ページの画像
PDF
ePub

Dread the race of Zaharak !
Fear the spell of Dahomay !»-

XXII.

Uncouth and strange the accents shrill Rung those vaulted roofs among; Long it was ere, faint and still,

Died the far-resounding song.

While yet the distant echoes roll,

The warrior communed with his soul.

« When first I took this venturous quest, I swore upon the rood,

.

Neither to stop, nor turn, nor rest, For evil or for good. My forward path, too well I ween, Lies yonder fearful ranks between ; For man unarm'd, 't is bootless hope With tigers and with fiends to copeYet, if I turn, what waits me there, Save famine dire and fell despair?Other conclusion let me try, Since, chuse howe'er I list, I die. Forward, lies faith and knightly fame; Behind, are perjury and shame. In life or death I hold my word. »— With that he drew his trusty sword, Caught down a banner from the wall, And enter'd thus the fearful hall

XXIII.

On high each wayward maiden threw
Her swarthy arm, with wild halloo!
On either side a tiger sprung-
Against the leftward foe he flung
The ready banner, to engage
With tangling folds the brutal rage;
The right-hand monster in mid air
He struck so fiercely and so fair,
Through gullet and through spinal bone
The trenchant blade hath sheerly gone.
His grisly brethren ramp'd and yell'd
But the slight leash their rage withheld,
Whilst, 'twixt their ranks, the dangerous road
Firmly, though swift, the champion strode.
Safe to the gallery's bound he drew,
Safe pass'd an open portal through;
And when 'gainst followers he flung
The gate, judge if the echoes rung!
Onward his daring course he bore,
While, mix'd with dying growl and roar,
Wild jubilee and loud hurra

Pursued him on his venturous way.

XXIV.

« Hurra, hurra! Our watch is done! We hail once more the tropic sun. Pallid beams of northern day, Farewell, farewell! Hurra, hurra!

« Five hundred years o'er this cold glen
Hath the pale sau come round agen;
Foot of man, till now, hath ne'er
Dared to cross the Hall of Fear.

« Warrior! thou, whose dauntless heart Gives us from our ward to part,

Be as strong in future trial, Where resistance is denial.

Now for Afric's glowing sky, Zwenga wide and Atlas high, Zaharak and Dahomay!

Mount the winds! Hurra, hurra!»—

XXV.

The wizard song at distance died

As if in ether borne astray,

While through waste halls and chambers wide
The knight pursued his steady way,

Till to a lofty dome he came,
That flash'd with such a brilliant flame,
As if the wealth of all the world
Were there in rich confusion hurl'd.
For here the gold, in sandy heaps,
With duller earth incorporate sleeps;
Was there in ingots piled, and there
Coin'd badge of empery it bare;
Yonder huge bars of silver lay,
Dimm'd by the diamond's neighbouring ray,
Like the pale moon in morning day;
And in the midst four maidens stand,
The daughters of some distant land.
Their hue was of the dark-red dye,
That fringes oft a thunder sky,
Their hands palmetto baskets bare,
And cotton fillets bound their hair;
Slim was their form, their mien was shy,
To earth they bent the humbled eye,
Folded their arms, and suppliant kneel'd,
And thus their proffer:d gifts reveal'd.

XXVI.

CHORUS.

« See the treasures Merlin piled,
Portion meet for Arthur's child.
Bathe in Wealth's unbounded stream,
Wealth that Avarice ne'er could dream!»>

FIRST MAIDEN.

« See these clots of virgin gold! Sever'd from the sparry mould, Nature's mystic alchemy

In the mine thus bade them lie; And their orient smile can win Kings to stoop, and saints to sin.»—

SECOND MAIDEN.

<< See these pearls that long have slept; These were tears by Naiads wept

For the loss of Marinel.
Tritons in the silver shell
Treasured them, till hard and white
As the teeth of Amphitrite.»>-

THIRD MAIDEN.

« Does a livelier hue delight? Here are rubies blazing bright, Here the emerald's fairy green, And the topaz glows between; Here their varied hues upite In the changeful chrysolite.»

[merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small]

Calmly and unconcern'd the knight
Waved aside the treasures bright:
<< Gentle maidens, rise, I pray!
Bar not thus my destined way.
Let these boasted brilliant toys
Braid the hair of girls and boys!
Bid your streams of gold expand
O'er proud London's thirsty land.
De Vaux of wealth saw never need,
Save to purvey him arms and steed,
And all the ore he deign'd to hoard
Inlays his helm, and hilts his sword.»-
Thus gently parting from their hold,
He left, unmoved, the dome of gold.

XXVIII.

And now the morning sun was high,
De Vaux was weary, faint, and dry;
When lo! a plashing sound he hears,
A gladsome signal that he nears

Some frolic water-run;

And soon he reach'd a court-yard square,
Where dancing in the sultry air,
Toss'd high aloft, a fountain fair
Was sparkling in the sun.

On right and left a fair arcade
In long perspective view display'd
Alleys and bowers, for sun or shade;
But full in front, a door,

Low-brow'd and dark, seem'd as it led
To the lone dwelling of the dead,
Whose memory was no more.
XXIX.

Here stopp'd de Vaux an instant's space,
To bathe his parched lips and face,

And mark'd with well-pleased eye,
Refracted on the fountain stream,
In rainbow hues, the dazzling beam
Of that gay summer sky.
His senses felt a mild control,
Like that which lulls the weary soul,

From contemplation high
Relaxing, when the ear receives
The music that the green-wood leaves
Make to the breeze's sigh.
XXX.

And oft in such a dreamy mood,
The half-shut eye can frame
Fair apparitions in the wood,

As if the nymphs of field and flood
In gay procession came.

Are these of such fantastic mould,

Seen distant down the fair arcade, These maids enlink'd in sister-fold,

Who, late at bashful distance staid, Now tripping from the green-wood shade, Nearer the musing champion draw, And, in a pause of seeming awe,

Again stand doubtful now ?

Ah, that sly pause of witching powers!
That seems to say, « to please be ours,

Be yours to tell us how.»

Their hue was of the golden glow

That suns of Candahar bestow,

O'er which in slight suffusion flows

A frequent tinge of paly rose;

Their limbs were fashion'd fair and free,

In nature's justest symmetry,

And wreath'd with flowers, with odours graced,
Their raven ringlets reach'd the waist;

In eastern pomp, its gilding pale
The hennah lent each shapely nail,
And the dark sumah gave the eye
More liquid and more lustrous dye.
The spotless veil of misty lawn,
In studied disarrangement, drawn
The form and bosom o'er,
To win the eye, or tempt the touch,
For modesty show'd all too much-
Too much-yet promised more.
XXXI.

« Gentle knight, awhile delay,»
Thus they sung, « thy toilsome way,
While we pay the duty due

To our master and to you.

Over Avarice, over Fear,

Love triumphant led thee here;
Warrior, list to us, for we

Are slaves to Love, are friends to thee.

[ocr errors][merged small]
[ocr errors]

Stay, then, gentle warrior, stay, Rest till evening steal on day; Stay, O stay!-in yonder bowers We will braid thy locks with flowers, Spread the feast and fill the wine, Charm thy ear with sounds divine, Weave our dances till delight Yield to languor, day to night.

Then shall she you most approve, Sing the lays that best you love, Soft thy mossy couch shall spread, Watch thy pillow, prop thy head, Till the weary night be o'erGentle warrior, wouldst thou more? Wouldst thou more, fair warrior,-she Is slave to Love and slave to thee.»>

XXXII.

O do not hold it for a crime

In the bold hero of my rhyme, For stoic look,

And meet rebuke,

He lack'd the heart or time;
As round the band of sirens trip,
He kiss'd one damsel's laughing lip;
And press'd another's proffer'd hand,
Spoke to them all in accents bland,
But broke their magic circle through;
«Kind maids,» he said, « adieu, adieu!
My fate, my fortune, forward lies.»>-
He said, and vanish'd from their eyes;
But, as he dared that darksome way,.
Still heard behind their lovely lay:
<< Fair Flower of Courtesy, depart!
Go, where the feelings of the heart
With the warm pulse in concord move:
Go, where Virtue sanctions Love !->

[merged small][ocr errors]

Downward De Vaux through darksome ways And ruin'd vaults has gone,

Till issue from their wilder'd maze,

Or safe retreat, seem'd none;
And e'en the dismal path he strays
Grew worse as he went on.
For cheerful sun, for living air,
Foul vapours rise and mine-fires glare,
Whose fearful light the dangers show'd
That dogg'd him on that dreadful road.
Deep pits, and lakes of waters dun,
They show'd, but show'd not how to shun.
These scenes of desolate despair,
These smothering clouds of poison'd air,
How gladly had De Vaux exchanged,
Though 't were to face
yon tigers ranged!
Nay, soothful bards have said,
So perilous his state seem'd now,
He wish'd hin under arbour bough

With Asia's willing maid.
When, joyful sound! at distance near
A trumpet flourish'd loud and clear,
And, as it ceased, a lofty lay

Seem'd thus to chide his lagging way.

XXXIV.

<< Son of Honour, theme of story,
Think on the reward before ye!
Danger, darkness, toil despise;
'Tis Ambition bids thee rise.

«He that would her heights ascend,
Many a weary step must wend;
Hand and foot and knee he tries:
Thus Ambition's minions rise.

<< Lag not now, though rough the way,
Fortune's mood brooks no delay;
Grasp the boon that 's spread before ye,
Monarch's power, and conqueror's glory!»—

XXXV.

It ceased. Advancing on the sound, A steep ascent the wanderer found, And then a turret stair:

Nor climb'd he far its steepy round

Till fresher blew the air,

And next a welcome glimpse was given,
That cheer'd him with the light of heaven.
At length his toil had won

A lofty hall with trophies dress'd,
Where, as to greet imperial guest,
Four maidens stood, whose crimson vest
Was bound with golden zone.

XXXVI.

Of Europe scem'd the damsels all;
The first a nymph of lively Gaul,
Whose easy step and laughing eye
Her borrow'd air of awe belie;
The next a maid of Spain,
Dark-eyed, dark-hair'd, sedate, yet bold;
White ivory skin and tress of gold,
Her shy and bashful comrade told
For daughter of Almaine.
These maidens bore a royal robe,

With crown, with sceptre, and with globe,

Emblems of empery;

The fourth a space behind them stood,
And leant upon a harp, in mood

Of minstrel ecstasy.
Of merry England she, in dress
Like ancient British druidess;
Her hair an azure fillet bound,
Her graceful vesture swept the ground,
And, in her hand display'd,

A crown did that fourth maiden hold,
But unadorn'd with gems and gold,
Of glossy laurel made.

XXXVII.

At.once to brave De Vaux knelt down
These foremost maidens three,
And proffer'd sceptre, robe, and crown,
Liegedom and seignorie

O'er many a region wide and fair,
Destined, they said, for Arthur's heir;

But homage would he none :

« Rather, he said, « De Vaux would ride,

A warder of the Border-side,

In plate and mail, than, robed in pride,
A monarch's empire own;
Rather, far rather, would he be
A free-born knight of England free,
Than sit on despot's throne.»

So pass'd he on, when that fourth maid,
As starting from a trance,
Upon the harp her finger laid;
Her magic touch the chords obey'd,
Their soul awaked at once!

SONG OF THE FOURTH MAIDEN.

«Quake to your foundations deep,
Stately tower, and banner'd keep,
Bid your vaulted echoes moan,
As the dreaded step they own..

« Fiends that wait on Merlin's spell,
Hear the foot-fall! mark it well!
Spread your dusky wings abroad,
Boune ye for your homeward road.

« It is BIS, the first who e'er

Dared the dismal Hall of Fear;
His, who hath the snares defied
Spread by Pleasure, Wealth, and Pride.

<< Quake to your foundations deep,
Bastion huge, and turret steep!
Tremble keep, and totter tower!
This is Gyneth's waking hour.»-

XXXVIII.

Thus while she sung, the venturous knight Has reach'd a bower, where milder light

Through crimson curtains fell;
Such soften'd shade the hill receives,
Her purple veil when twilight leaves
Upon its western swell.

That bower, the gazer to bewitch,
Had wond'rous store of rare and rich
As e'er was seen with eye;
For there by magic skill, I wis,
Form of each thing that living is
Was limu'd in proper dye.

All seem to sleep the timid hare
On form, the stag upon his lair,
The eagle in her eyrie fair

Between the earth and sky.
But what of pictured rich and rare
Could win De Vaux's eye-glance, where,
Deep slumbering in the fatal chair,

He saw King Arthur's child!
Doubt, aud anger, and dismay,
From her brow had pass'd away,
Forgot was that fell tourney-day,

For, as she slept, she smiled.
It seem'd that the repentant seer
Her sleep of many a hundred year
With gentle dreams beguiled.

XXXIX.

That form of maiden loveliness,
"Twixt childhood and 'twixt youth,
That ivory chair, that sylvan dress,
The arms and ancles bare, express
Of Lyulph's tale the truth.
Still upon her garment's hem
Vanoc's blood made purple gem,
And the warder of command
Cumber'd still her sleeping hand;
Still her dark locks dishevell'd flow
From net of pearl o'er breast of snow;
And so fair the slumberer seems,
That De Vaux impeach'd his dreams,
Vapid all and void of might,
Hiding half her charms from sight.
Motionless awhile he stands,

Folds his arms and clasps his hands,

Trembling in his fitful joy,
Doubtful how he shall destroy
Long-enduring spell;
Doubtful too, when slowly rise
Dark-fringed lids of Gyneth's eyes,
What these eyes shall tell.

<< St George! St Mary! can it be,
That they will kindly look on me!»—

XL.

Gently, lo! the warrior kneels,
Soft that lovely hand he steals,
Soft to kiss, and soft to clasp-
But the warder leaves her grasp;
Lightning flashes, rolls the thunder!
Gyneth startles from her sleep,
Totters tower, and trembles keep,

Burst the castle walls asunder! Fierce and frequent were the shocks, Melt the magic halls away---But beneath their mystic rocks, In the arms of bold De Vaux,

Safe the princess lay!

Safe and free from magic power,
Blushing like the rose's flower

Opening to the day;

And round the champion's brows was bound The crown that druidess had wound,

Of the green laurel-bay.

And this was what remain'd of all
The wealth of each enchanted hall,

The garland and the dame :-
But where should warrior seek the meed,
Due to high worth for daring deed,
Except from Love and FAME!

CONCLUSION. I.

MY LUCY, when the maid is won,

The minstrel's task, thou know'st, is done;

And to require of bard

That to the dregs his tale should run,

Were ordinance too hard.

Our lovers, briefly be it said,
Wedded as lovers wont to wed,

When tale or play is o'er;

Lived long and blest, loved fond and true,
And saw a numerous race renew

The honours that they bore.
Know, too, that when a pilgrim strays,
In morning mist, or evening maze,

Along the mountain lone,
That fairy fortress often mocks
Ilis gaze upon the castled rocks
Of the Valley of Saint John;
But never man since brave De Vaux
The charmed portal won.

"T is now a vain illusive show,

That melts whene'er the sun-beams glow, Or the fresh breeze hath blown.

[blocks in formation]

And O! beside these simple knaves,
How many better born are slaves

To such coarse joys as these,
Dead to the nobler sense that glows
When nature's grander scenes unclose!
But Lucy, we will love them yet,
The mountain's misty coronet,

The green-wood and the wold;
And love the more, that of their maze
Adventure high of other days

By ancient bards is told,
Bringing, perchance, like my poor tale,
Some moral truth in fiction's vei!!
Nor love them less, that o'er the hill
The evening breeze, as now, comes chill;-
My love shall wrap her warm,
And, fearless of the slippery way,
While safe she trips the heathy brae,
Shall hang on Arthur's arm.

NOTES.

CANTO I.

Note 1. Introduction. Stanza viii.

pass

Like COLLINS, ill-starr'd name! COLLINS, according to Johnson, « by indulging some peculiar habits of thought, was eminently delighted with those flights of imagination which the bounds of nature, and to which the mind is reconciled only by a passive acquiescence in popular traditions. He loved fairies, genii, giants, and monsters; he delighted to rove through the meanders of enchantment, to gaze on the magnificence of golden palaces, to repose by the waterfalls of Elysian gardens.»

Note 2. Stanza i.

the Baron of Triermain.

Triermain was a fief of the Barony of Gilsland, in Cumberland; it was possessed by a Saxon family at the time of the Conquest, but, « after the death of Gilmore, Lord of Tryermaine and Torcrossock, Hubert Vaux gave Tryermaine and Torcrossock to his second son, Ranulph Vaux, which Ranulph afterwards became heir to his elder brother Robert, the founder of Lanercost, who died without issue. Ranulph, being Lord of all Gilsland, gave Gilmore's lands to his own younger son, named Roland, and let the barony descend to his eldest son Robert, son of Ranulph. Ronald had issue Alexander, and he Ranulph, after whom succeeded Robert, and they were named Rolands successively, that were lords thereof, until the reign of Edward the Fourth. That house gave for arms, Vert, a bend dexter, chequey, or and gules.»-BURN's Antiquities of Westmoreland and Cumberland, vol. II, p. 482.

This branch of Vaux, with its collateral alliances, is now represented by the family of Braddyl of Cornishead Priory, in the county palatine of Lancaster; for it appears that, about the time above mentioned, the house of Triermain was united to its kindred family Vaux of Caterlen, and, by marriage with the heiress of Delamore and Leybourne, became the representative of those ancient and noble families. The male line fail

ing in John de Vaux, about the year 1665, his daughter and heiress, Mabel, married Christopher Richmond, Esq. of Highhead Castle, in the county of Cumberland, descended from an ancient family of that name, lords of Corby Castle, in the same county, soon after the Conquest, and which they alienated about the 15th of Edward the Second, to Andrea de Barcla, Earl of Carlisle. Of this family was Sir Thomas de Raigemont (miles auratus), in the reign of King Edward the First, who appears to have greatly distinguished himself at the siege of Kaerlaveroe, with William Baron of Leybourne. In an ancient heraldic poem now extant, and preserved in the British Museum, describing that siege, his arms are stated to be, Or, 2 Bars Gemelles Gules, and a Chief Or, the same borne by his descendants at the present day. The Richmonds removed to their castle of Highhead in the reign of Henry the Eighth, when the then representative of the family married Margaret, daughter of Sir Hugh Lowther, by the Lady Dorothy de Clifford, only child by a second marriage of Henry Lord Clifford, great grandson of John Lord Clifford, by Elizabeth Percy, daughter of Henry (surnamed Hotspur) by Elizabeth Mortimer; which said Elizabeth was daughter of Edward Mortimer, third Earl of Marche, by Philippa, sole daughter and heiress of Lionel, Duke of Clarence.

The third in descent from the above-mentioned John Richmond became the representative of the families of Vaux, of Triermain, Caterlen, and Torcrossock, by his marriage with Mabel de Vaux, the heiress of them. His grandson Henry Richmond died without issue, leaving five sisters co-heiresses, four of whom married; but Margaret, who married William Gale, Esq. of Whitehaven, was the only one who had male issue surviving. She had a son, and a daughter married to Henry Curwen of Workington, Esq., who represented the county of Cumberland for many years in Parliament, and by her had a daughter married to John Christian, Esq. (now Curwen). John, son and heir of William Gale, married Sarah, daughter and heiress of Christopher Wilson of Bardsea-hall, in the county of Lancaster, by Margaret, aunt and co-heiress of Thomas Braddyl, Esq. of Braddyl, and Cornishead Priory, in the same county, and had issue four sons and two daughters:-1st. William Wilson, died an infant; 2d. Wilson, who upon the death of his cousin, Thomas Braddyl, without issue, succeeded to his estates and took the name of Braddyl, in pursuance of his will, by the king's sign manual; 3d. William, died young, and, 4th. Henry Richmond, a lieutenant-general of the army, married Sarah, daughter of the Rev. R. Baldwin; Margaret married Richard Greaves Townley, Esq. of Fulbourne, in the county of Cambridge, and of Bellfield, in the county of Lancaster; Sarah married to George Bigland, of Bigland-hall, in the same county.

Wilson Braddyl, eldest son of John Gale, and grandson of Margaret Richmond, marrid Jane, daughter and heiress of Matthias Gale, Esq. of Catgill-hall, in the county of Cumberland, by Jane, daughter and heiress of the Rev. S. Bennet, D. D.; and, as the eldest surviving male branch of the families above-mentioned, he quarters, in addition to his own, their paternal coats in the following order, as appears by the records in the College of Arms.

ist. Argent, a fess azure, between three saltiers of

« 前へ次へ »