiefest comfort is the little child<br/>
Of one unworthy mother; which she left:<br/>
She shall not have it back: the child shall grow<br/>
To prize the authentic mother of her mind.<br/>
I took it for an hour in mine own bed<br/>
This morning: there the tender orphan hands<br/>
Felt at my heart, and seemed to charm from thence<br/>
The wrath I nursed against the world: farewell.'<br/>
<br/>
I ceased; he said, 'Stubborn, but she may sit<br/>
Upon a king's right hand in thunder-storms,<br/>
And breed up warriors! See now, though yourself<br/>
Be dazzled by the wildfire Love to sloughs<br/>
That swallow common sense, the spindling king,<br/>
This Gama swamped in lazy tolerance.<br/>
When the man wants weight, the woman takes it up,<br/>
And topples down the scales; but this is fixt<br/>
As are the roots of earth and base of all;<br/>
Man for the field and woman for the hearth:<br/>
Man for the sword and for the needle she:<br/>
Man with the head and woman with the heart:<br/>
Man to command and woman to obey;<br/>
All else confusion. Look you! the gray mare<br/>
Is ill to live with, when her whinny shrills<br/>
From tile to scullery, and her small goodman<br/>
Shrinks in his arm-chair while the fires of Hell<br/>
Mix with his hearth: but you—she's yet a colt—<br/>
Take, break her: strongly groomed and straitly curbed<br/>
She might not rank with those detestable<br/>
That let the bantling scald at home, and brawl<br/>
Their rights and wrongs like potherbs in the street.<br/>
They say she's comely; there's the fairer chance:<br/>
<i>I</i> like her none the less for rating at her!<br/>
Besides, the woman wed is not as we,<br/>
But suffers change of frame. A lusty brace<br/>
Of twins may weed her of her folly. Boy,<br/>
The bearing and the training of a child<br/>
Is woman's wisdom.'<br/>
Thus the hard old king:<br/>
I took my leave, for it was nearly noon:<br/>
I pored upon her letter which I held,<br/>
And on the little clause 'take not his life:'<br/>
I mused on that wild morning in the woods,<br/>
And on the 'Follow, follow, thou shalt win:'<br/>
I thought on all the wrathful king had said,<br/>
And how the strange betrothment was to end:<br/>
Then I remembered that burnt sorcerer's curse<br/>
That one should fight with shadows and should fall;<br/>
And like a flash the weird affection came:<br/>
King, camp and college turned to hollow shows;<br/>
I seemed to move in old memorial tilts,<br/>
And doing battle with forgotten ghosts,<br/>
To dream myself the shadow of a dream:<br/>
And ere I woke it was the point of noon,<br/>
The lists were ready. Empanoplied and plumed<br/>
We entered in, and waited, fifty there<br/>
Opposed to fifty, till the trumpet blared<br/>
At the barrier like a wild horn in a land<br/>
Of echoes, and a moment, and once more<br/>
The trumpet, and again: at which the storm<br/>
Of galloping hoofs bare on the ridge of spears<br/>
And riders front to front, until they closed<br/>
In conflict with the crash of shivering points,<br/>
And thunder. Yet it seemed a dream, I dreamed<br/>
Of fighting. On his haunches rose the steed,<br/>
And into fiery splinters leapt the lance,<br/>
And out of stricken helmets sprang the fire.<br/>
Part sat like rocks: part reeled but kept their seats:<br/>
Part rolled on the earth and rose again and drew:<br/>
Part stumbled mixt with floundering horses. Down<br/>
From those two bulks at Arac's side, and down<br/>
From Arac's arm, as from a giant's flail,<br/>
The large blows rained, as here and everywhere<br/>
He rode the mellay, lord of the ringing lists,<br/>
And all the plain,—brand, mace, and shaft, and shield—<br/>
Shocked, like an iron-clanging anvil banged<br/>
With hammers; till I thought, can this be he<br/>
From Gama's dwarfish loins? if this be so,<br/>
The mother makes us most—and in my dream<br/>
I glanced aside, and saw the palace-front<br/>
Alive with fluttering scarfs and ladies' eyes,<br/>
And highest, among the statues, statuelike,<br/>
Between a cymballed Miriam and a Jael,<br/>
With Psyche's babe, was Ida watching us,<br/>
A single band of gold about her hair,<br/>
Like a Saint's glory up in heaven: but she<br/>
No saint—inexorable—no tenderness—<br/>
Too hard, too cruel: yet she sees me fight,<br/>
Yea, let her see me fall! and with that I drave<br/>
Among the thickest and bore down a Prince,<br/>
And Cyril, one. Yea, let me make my dream<br/>
All that I would. But that large-moulded man,<br/>
His visage all agrin as at a wake,<br/>
Made at me through the press, and, staggering back<br/>
With stroke on stroke the horse and horseman, came<br/>
As comes a pillar of electric cloud,<br/>
Flaying the roofs and sucking up the drains,<br/>
And shadowing down the champaign till it strikes<br/>
On a wood, and takes, and breaks, and cracks, and splits,<br/>
And twists the grain with such a roar that Earth<br/>
Reels, and the herdsmen cry; for everything<br/>
Game way before him: only Florian, he<br/>
That loved me closer than his own right eye,<br/>
Thrust in between; but Arac rode him down:<br/>
And Cyril seeing it, pushed against the Prince,<br/>
With Psyche's colour round his helmet, tough,<br/>
Strong, supple, sinew-corded, apt at arms;<br/>
But tougher, heavier, stronger, he that smote<br/>
And threw him: last I spurred; I felt my veins<br/>
Stretch with fierce heat; a moment hand to hand,<br/>
And sword to sword, and horse to horse we hung,<br/>
Till I struck out and shouted; the blade glanced,<br/>
I did but shear a feather, and dream and truth<br/>
Flowed from me; darkness closed me; and I fell.<br/></p>
<p>Home they brought her warrior dead:<br/>
She nor swooned, nor uttered cry:<br/>
All her maidens, watching, said,<br/>
'She must weep or she will die.'<br/>
<br/>
Then they praised him, soft and low,<br/>
Called him worthy to be loved,<br/>
Truest friend and noblest foe;<br/>
Yet she neither spoke nor moved.<br/>
<br/>
Stole a maiden from her place,<br/>
Lightly to the warrior stept,<br/>
Took the face-cloth from the face;<br/>
Yet she neither moved nor wept.<br/>
<br/>
Rose a nurse of ninety years,<br/>
Set his child upon her knee—<br/>
Like summer tempest came her tears—<br/>
'Sweet my child, I live for thee.'<br/></p>
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