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Knights Of King Arthur's Court

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An Arthurian Miscellany

The scent of the may is in the air,

And its stars on each bough are hung,

With largesse of blossom and perfume rare

To the wandering breezes flung,

And the fairies tread a measure fair

To the chime by the blue-bells rung.

And the wood-birds carol unafraid,

For no man hath done them wrong,

While King Arthur's knights pass adown the glade,

And each, as he rides along,

Wending his way by sun and shade,

Beguileth the hour with song.

Sir Gawayne

\"A song, a song for the springtide,

A song for the golden days,

For the lovelit eyes of the maidens,

And the knight whom their lips shall praise

And who but I should sing it,

Who was ever the Maidens' Knight?

Such honour hath been my guerdon

For many a fair-fought fight.

"Oh, my heart is fain for the clamour

And cry of the battle-field,

For the crash of the splintered spear-shaft,

And the clang of the smitten shield.

But 'tis sweeter when toil is over

To lay me a while to rest

In the arms that so soft enfold me,

And for pillow a snow-white breast.

"And what if such joys be fleeting?

Ah, little I reck the while

I ride adown thro
' the sunlight,

With ever a song and a smile!

For when my last fight is foughten

I know that a white-robed band

Of maidens shall bid me greeting

On the shores of a sunlit land!"

Sir Tristan

\"Tho' the springtide sun be fair,

Brighter far beyond compare

Shineth Iseult's golden hair!

"Springtide hours pass all too fleet,

Haste, my steed, on flying feet,

Ah, but Iseult's lips are sweet!

"Iseult, lily, Iseult, rose,

At my heart the love-drink glows,

Thro' my veins like fire it flows!

"Iseult, Iseult, when the light

Fadeth, clasp me, hold me tight,

Kiss me, dearest, into night!"

Sir Lancelot

\"Art thou waiting for me, my Lady,

Alone in thy royal bower?

Dost thou send a word thro' the silence

To hasten the passing hour,

'Hath he ever a thought for me, my knight?

Will he come to my arms with the fading light?'

"I am coming, love, I am coming--

Breathe soft, O wind of Spring,

Sail fast, O fleecy cloudlet,

Speed, bird, on glancing wing,

Whisper a word in my Lady's ear,

Tell her the sound of my feet ye hear!

"Ah, never had knight a lady

Fair as my queen is fair;

On a golden throne she sitteth,

In the blaze of her red-gold hair--

And little he dreams, my lord the king,

Of the secret that maketh her heart to sing.

"Are we false? are we true? I know not,

The twain are so wrought in one;

But whether for joy or for sorrow,

The sands of our fate must run--

And what matter if men condemn us quite,

Since all the world shall be ours to-night?"

Sir Perceval

\"I ride adown the forest aisles

From morn till evening shade,

Beneath the stars of heaven my head,

At fall of night, is laid.

No comrade wendeth at my side,

No voice bids me God-speed,

Alone by hill and vale I ride,

Alone by wood and mead.

"For somewhere, near, or far away,

One waiteth long mine aid,

I may not rest, by night or day,

Until his grief be stayed.

For many a year, with prayer and tear,

I've sought to find the way,

But rough or smooth, the path I choose

Still leadeth me astray.

"I may not rest from off my quest,

I may not stay my hand,

Tho' Life and Love be waiting me,

Far in a distant land.

I may not see my wife's fair face,

I may not faint nor fail,

Till I have won Anfortas grace,

And found the Holy Grail."

.........

Sir Gawayne hath sought the isles of light

Beyond the shores of day,

Where morn never waneth to shades of night,

And the silver fountains play;

There he holdeth high court as the Maidens' Knight,

In the Maidens' Isle, for aye.

And Tristan sleeps by his lady's side,

To the dirge of the sounding sea;

And the foaming wave and the flowing tide

Hide the twain, that no man may see

Where they take their rest, and their fate abide,

Till the dawn of Eternity.

But Lancelot wrought a penance hard

To win from his sin release,

And his face was by fast and vigil marred

Or ever his pain might cease.

Now his body lieth in Joyous Gard,

And his soul hath gotten peace.

And Perceval, doth he wake or sleep?

Ah, no man shall tell that tale--

Perchance he lieth in slumber deep

With the Eastern sands for veil;

Or perchance, in a distant land, doth keep

Watch and ward o'er the Holy Grail.

But when the archangel trump shall call,

And the Heavenly Feast be spread,

Say, which of those heroes, among them all,

Shall lift up a fearless head,

And walk the pavement of Heaven's high Hall

With unashamd tread?

Sir Gawayne, methinks, shall hide his face,

Abashed and overawed,

And the lovers twain, by Jesu's grace,

Sit low at the Heavenly board;

But the King of Heaven shall rise from His place

When He seeth Monsalvsch' lord--

"Welcome, O Brother, who bare thy part

In the travail of My soul,

Who knew no rest of hand or heart

Till thy brother might be made whole;

Come thou, and sit at My side, apart,

While the stars 'neath our footstool roll."
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