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The Death Of Merlin

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An Arthurian Miscellany

I.--the Sea-rumour.

I.

Three sailors pass, by the Water-gate,

And sing of Merlin, as it grows late.

Last night they sailed the Irish Sea,

The bitter sea, in a wild twilight,

Where its tide swims north to Enlli strait.

From the Water-gate to Merlin's Tree,--

They sing to-night

Of Merlin's death and Annwn's might.

Ii.

To-night, oh Towy, from the seas,

We saw their mast o'ertop thy trees,

The tow rope swayed their top-mast tall;

While the wind whipt the rain like a tarrying team,

And the spent leaves speckled thy serpent stream:

Thro' the sleepy town, what songs are these

They sing, till they reach the Spital wall,

And break the dream of Morial?

Iii.

\" SAILORS' SONG."

'Marvellous Merlin is wasted away

With a wicked woman:--woe might she be!

For she hath closed him in a crag

On Cornwall coast.'

Iv.

'A fair sea-tale! What woman could,

With all the red witchery of her blood,

Enchant the Enchanter that is lost?

Her maiden mystery,' Morial said,

'Was Nimua's art, in Merlin's mood.

What iron crag of Cornwall coast,

What cleft of fierce Tintagil's head,

Keeps him that like a flower all Carnac sunward spread?'

Ii.--the Second Sea-rumour.

I.

Deep, deep is the night, the street deserted:


One house alone wakes broken-hearted:

A candle winks in the window-pane.

The children wake and cry within

At the thing that never yet tear averted.

As the monk sains the dead, another strain

From the quay below, brings the sailor's din

And tells some belated ship is in!

Ii.

'Yo ho, yo he!' a hearty sound:


But their barque has gotten a sore sea-wound.

Her master hastens from the quay;

At the Spital gate, now hear him knock,

And hum to himself, while on the ground

From his fierce red-beard, and his stained sea-frock,

The salt sea-fret continually

Drops as he drones his sea-mystery.

Iii. Shipmaster
'S Song.

Marvellous Merlin is wafted away

In a sailing island, a ship of glass;

Far over the edge of the world he's blown

By Annwn's blast.

Iv.

His voice fell as he sang, forlorn

As a voice o'er the drown'd five cities borne:

To a mariner on the winter sea:

And the monk that came from the dead-chamber,

With thought of death, grew sad to hear:

And sad his 'Benedicite?'

[Twas Morial spoke], as he turned the key.

V.

The wet night wind went whistling through

The wicket as he swung it to,

And the lantern gaped at the red sea-beard.

'From demons save my soul,' began

The Shipmaster: 'Hark ye, it blew

The blackest blast that ever I knew,

Under Enlli Isle: and we fell afeard,

For the Isle was adrift, and we barely cleared.

Vi.

'Like a ship of glass as white as milk,

With mast of ebon and shroud of silk,

She sailed away. But see in black

Stands Merlin midships, round his head

A ring of white-fire,--while the rack

Screams by o'erhead: and the long-drown'd dead

Stand up to see. But he never looks back:

Tho' the hounds of Annwn are on his track.

Vii.

'Oh, the dead cried out, and the sea-worms leapt,

For her keel drag'd fathom deep, and swept

Gulfs dark with demons in her wake!

And they sea-witched us, me and my men,

Till we drank the salt, and never slept,

And for many a moon beat the sea, and then,

Came home, came home! Good Morial, take

Off Satan's curse for Christ His sake!'

Viii.

Next noon, see, on the sunn'd ebbtide,

His ship sails trim from Towy side,

And the sailors sing: but Morial

Thinks of the dead last night, and deems

That Merlin lies indeed where glide

Those snakes that demons are. His dreams

Make pale moon-paintings on his wall;

Where the drowned sink, saying,--'Death is all!'

Ix.

Oh, then to all else Morial died,

Save scroll and desk, and wall beside:

For Merlin's history let him write!

The Abbot said, and nothing hide:

But year by year the thread unwind

Of Merlin's mystery from his mind;

From demon birth, thro' sin and sleight,

To the dark sea-death in the drifting night.

Iii.--morial
'S Death-dream.

I.

Now Calan Gauav again draws on,

And many a marching year is gone:

And yet, as thirty years before,

His faith thrice-slain, writes Morial.

He hardly marks the one year more;

The winter dusk stand at the door;

The winter wind sigh in the wall;

The winter leaves by the window fall.

Ii.

To-night there should have been a moon:


But it rained hard all afternoon,

And chill the early twilight fell,

O'er Merlin's death he bent his head,

To tell the end: 'Now from Annwn,

The demons call;
' he writes, 'the bell

[And never a mass for Merlin said,]

Rings thrice in Enlli for the dead!'

Iii.

With every word he writes, he dies;

The historian with his histories.

The parchment paled as now the pen

With failing charactry made pause

O'er Merlin's demon-obsequies,

Too monstrous to be told of men:

Thrice dead is all that Merlin was:--

'Merlinus Mortuus: Deo Laus!'

Iv.

His heart slept there: but sure the gloom

Hid one that spoke within the room,

A face that grew on the grey wall,

And seemed to speak, and fade again

'Beneath Galltvyrthen is my tomb,

Where now the rain drips, Morial:

But I hear the stars at their ancient strain:

And it needs you come where I have lain.'

V.

He knew that voice, that tone of fate;

And cried, 'I come!' The Spital gate

Creak'd as he passed. The wind made spears

Of the shattered rain: his pulses leapt

To feel them fall: his heart grew great

With every gust: his only fears,

To feel how frail the pace he kept;

To feel how slow his stiff feet stept.

Vi.

By Towy's tide, o'er Gwili's flood--

Now Morial gains Galltvyrthen wood.

In the heart of the wood the wind lay still;

The moon in the trees lit a silver lamp;

And Morial saw where the Nine Oaks stood

About the grave-stone under the hill,

That rose from the mould and the dead-leaf-damp,

In the twilight of the moon's white lamp.

Iv.--the Waking Of Merlin.

I.

'Merlin!' he cried. Like nine grey men,

The oaks, he thought, moved nearer then

The door of death, whose mysteries

Gave way at the clay's rebirth;

As shaking off the grave again,

With all his smouldering fervencies

Regathered from his mother Earth,

Her Marvellous Son stood forth.

Ii.

But first, half-risen from the clay,

'Marw a garav,' he seemed to say--

'Marw Mordav'--'Since Mordav's dead,

I want to die!' So long ago,

He cried on dread Arderyd's day,

Thought Morial,--and in his bed

Of death, that crimson stream of woe

Seemed thro' his dream to flow and flow.

Iii.

'Crist Celi' next he cries, with hands

Heaved trembling up, and forthright stands:

And surely now the nine Oak-trees

Stand, nine grey Druids, robed in white,

Armed with the smoking bardic brands,

And hymn the Eternal Three Essences,

And weave the rune of the crescent Light,

Whose dawn-fire breaks on Merlin's night.

Iv.

\" DRUIDS' SONG."

Marvellous Merlin's awake with the day:

The Morning Star calls the Dawn from the hill:

The Flame wakes again on the ash of thy brands,

Oh sacred hearth!

Wild Merlin's awake. The Sun's on his way;

Where the Elements heard the harp of the Stars,

That Darkness let shine, as Death does thy Life,

Oh Cymraec Land!

V.

Their hymn was done. Their brands the smoke

Sent branching up; and Merlin spoke:

'The Soul aspires, past Night's last arch;

Where they that stained Arderyd's dust,

Cross, to the ardent fields of air;

And make such music in their march,

Their hearts forget the deadly thrust,

Whose purple decks the robes they wear.

Vi.

'Now Morning, from Caer Cennen's steep,

Comes marching,' Merlin cries, 'to keep

Watch on the mountain fastnesses!

Crying to all the Cymraec fields--

Awake! Not long King Arthur's sleep

Shall be, ere while the herd-boy sees

The dawn that yields

The cry of harps, the glancing of his shields!'

Vii.

So Morial heard, that might not write

Nor add the morn to Merlin's night.

That ends his mortal chronicle;

And some say still, that many a one

Read Annwn's mark, and dreadful might,

In the dead face of Morial:

There speaks the Night! The Night is done:

And Marvellous Merlin's Day's begun.
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