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A poem by Madison Julius Cawein |
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Romaunt Of The Oak |
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Title: Romaunt Of The Oak Author: Madison Julius Cawein [More Titles by Cawein] "I rode to death, for I fought for shame-- "The fair and faithless!--Though life be long "Of all my life; and the soul that crept "Still leaps with the love that it found untrue, "Yea, run me through! for meet and well, "It is that I, who have done no wrong, "Of Hugh her leman!--What else could be "He splintered my lance, and my blade he broke-- The crest of his foeman,--a heart of white Stooped and laughed as his sword he swung, But who is she in the gray, wet dawn, Who kneels, one hand on her straining breast, Her face is dim as the dead's; as cold O Lady Maurine! O Lady Maurine! That his hair you smooth, that you kiss his brow She has haled him under the trysting oak, She has stood him, gaunt in his battered arms, She laughed as his cloven casque she placed Then sat and talked to the forest flowers And stared and whispered and smiled and wept, And, lo, when the moon, like a great gold bloom She rose up sobbing, "O moon, come see "I have talked to the flowers all day, all day, "He would not listen, he would not hear, "O moon, steal in where he stands so grim, "Soften his face that is cold and stern "O moon, O moon, so my soul can see When the moon was set, and the woods were dark, As phantoms with eyes of fire; or fled And the hoot-owl called; and the were-wolf snarled; Like the whining rush of the hags that ride And wrapped in his mantle of wind and cloud When she heard the dead man rattle and groan And the lightning vanished and shimmered his mail, She seemed to hear him, who seemed to call,-- "The wild leaves rustle, the wild leaves flee; "To the trysting tree, to the tree once green; They found her closed in his armored arms-- [The end] GO TO TOP OF SCREEN |