― [1] ―
Sir Wilibert de Waverley
|
YE days, when Knighthood in its glory blazed, | |
When Chivalry on high his standard raised, | |
When gallant youths, in noble daring bold, | |
On honour's lists a sounding name enroll'd, | |
To you I turn a retrospective glance: | |
I love the waving plume, and beaming lance, | |
With all that modern Wisdom calls Romance! | |
If 'tis romance in virtuous deeds to shine, | |
And add new honours to a noble line, | |
― 2 ― |
|
If 'tis romance to shield the dame ye love, | |
And prize her smile, all guerdons far above, | |
With high-wrought fervour, every vice disdain, | |
Romance! return, resume thy ancient reign! |
See where yon towers arise in antique pride, | |
While at their base: the waves of ocean glide | |
With tranquil current; hushed awhile their roar, | |
They, gently rippling, lave the neighbouring shore; | |
Still is each sound—no winds the turrets shake, | |
Groan through the hall, or rush through bower and brake;— | |
Night fades away—the stars more pale appear, | |
And misty vapours shew the dawn is near; | |
― 3 ― |
|
'Tis morn—uprising from his orient cave | |
His rays of gold, dilating o'er the wave, | |
The sun's broad glories on the waters play, | |
Ascend the sky, and widen into day!— | |
The last faint star, that glimmered in the west, | |
Beheld no beaming arms, no warrior's crest, | |
The sun's first rays saluted many a Knight, | |
With steel begirt, and ready for the fight, | |
The war-horse thunders o'er the trembling ground, | |
And busy echoes through the halls resound. |
The lances glitter on the plain, | |
In air th' embroidered banners wave, | |
― 4 ― |
|
The Knights their steeds impatient rein, | |
Why comes he not?—their leader brave! | |
He does but stay awhile, to dry | |
The tears which flow from beauty's eye, | |
And hush the sorrows of a breast | |
With cares for Wilibert distrest;— | |
His Lady-love was Geraldine, | |
What maid so fair as her was seen, | |
What maid could boast a heart so kind, | |
With manners gentle, and refined! | |
Her sparkling eye revealed a soul, | |
Artless, and scornful of controul; | |
Her cheek displayed a damask rose, | |
Blooming amid surrounding snows; | |
Her shining locks of flowed unbound, | |
Or waved her polished brows around, | |
― 5 ― |
|
And hers a mind of highest mould,— | |
But time its treasures must unfold; | |
She seemed unto a casual eye | |
The offspring of Simplicity; | |
And so, in truth, was Geraldine, | |
For souls like hers can ne'er be mean, | |
Can ne'er descend to mental strife, | |
With all the low concerns of life, | |
But, truth themselves, the world believe, | |
And find, too late, deep cause to grieve. |
But life, and love, and hope, were young, | |
And short the course she then had run; | |
For not as yet had Geraldine | |
Beheld the close of years eighteen; | |
― 6 ― |
|
Now first the pang of grief she knew, | |
For she must bid a long adieu | |
To brave Sir Wilibert, her Knight, | |
So true in love,—so famed in fight! | |
Seldom a Chieftain could you see | |
Like Wilibert de Waverley, | |
So courteous, generous, and kind | |
A gentle soul, a lofty mind, | |
Were his, while in his flashing eye | |
Was seen the warrior's spirit high; | |
He loved his youthful Lady dear, | |
His mother to his heart was near, | |
Yet felt his martial ardour rise, | |
When Edward, bold in enterprise, | |
To Asia led a daring train, | |
The young, the warlike, and the vain. |
At length his fond adieu is o'er, | |
He tears him from his lovely maid, | |
He mounts his steed, then turns once more | |
To view the Dames, who lingering staid | |
Long as their tearful eyes could see | |
Aught of the gallant company, | |
Whose burnished shields, and glittering spears, | |
Reflected many a brilliant ray;— | |
When passed they from their sight away, | |
Fast flowed of both the anguished tears, | |
For, oh! what harrowing thoughts arise, | |
Visions of woe their souls surprise; | |
While yet Sir Wilibert was there | |
The visions of their minds were fair, | |
― 8 ― |
|
But he, whose presence could impart | |
Such comfort to each anxious heart, | |
Was gone—to battle he was gone, | |
In glory's cause, what chief so brave! | |
But ere the warfare fierce was done, | |
Sir Wilibert might find his grave. | |
Yet tears will wash our grief away, | |
The maiden grew composed, nay gay,— | |
And oft her frolics could beguile | |
From the grave dame, a pensive smile; | |
Yet did the lady oftener sigh, | |
And wish Sir Wilibert was nigh; | |
She knew the Knight adored the Dame, | |
His was no youthful boyish flame, | |
That kindles at an eye of blue, | |
Of soars to one of darker hue; | |
― 9 ― |
|
She was the essence of his soul, | |
Her love, his hope, his joy, his goal; | |
His goal of bliss beneath the sky, | |
The day-star of his destiny! |
And Geraldine, whose guileless heart, | |
Communion never held with art, | |
Believed that when she said, I love, | |
And vowed she would all-constant prove, | |
She ne'er could deem another youth | |
So worthy of her heart and truth: | |
Ah! little did the fair-one guess, | |
Of love, the woe or happiness; | |
Not her's the pale of glowing cheek, | |
When those we love our vision meet; | |
― 10 ― |
|
Not her's the conscious looks, which shew | |
Affection's true and vivid glow, | |
Which fain the bosom would conceal, | |
Nor aught to vulgar eye reveal | |
Long as her memory could review, | |
To present time, from childhood's hour, | |
Sir Wilibert her friend she knew; | |
Companions still in hall and bower, | |
With him she danced, for him she sung, | |
For Wilibert the harp was strung; | |
Or from his precepts, when his mind | |
To graver converse was inclined, | |
She formed within her heart a store | |
Of virtue, pure virgin ore— | |
But he was not a lover meet | |
For one so young, so gaily wild, | |
― 11 ― |
|
His age her Father's years might greet, | |
And she appear his blooming child; | |
And he was grave—aye jealous too! | |
Though wherefore jealous, hard to tell, | |
No fear of lovers there, to woo, | |
From infancy to youth she grew. | |
Immured, as in a convent's cell. | |
Man once deceived, no more will trust,— | |
Perhaps his motive may be just— | |
Yet is it very hard, to bear | |
Suspicion's ever-rankling care, | |
The glance—not that of fond regard— | |
Whose piercing beams would search the soul, | |
While of our truth the sole reward | |
Is credence—distant as the pole | |
― 12 ― |
|
In youth's warm hour, Sir Wilibert | |
Had loved—she feigned return I ween— | |
The Dame was false!—his manly heart | |
Withered beneath a blast so keen!— | |
Her Lord was slain, the wretched fair | |
Died the pale victim of despair, | |
But first implored de Waverley, | |
A parent to her child to be:— | |
When Geraldine's bewitching grace, | |
Her lovely form, and beauteous face, | |
So like her faithless mother seemed, | |
Upon the warrior's sight she beamed | |
As a bright phantom of the past, | |
Sent to convey him peace at last! |
Three years were past in paynim land, | |
But sheathed was then the warrior's brand, | |
Homeward they wend their welcome way, | |
Their hopes are high, their hearts are gay; | |
The vessel cleaves the liquid deep, | |
And swiftly o'er the waves they sweep, | |
When lo! a distant sail is seen, | |
Which bearing down with gallant mien, | |
Gives promise of a conflict keen: | |
Long was the fight—but greater force | |
O'ercomes a crew where all are brave, | |
And now the British vessel's course | |
Far different steers unwillingly, | |
No longer bold, no longer free, | |
She stems a distant wave. | |
― 14 ― |
|
Sir Wilibert,—oh! how declare | |
His anguish wild, or deep despair?— | |
He who so late had hoped to view, | |
Ere long, the dame still loved so true; | |
When might he hope such bliss to know,— | |
His lot was slavery and woe! |
Weeks, months, nay years, had sadly, slowly past, | |
The Knight, long sick of slavery's galling chain, | |
Is bold, succeeds, and he is free at last, | |
Escapes from Afric—into Asia's plain! | |
And now, Sir Wilibert, before his eyes | |
Again behold the land for which he sighs, | |
Resolves a weary pilgrimage to tread, | |
And thank kind Heaven before that holy tomb, | |
― 15 ― |
|
Where lowly bowed full many a saintly head, | |
And faith illum'd the prostrate sinner's gloom; | |
How could he hope his home again to see, | |
How think that happiness could e'er be his, | |
If he, unmindful of the misery | |
So late escaped, and new-raised hopes of bliss, | |
Could homeward bend his steps, nor duly stay | |
At that famed shrine, his grateful thanks to pay? | |
Who, then, that viewed him, kneeling at the shrine, | |
With air so meek, and flowing robe of gray, | |
Could guess that erst that form in arms did shine, | |
And rushed to war in terrible array? | |
Yet, though his air was lowly, cheek was pale, | |
And years of suffering had worn his form, | |
― 16 ― |
|
The glance his drooping eye-lid scarce could veil, | |
Shewed him yet unsubdued by misery's storm; | |
Still of his hazle eye, the wonted fire | |
Betrayed Sir Wilibert, in Pilgrim's gray attire! |
Before the holy shrine he knelt, | |
And fervently he prayed, | |
As if in Heaven his wishes dwelt, | |
And long his vows he paid; | |
Then, rising, marked a stranger's eye | |
Deep fixed in stedfast scrutiny; | |
Like him enrobed in russet weed, | |
With staff, and rosary, and bead— | |
― 17 ― |
|
"Sure, if I may believe mine eye, | |
I now behold de Waverley"— | |
The stranger said,—"That name I bear, | |
How didst thou know me, when and where?" | |
"Thy name, Sir Knight, in many a land, | |
On foreign and domestic strand, | |
Stands nobly high—from age to age | |
'Twill be enrolled on honour's page, | |
And I have seen thee in the field, | |
The foeman dare, the faulchion wield— | |
For crimes by youth's warm passions wrought, | |
In penance to this shrine I came, | |
To quench each wild impetuous thought, | |
The ardour of my soul to tame, | |
― 18 ― |
|
I came—I go, my penance done, | |
And pardon for my errors won, | |
To linger here no more I need, | |
My course to England's shore I speed, | |
Well pleased, if thou wilt condescend | |
My homeward footsteps to attend." | |
"Sir Knight!" de Waverley returned, | |
"Thy penance paid, thine errors mourned, | |
Return thou to thy native shore; | |
For mercies high, and perils past, | |
I came to praise and to adore, | |
And ere I bid this land farewell, | |
My steps shall tread yon plain so vast, | |
And by the desert lake I'll pray— | |
I think it right awhile to dwell, | |
Far, far from worldly joys away: | |
― 19 ― |
|
But stay, Sir Knight, thy name?" he cried, | |
"Ronald de Merton," then replied | |
The youth, who said with laughing air, | |
"But can I not, good Pilgrim, bear | |
Some token to thy Lady fair? | |
But no—I deem thou art too wise | |
To own the sway of Ladies' eyes, | |
And who can wander here afar, | |
When Beauty, like a guiding star, | |
To Albion points our ready way, | |
And lights us with her lovely ray!" | |
Upon the hero's pallid cheek, | |
Some deep'ning shades emotion speak; | |
Then, with a smile, he said, "Thou'rt young, | |
Few griefs thy youthful heart have wrung, | |
― 20 ― |
|
And thou can'st not believe I love, | |
Since here my lingering footsteps rove; | |
Yet one is dear—and thou may'st bear | |
This little pledge of truth with thee, | |
Convey it to my beauteous fair, | |
She soon will know it's sent by me." | |
A heart of crystal, rudely formed, | |
He drew from where it long reposed, | |
The lock of hair it had enclosed | |
He still detained, and passion warmed, | |
Began with many a subtle art, | |
And many a motive, fondly sage, | |
To urge him quickly to depart, | |
And leave untrod his Pilgrimage. |
'Twas but a moment's ardent thought, | |
The madness of a lover's brain, | |
Reflection better counsels brought, | |
And Reason reassumed her reign,— | |
At least, de Waverley indeed, | |
Believed he followed wisdom's creed, | |
In wandering over many a plain, | |
With prayer and penance, and with pain, | |
Rather than in his native isle | |
To seek, of love, the soothing smile, | |
To view of love the sunny glance, | |
And thus Religion's self enhance; | |
For oh! when hearts of purity do meet, | |
Then earthly bliss has reached its highest goal, | |
― 22 ― |
|
Love, more refined than earthly love, they meet, | |
And Peace divine is monarch of the soul: | |
But, Superstition, many a woe was thine, | |
And many a heart was broken at thy shrine! |
While young Sir Ronald, o'er the buoyant wave, | |
Hied him with joy to England's happy shore, | |
His destined course pursued the warrior brave, | |
Who staid those holy regions to explore; | |
To sad Jerusalem he bade adieu, | |
And passed o'er many a extended plain, | |
Where all of yore was lovely to the view, | |
Till Sin and Desolation held their reign; | |
Each scene is changed, delight has left the land, | |
From Rama's plain to Jordan's gloomy strand. | |
― 23 ― |
|
Far on the East, Arabia's mountains rise, | |
One dreary mass, the boundary of the sight, | |
No wild varieties the eye surprise, | |
Nor is the view with kindly herbage bright; | |
O'er the wide surface of the Lake of death, | |
Rocks, high and black, their darkened shadows fling, | |
Those waves scarce move, e'en at the roughest breath | |
The blustering winds upon their pinions bring, | |
And there no shrieking sea-bird dips his wing, | |
But there are fruits, ungrateful to the taste, | |
And horror breathes around that dreary waste. | |
― 24 ― |
|
How felt Sir Wilibert—whose eye surveyed, | |
The scene where wrathful judgment was displayed; | |
All feelings, save of awe, within his mind | |
Before the wond'rous thought in terror fled, | |
Congealed by horror, and to fear resigned, | |
He viewed the waves that roll above the dead: | |
He turned—what saw he? a deep, sullen tide, | |
Whose waves reluctant, to the salt-sea glide, | |
While reeds and willows grow upon its side: | |
He knelt—he prayed—then gladly bent his way | |
To scenes less sterile, and to brighter day. |
But Sharon! how shall mortal pen declare | |
The charms still lingering on thy plain so fair. | |
― 25 ― |
|
The sweet narcissus, and the lily pale, | |
With mingled roses, shed their rich perfume, | |
And there are flowers of everlasting bloom, | |
Whose fragrant beauties scent the gentle gale; | |
Alas! that here a Despot's hand should wield, | |
With wild unhallowed sway, the rod of power, | |
Make barren, spots that willing herbage yield, | |
And plant the thistle, where would bloom the bower; | |
But Heaven—not man—directs of earth the sway, | |
And Heaven must guide—man worship and obey. |
Now then de Waverley, his purpose wrought, | |
The ancient far-famed port of Jaffa∗sought, | |
― 26 ― |
|
Once more he bids to Palestine adieu, | |
And Carmel's brow is lessening on his view; | |
Farewell the land, renowned in every age, | |
In sacred story, and historic page; | |
Ill suits the subject with an idle verse, | |
Else might the Muse each great event rehearse, | |
There the first Christians hailed their heavenly Lord, | |
There, for the Cross, waved many a glittering sword; | |
Rest, rest, ye brave! nor blame her rancour, shed | |
O'er mouldering relics of the warlike dead, | |
Let Godfrey, still, his hard-earned honours wear, | |
Raymond and Tancred, still their glories bear, | |
While, not the least, must Coeur-de-Lion share. | |
― 27 ― |
|
But as that land receded from his eye, | |
Impatience grew within the warrior's breast, | |
And as more near his native isle drew nigh, | |
His troubled bosom knew no peaceful rest; | |
If Hope a moment waked delight, | |
His glancing eye shone gaily bright, | |
But of his cheek the fading hue | |
Would oft disclose the cares he knew, | |
As he more near the promised haven drew. | |
Who has not felt—who does not know | |
The icy chill—or feverish glow, | |
That rushes through each throbbing vein, | |
When expectation we sustain? | |
Or when our minds that summit gain, | |
That's wrought beyond a sense of pain, | |
― 28 ― |
|
What words can e'er that thrill so wild, express? | |
It is nor death—nor life—nor grief—nor happiness. | |
But blow, ye winds—his vessel gently bear, | |
We leave the Knight, and seek his lovely fair. |
asterisk. ∗Joppa.
Three years had slowly rolled away, | |
Since love beheld their parting day, | |
When lo! 'twas told, upon the main | |
His vessel was by Corsairs ta'en; | |
His aged mother heard the tale, | |
Ah! well might she his fate bewail, | |
He was the staff, on which her age | |
Had hoped, in life's declining stage, | |
― 29 ― |
|
To lean; for, guarded by his power, | |
No foeman would invade her tower, | |
And Wilibert's attentive eye | |
Forbade one want he could supply— | |
She long had mourned her absent child, | |
But Hope her latent fears beguiled, | |
When Geraldine, in accents gay, | |
Would talk of bliss on future day; | |
But now each looked for peace in vain! | |
Their loved one in a captive's chain. | |
The Lady drooped, but ere she died, | |
To Geraldine she faintly said, | |
"No one remains thy youth to guide, | |
Yet hope for thee a beam may shed, | |
My son, in time, may yet return; | |
In foreign lands his lawful heir. | |
― 30 ― |
|
May not, perchance, these tidings learn, | |
My child! my child! do not despair, | |
Weep not for me—adieu, my love, I go | |
Where care is lost—forgotten every woe." | |
Poor Geraldine! but that her soul | |
All buoyant rode on Hope's bright wave, | |
Pale Grief had wrapped her in her stole, | |
And Sorrow bent her to the grave. | |
Ah! were it given us to read | |
The various ills to each decreed, | |
Engraven in the length'ning scroll, | |
Which, day by day, the Fates unrol, | |
How few could wait each pending blow, | |
That wakes the heart to direr woe: | |
The guileless soul would shrink, to view | |
Of fraudful friends, a smiling band, | |
― 31 ― |
|
Who still their promised end pursue, | |
With flattering lips, and clasping hand; | |
Their object gained, their friendship flies, | |
The heart, deceived, unheeded sighs: | |
And love! oh, who would love, to be | |
The victim of duplicity? | |
Or doubting live, of drooping pine, | |
And such, oh Love! such woes are thine! |
Now many a month had passed away, | |
And dreary was each coming day, | |
Not one on earth to whom her heart | |
Its deep emotions could impart, | |
It seemed as though the maid alone, | |
Nor kindred, friends, nor joy, must own; | |
― 32 ― |
|
And as a Phoenix shone the Dame, | |
Consumed amidst her own bright flame. | |
Oh! would there were some lovely sphere, | |
Whither congenial souls might fly! | |
When tired of vapid mortals here, | |
Of wearying woes—and vanity; | |
Escaping from the mingling strife | |
Of earth-born cares that wring the soul, | |
In purer realms to breathe new life, | |
And, bounding, reach of bliss the goal: | |
Could Fate a higher boon bestow | |
Than converse with what's dear to know? | |
The proudest boast of earthly power, | |
Vies not with Friendship's meeting hour! |
The sun beamed bright on hall and bower, | |
And bloomed around her many a flower, | |
The groves with echoing music rang, | |
Each bird a lively carol sang, | |
The tribes of Nature all were glad, | |
And Geraldine alone was sad; | |
To sooth the sorrows of her soul | |
She tried her harp's enchanting sound, | |
And waked, with snowy hand, the wire,— | |
Then while its notes entrancing stole, | |
Such accents soft were heard around | |
As Seraphs sing—or Sylphs inspire— | |
Nor deemed she that a listening ear | |
Those melting murmurs staid to hear, | |
― 34 ― |
|
Then, leaning on her hand, she hid | |
The eyes remembrance dewed with tears, | |
A sound, as of retiring feet, | |
Awaked the startled fair-one's fears, | |
But promptly her alarm she chid, | |
Since she no danger there could meet. |
Within the portal's distant shade, | |
A stranger Knight still lingering staid, | |
Who then advanced with courteous air, | |
And paid due homage to the fair; | |
This was of Waverley the Heir, | |
Should Wilibert no more return, | |
― 35 ― |
|
And his was every talent rare, | |
And virtues, more than all discern! | |
Oh! how describe his radiant eye, | |
Wherein you might his soul descry, | |
The brow, whereon deep thought reclined, | |
Expansive as his noble mind; | |
Gracefully o'er his manly brow | |
His clustering curls, of ebon hue, | |
Wildly luxuriant careless flow,— | |
Sir Alwyn might all hearts subdue! | |
Oh, if from realms of silvery light, | |
Some Sylph should bend to earth his flight, | |
To whisper to some troubled breast | |
A rainbow-tinted dream of hope, | |
To lull Distraction's cares to rest, | |
And arm the soul with ills to cope— | |
― 36 ― |
|
Let him in Alwyn's form appear, | |
And let him speak in Alwyn's voice, | |
Mild Peace that throbbing heart would cheer, | |
And Hope teach Misery to rejoice: | |
Fair Geraldine, her timid gaze | |
To Alwyn scarcely dared to raise, | |
Through the long lashes of his eye | |
Such dazzling beams effulgent fly, | |
It was as though two kindred spheres, | |
(Which erring mortals Stars might call, | |
Though more like Suns they gleamed,) | |
Had started from their bright compeers, | |
And in his visage, since their fall, | |
In place of mortal eyes had beamed! |
With mantling blushes on her cheek, | |
She strove some trembling words to speak, | |
Sir Alwyn, then, with gentle air, | |
Thus reassured th' astonished fair; | |
"Forgive me that I thus intrude, | |
Fair Lady, on thy solitude; | |
But now returned from foreign land, | |
I just have gained my native strand, | |
And, as I passed this castle gate, | |
(Unknown to me my kinsman's fate) | |
I thought it would be well to see | |
The noble chief of Waverley; | |
Oh! weep not—sigh not—fear not harm, | |
While life sustains this youthful arm, | |
― 38 ― |
|
Ever will I thyself defend, | |
And prove thy constant, steady friend— | |
Not mine these lands—de Waverley | |
May yet regain his liberty; | |
Do thou beneath this roof abide, | |
While I in Greystone's towers reside." | |
He staid awhile to take survey | |
Of treasure, lands, and vassalry, | |
Still hoping that the lawful Lord | |
Might be to his domain restored; | |
But while he yet prolonged his stay, | |
With Geraldine he oft would stray; | |
Well did his fair companion love | |
With Alwyn in those paths to rove, | |
― 39 ― |
|
For he had trod where few had been, | |
And many a distant land had seen, | |
And she with new, unfeigned delight, | |
Heard him those wonders all recite, | |
Which it had been his lot to trace | |
In various climes, 'mid foreign race; | |
Bade him again his story tell, | |
And loved upon his words to dwell. | |
Oh, life! thy sunny moments are | |
How few, how exquisite, how rare! | |
"Like sun-beams in a winter's day;" | |
And as when those withdraw their ray, | |
More gloomy seems the cheerless scene, | |
That lately wore a lively mien, | |
So, when across Life's clouded sky, | |
Bright hours, like transient sun-beams, fly, | |
― 40 ― |
|
The moments that bring up their rear | |
More wretched seem, more dark, more drear. |
So felt the Dame, Sir Alwyn gone, | |
And she now left forlorn and lone, | |
Ne'er o'er her mind a cloud had hung, | |
Like that his absence o'er it flung; | |
"Why feel I thus?" she murmuring cried, | |
"Not, when I bade that Chief adieu | |
Of whom I am the promised bride, | |
A pang, like this, my bosom knew! | |
Oh, heart ingrate! and dost thou feel | |
Such interest in a stranger's weal! | |
Forgetful of thine earliest friend, | |
Who now, in chains and slavery, | |
― 41 ― |
|
Beneath a dreadful yoke must bend, | |
And mourns, perhaps, false girl! for thee." | |
Oh, who that's skilled in woman's heart, | |
Will not the maiden's conduct guess? | |
She strove, by every gentle art, | |
Sir Alwyn's image to repress, | |
And acted, thus, a virtuous part. | |
She called to mind events long past, | |
In all, her Knight was first and last; | |
Who did her infant pastime share: | |
Sir Wilibert she traced e'en there. | |
And who, in youth's advancing hour, | |
With her would watch each opening flower— | |
And as those flowers, beneath the ray | |
Of Sol, gave richer sweets to day, | |
― 42 ― |
|
So she, instructed by the care | |
Of Wilibert, grew good as fair; | |
On this she pondered, till her mind | |
To Wilibert was all resigned. |
How those who tread life's devious way, | |
Against temptation ought to pray, | |
How dread, in every thing, a lure, | |
Nor ever deem themselves secure. | |
The Lady, from the turret high, | |
Cast o'er the waves a watchful eye, | |
She marked, approaching to the shore, | |
A boat, the rowers plied the oar, | |
Impelled, it seemed, by one whose height | |
And warlike air rose to her sight, | |
― 43 ― |
|
Like him whose absence long she mourned, | |
And hoped, at length, was now returned; | |
The warden's horn blew shrill and high, | |
And swiftly did the Lady fly, | |
Within the hall to take her stand, | |
And give her hero greeting bland. | |
Ah! how unwelcome to her view | |
The form unknown, that near her drew, | |
The roses on her cheek grew pale, | |
To hide her tears, she lowered her veil, | |
Then begged the stranger to declare | |
The purport of his presence there. |
"Lady, a pledge I bring to thee, | |
'Twas sent by brave de Waverley,"— | |
― 44 ― |
|
"De Waverley then lives! is free!" | |
Exclaimed the maid in ecstacy; | |
Then flinging back her flowing veil, | |
She shewed a cheek no longer pale, | |
Her sparkling eyes, with pleasure bright, | |
Shed beams of rapturous delight; | |
Her lip of coral—hand of snow— | |
And locks, that all redundant flow, | |
Her graceful mien, and fairy form, | |
A colder heart than his might warm, | |
Who first beheld the maid that hour, | |
And bowed to conquering Beauty's power, | |
Beauty! delightful, fatal thing, | |
How many woo thee, to their cost! | |
Thy sweets a poisonous odour fling, | |
At best, thou art a dangerous boast, | |
― 45 ― |
|
And nought can e'er thy flight delay; | |
Short is thy bright triumphant day, | |
Soon lost by those who prized thee most. | |
Yet, for this fragile, fleeting shade, | |
Cities have been in ashes laid, | |
Empires, kingdoms, worlds, been lost, | |
And slain full many a gallant host. | |
Ronald de Merton, as he gazed | |
Upon the Lady, felt amazed, | |
That one who loved so fair a maid | |
In distant climes should choose to stray, | |
But now I'll profit by his stay, | |
With evil thought he said. | |
"Tell me," the Dame impatient cried, | |
"Oh, where does Waverley abide, | |
― 46 ― |
|
Why comes he not to Albion's shore, | |
To view his home and friends once more?" | |
"He thinks it better, far to roam, | |
Than seek his all-delightful home; | |
He talked of pilgrimage and prayer, | |
And such a message bade me bear, | |
But" ——then he paused, the Lady's eye | |
On Ronald gazed, half fearfully: | |
"But," —— "nay, Sir Knight, hide nought from me, | |
What said the Chief de Waverley? | |
Methinks 'tis strange, so long a time | |
As he has passed in foreign clime, | |
He comes not promptly—tell me why"— | |
Breathless, she waited his reply; | |
― 47 ― |
|
That meaning "but," had waked a train | |
Of fears, she bade disperse in vain. | |
"Why should I to thine ears convey,"— | |
He faltered in his first essay, | |
But glancing at her beauty bright, | |
He gathered boldness from the sight, | |
And told a garbled tale—replete | |
With broken truth, and vile deceit. |
She took the little crystal heart, | |
The token of Sir Wilibert, | |
So pure, the emblem of her own, | |
And felt, within the world, alone! | |
She fled the hall—her chamber's space | |
Her hurried footsteps often trace; | |
― 48 ― |
|
Then on her couch her form reclined, | |
Or, rising with distracted mind, | |
Her weary round she trod again, | |
While every nerve was wrung with pain— | |
That mental pain, so dire and deep | |
Which scarce can sigh, and does not weep— | |
And though the lip a smile may wear, | |
'Tis but the writhing of despair, | |
That will not shew the world its care. | |
"Not one!" she said, with upraised eye, | |
"Not one! on whom I may rely! | |
Alone within the world's wide bound;— | |
Ah! truth and love, where are ye found, | |
Since Wilibert can faithless prove? | |
Oh man—false man! what is thy love!" | |
― 49 ― |
|
She clasped her hand, she bowed her head, | |
Her only stay on earth was fled, | |
Within, without, all, all around, | |
Immersed in murky gloom profound; | |
Hope's self was chill'd, whose heavenly flame | |
Had hitherto sustained the Dame— | |
On earth were none to sooth her grief, | |
Yet did the Lady find relief, | |
To Heaven she breathed a fervent prayer, | |
And found her surest refuge there. |
Still staid Sir Ronald—spell-bound there | |
He stood enwrapped in thoughtful care, | |
When Geraldine, all pale, and meek, | |
With downcast eye, and altered cheek, | |
― 50 ― |
|
Descended to the ancient hall, | |
Where, ranged in goodly order, all | |
The well-won trophies high were hung, | |
And far their length'ning shadows flung. | |
Sir Ronald, if awhile his heart | |
Reproached him for his cruel art, | |
To stifle all those feelings strove, | |
Imputing all to mighty Love; | |
He told her many a high-wrought tale, | |
In hopes ambition might prevail, | |
Or thoughts of novelty, incite | |
A wish to taste of new delight; | |
He talked of tournaments and halls, | |
Of courtly feasts, and splendid brawls, | |
But little did that maiden heed, | |
And nought to Ronald's wish accede; | |
― 51 ― |
|
For, when he dwelt on scenes like these, | |
She felt they ne'er her heart could please, | |
Ill was she formed to stem the tide | |
Down which the common herd may glide; | |
She heard enough the world to dread, | |
Nor wished its mazy wilds to tread. | |
Ye idle throng, of pleasures vain, | |
Oh! who would mingle in your train! | |
Say, can ye sooth the bosom's woe, | |
When Disappointment's pang we know? | |
Say, can ye still the anguished sigh, | |
Or steal the tear from Sorrow's eye? | |
Oh! no! although the eye may rest | |
On scenes by Taste and Fashion drest, | |
And though awhile the listening ear | |
May seem the whispered tale to hear, | |
― 52 ― |
|
The feeling heart, the ardent mind, | |
Seek happiness that's more refined. | |
Ah! genius! feeling! what a fate | |
Attends them in this earthly state, | |
Amidst a crowd to seem alone, | |
Unloved, unhonoured, and unknown— | |
Unloved—because of genius bright, | |
Will envy taint the beamy light; | |
Unhonoured—for, alas! how few | |
To merit give the meed that's due; | |
Unknown—for none, but those alone | |
Who genius, sense, and feeling, own, | |
Can trace those actions to their cause, | |
Which deviate from general laws; | |
And if, as life's bewildering maze | |
We view, with sad and aching gaze, | |
― 53 ― |
|
Some mind, with kindred ardour warm, | |
Enveloped in an Angel's form, | |
Upon our weary path should shine, | |
And gild it with a ray divine, | |
One moment met—again we part, | |
And pangs anew assail the heart— | |
So did the maiden think, when she | |
Reflected on past misery— | |
Or listened to Sir Ronald's tale, | |
Which could not o'er her heart prevail. |
The Knight departed, and the maid | |
Wandered amidst congenial shade, | |
Or, in the hall's accordant gloom, | |
She plied, with ready hand, the loom, | |
― 54 ― |
|
And many a direful tale she wove, | |
Of ruthless deed—or hapless love. | |
The withering leaves were falling fast, | |
And loudly sang the autumn blast, | |
The vassals gay, around the fire, | |
Pledged of their Lord the quick return, | |
While Geraldine alone did mourn, | |
And, pensive, from her loom retire, | |
Why starts the maid? 'twas but the sound | |
Of sullen winds, that murmur round; | |
Again—was the wind's loud roar | |
That rushed along the corridor? | |
That whistle—but the winds high shriek, | |
Whose shrilly tones distinctly speak? | |
― 55 ― |
|
The door is open—no, the gale | |
Did not above its force prevail, | |
The room is filled with armed men, | |
She shrieks for aid—but shrieks in vain,— | |
For then, alas! her feeble cry | |
Was lost by distant revelry. | |
From Waverley the maid is torn, | |
An unresisting burden borne. |
She faints—when she again revives, | |
With fears of woe her heart is riven, | |
To learn where she is placed she strives, | |
She marks the concave high, of Heaven, | |
She hears the clash of mingling steel, | |
The roaring of the ocean wave, | |
― 56 ― |
|
She can its fresh'ning breezes feel, | |
And wildly round the loud winds rave. | |
The towers that meet her anxious eye | |
Seem still like those of Waverley; | |
Bewildered with conjectures strange, | |
She cannot her ideas arrange, | |
When lo! a voice strikes on her ear | |
That bids the maiden cease to fear, | |
Supported by SIR ALWYN'S arm, | |
She feels, indeed, secure from harm. | |
Blest was the hour for that fair maid, | |
That Alwyn then his visit paid: | |
Sir Ronald's was the fraudful scheme, | |
Resolved to gain her for his bride, | |
When, happy for the fair I deem, | |
Sir Alwyn heard his vaunting pride, | |
― 57 ― |
|
As Ronald, boasting of his prey, | |
Around the castle wound his way; | |
Enough—Sir Alwyn heard no more | |
Attended by retainers four, | |
His little troop sufficed—the Knight | |
His base opponent put to flight, | |
Then led the maid within the hall, | |
Captive—though freed from captive thrall. |
Alas! for thee! de Waverley! | |
Misjudging loiterer, why delay, | |
Return, thy tarnished truth to clear;— | |
Alas! for thee the Fates have wove | |
A doom, with Sorrow in the rear, | |
And thine is still a luckless love. | |
― 58 ― |
|
Sir Alwyn and the pensive Dame, | |
Imbibed, too soon, Love's fatal flame; | |
But, true to inborn Honour's laws, | |
He pleaded not a lover's cause | |
Till all the dreary months were past, | |
And summer flowerets come at last; | |
Then, and then only, he began | |
To deem his rival was untrue, | |
At first, he truly thought the tale | |
Was Ronald's—better to prevail, | |
When Geraldine he wont to sue; | |
But now Sir Alwyn scorned the man, | |
Who thus, in life's primeval hour, | |
Abandoned Beauty's blooming flower; | |
― 59 ― |
|
And then with eloquence, that flowed | |
Impetuous, as the love that glowed | |
Within his heart; he wooed—her downcast eye | |
Proclaimed Sir Alwyn's victory. |
When softly stealing on our view, | |
The beams of day their course renew, | |
When through the eastern portal's wide, | |
Morn's rosy shadow lightly glide, | |
How gaze we with delighted eye, | |
On golden cloud and blushing sky, | |
Till, rising full before our sight, | |
We hail the orb of heat and light! | |
'Tis thus, when first within our soul | |
We own of Love the dear control; | |
― 60 ― |
|
'Tis mild, 'tis soft, 'tis sweet, to feel | |
Its gentle influence slowly steal, | |
The hope that's indistinctly form'd, | |
The love that's scarce by passion warm'd, | |
Till he, who to the throbbing heart | |
Each dear sensation could impart, | |
With manly pride avows his flame, | |
And kindles in our soul the same— | |
So shone the youth, so felt the maid, | |
When each to each their love betray'd; | |
Then lost was every woe in bliss, | |
And irksome every theme but this. |
In air the streaming penons fly | |
The minstrels wake a joyful strain, | |
― 61 ― |
|
Reflected from each window high, | |
The lights are dancing on the main. | |
"Tell me, I pray, why thus I see | |
The ensigns of such revelry? | |
I've heard the Lord of this domain | |
Now wanders on a foreign plain,"— | |
"Good Pilgrim enter, test thee here, | |
Partake awhile our bridal cheer." | |
The Pilgrim's hand now pressed his brow, | |
And then his hat he drew more low, | |
And deeply in his labouring breast | |
Some vast emotion seemed represt. | |
"Bridal!" he cried—"and who the Bride?" | |
His kind informer then replied, | |
― 62 ― |
|
"She will, perhaps, this way advance, | |
And then, good Pilgrim, take a glance, | |
Of form and face divinely fair, | |
In truth, she is a beauty rare." | |
"Has she no name!" the Pilgrim said, | |
Then on his hand he leaned his head, | |
And seemed the next reply to dread— | |
"No name! grave Pilgrim, what dost mean? | |
It is, the Lady Geraldine! | |
No word the stranger spoke again, | |
But seemed, in silence, to remain | |
Immersed in thoughts that caused him pain. | |
He moved to where a deep recess | |
Concealed him from the view, | |
― 63 ― |
|
And then, attired in bridal dress, | |
The lovely Dame he saw—he knew; | |
Still revelled in her youthful mien | |
The roseate charms of gay eighteen. | |
The Pilgrim marked the Bridegroom's pride, | |
When gazing on his lovely Bride, | |
And saw the ray of rapture fly | |
From Geraldine's to Alwyn's eye— | |
Was that the glance of ire awhile? | |
What strange expression in that smile! | |
'Twas but Remembrance flashing o'er | |
The train of wrongs his heart had borne, | |
A smile those lips might own once more, | |
But 'twas the bitter smile of Scorn; | |
The hectic glow that crossed his cheek | |
Did aught, but health of peace, bespeak. |
Forth from his dark recess the Pilgrim came, | |
His cheek was pale, and sunk the ardent flame | |
That lately kindled in his hazle eye, | |
As the wild lightning in the lurid sky. | |
"Know ye not me!" the stranger faltering cried, | |
How felt the Bridegroom—and how looked the Bride! | |
Though now no more he wore the warrior's crest, | |
Nor shining cuirass glittered on his breast, | |
Though faded now the lustre of his eye, | |
Though locks of gray his auburn ones supply, | |
The air, the voice, proclaim DE WAVERLEY! | |
― 65 ― |
|
"For this, did I escape the captive's chain, | |
And cross, with bounding heart, yon foaming main? | |
What cheered my soul through many a year of woe, | |
The hope of bliss with Geraldine to know— | |
Still is this heart the prey of woman's wiles, | |
Why did I yield to Hope's deceitful smiles? | |
My soul was chill'd, and all on earth was drear, | |
Hope dormant rested—and I knew no fear— | |
When, as the beacon blazing on the height | |
Cheers the glad Sailor with its welcome light, | |
So hail'd my soul, the renovated ray | |
Of Beauty, beaming on my darkened way! | |
Yes! I exclaimed, my early love still lives, | |
And to my heart its wonted ardour gives; | |
― 66 ― |
|
And more than wonted rapture, for the Dame | |
Smiles on my passion, and approves my flame. | |
But, luckless hour! my native land I left, | |
Since then, I've been of every joy bereft; | |
Yet still I deemed thou would'st my woes reward | |
With constant faith, and ever fond regard." | |
Sir Alwyn, then, with mild, yet manly tone, | |
Sir Ronald's tale and outrage base made known. | |
" 'Tis false! 'tis false!" exclaimed de Waverley, | |
"This heart, my fair, was ever true to thee; | |
Oh! Geraldine!—break, break, my stubborn heart! | |
Nor tamely live with all that's dear, to part: | |
Yet stay—oh, hush th' emotions of thy mind, | |
ALWYN was generous—and I seemed unkind; | |
― 67 ― |
|
I blame thee not—his youth, his valiant arm, | |
All, all, conspired thy grateful heart to charm: | |
Be, then, most blest—yet sometimes think on one | |
Who, though his years of youthful fire are gone, | |
Still feels for thee, as others ne'er have felt,— | |
Where'er I roved, my thoughts upon thee dwelt, | |
Where'er I strayed, my soul still sprung to thee, | |
And GERALDINE was still the world to me!" | |
She raised her eye—she viewed his altered form, | |
Which, as some ruin battered by the storm, | |
Still proudly stood—though there might be descried | |
How frail the fabric of all human pride! | |
― 68 ― |
|
Then Alwyn's hand she clasped—some purpose deep | |
Shook her slight frame—and paled her fading cheek; | |
Sir Alwyn gazed, upon her speaking eye, | |
And thought some wild intent he could descry, | |
Some dreadful meaning—threat'ning to destroy | |
His air-built visions of terrestrial joy. | |
How vast the influence of woman's charms! | |
He, who unmoved had heard the din of arms, | |
Had boldly rushed amid the direful strife, | |
Reckless of danger—prodigal of life— | |
Now felt a thrill of dread his veins invade, | |
And Horror's mists his glancing eye o'ershade, | |
Then thus, with firmness gathering on her brow, | |
The fair essayed to speak a fearful vow; | |
― 69 ― |
|
" 'Tis meet," she cried, "that I, who cause thy woe, | |
An equal share of misery should know; | |
Farewell, then, hopes of bright felicity, | |
Adieu, my Alwyn—yes, adieu to thee! | |
Hear and attest, ye powers"—"Geraldine!" | |
Sir Alwyn cried, fierce phrensy in his mien, | |
"Thou can'st not—durst not—trifle with my heart, | |
Thou wilt not utter words that bid us part; | |
Nay—if it must be so, Fate, do thy worst, | |
Think'st thou I'll bear a being so accurst? | |
No: where the battle rages I will go, | |
And fly, with ardour, to the kinder foe, | |
Kinder by far than thee, who thus could'st bear | |
To doom thy lover to the fiend, Despair." | |
― 70 ― |
|
He said—and, turning, would have quickly flown, | |
But that de Waverley, in gentle tone, | |
Hushed the wild tumult of his boiling breast, | |
Then thus the Knight the beauteous fair addrest; | |
"Think'st thou, fair Dame, sweet object of my love, | |
A vow, like thine, could be approved above? | |
Or is my heart so changed, as now to find | |
Relief from woe, in what distracts thy mind; | |
Amidst yon ancient abbey's solemn gloom, | |
Think'st thou it would ameliorate my doom, | |
To know that thou wert wasting all thy years | |
In useless penitence, and ceaseless tears? | |
― 71 ― |
|
No! fare thee well! to Alwyn I resign | |
The lovely prize, which never must be mine; | |
None but thyself remained, my life to cheer, | |
And none can now my lonely late endear; | |
Yet, oh! that glance of bliss does well repay, | |
It speaks what words can ne'er so well display— | |
Enough, thou'rt happy—dear and lovely fair, | |
To yonder holy dome will I repair; | |
Be yours each blessing Heaven can bestow, | |
Since I no earthly happiness can know, | |
Before the shrine my orisons I'll pay, | |
And seek 'THAT PEACE WHICH PASSETH NOT AWAY!' " |