Poems-Volume 2
ARCHDUCHESS ANNE

George Mer

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1--I

In middle age an evil thing

Befell Archduchess Anne:

She looked outside her wedding-ring

Upon a princely man.

II

Count Louis was for horse and arms;

And if its beacon waved,

For love; but ladies had not charms

To match a danger braved.

III

On battlefields he was the bow

Bestrung to fly the shaft:

In idle hours his heart would flow

As winds on currents waft.

IV

His blood was of those warrior tribes

That streamed from morning's fire,

Whom now with traps and now with bribes

The wily Council wire.

V

Archduchess Anne the Council ruled,

Count Louis his great dame;

And woe to both when one had cooled!

Little was she to blame.

VI

Among her chiefs who spun their plots,

Old Kraken stood the sword:

As sharp his wits for cutting knots

Of babble he abhorred.

VII

He reverenced her name and line,

Nor other merit had

Save soldierwise to wait her sign,

And do the deed she bade.

VIII

He saw her hand jump at her side

Ere royally she smiled

On Louis and his fair young bride

Where courtly ranks defiled.

IX

That was a moment when a shock

Through the procession ran,

And thrilled the plumes, and stayed the clock,

Yet smiled Archduchess Anne.

X

No touch gave she to hound in leash,

No wink to sword in sheath:

She seemed a woman scarce of flesh;

Above it, or beneath.

XI

Old Kraken spied with kennelled snarl,

His Lady deemed disgraced.

He footed as on burning marl,

When out of Hall he paced.

XII

'Twas seen he hammered striding legs,

And stopped, and strode again.

Now Vengeance has a brood of eggs,

But Patience must be hen.

XIII

Too slow are they for wrath to hatch,

Too hot for time to rear.

Old Kraken kept unwinding watch;

He marked his day appear.

XIV

He neighed a laugh, though moods were rough

With standards in revolt:

His nostrils took the news for snuff,

His smacking lips for salt.

XV

Count Louis' wavy cock's plumes led

His troops of black-haired manes,

A rebel; and old Kraken sped

To front him on the plains.

XVI

Then camp opposed to camp did they

Fret earth with panther claws

For signal of a bloody day,

Each reading from the Laws.

XVII

'Forefend it, heaven!' Count Louis cried,

'And let the righteous plead:

My country is a willing bride,

Was never slave decreed.

XVIII

'Not we for thirst of blood appeal

To sword and slaughter curst;

We have God's blessing on our steel,

Do we our pleading first.'

XIX

Count Louis, soul of chivalry,

Put trust in plighted word;

By starlight on the brbrown lea,

To bar the strife he spurred.

XX

Across his breast a crimson spot,

That in a quiver glowed,

The ruddy crested camp-fires shot,

As he to darkness rode.

XXI

He rode while omens called, beware

Old Kraken's pledge of faith!

A smile and waving hand in air,

And outward flew the wraith.

XXII

Before pale morn had mixed with gold,

His army roared, and chilled,

As men who have a woe foretold,

And see it red fulfilled.

XXIII

Away and to his young wife speed,

And say that Honour's dead!

Another word she will not need

To bow a widow's head.

XXIV

Old Kraken roped his white moustache

Right, left, for savage glee:

- To swing him in his soldier's sash

Were kind for such as he!

XXV

Old Kraken's look hard Winter wears

When sweeps the wild snow-blast:

He had the hug of Arctic bears

For captives he held fast.

2--I

Archduchess Anne sat carved in frost,

Shut off from priest and spouse.

Her lips were locked, her arms were crossed,

Her eyes were in her brows.

II

One hand enclosed a paper scroll,

Held as a strangled asp.

So may we see the woman's soul

In her dire tempter's grasp.

III

Along that scroll Count Louis' doom

Throbbed till the letters flamed.

She saw him in his scornful bloom,

She saw him chained and shamed.

IV

Around that scroll Count Louis' fate

Was acted to her stare,

And hate in love and love in hate

Fought fell to smite or spare.

V

Between the day that struck her old,

And this black star of days,

Her heart swung like a storm-bell tolled

Above a town ablaze.

VI

His beauty pressed to intercede,

His beauty served him ill.

- Not Vengeance, 'tis his rebel's deed,

'Tis Justice, not our will!

VII

Yet who had sprung to life's full force

A breast that loveless dried?

But who had sapped it at the source,

With scarlet to her pride!

VIII

He brought her waning heart as 'twere

New message from the skies.

And he betrayed, and left on her

The burden of their sighs.

IX

In floods her tender memories poured;

They foamed with waves of spite:

She crushed them, high her heart outsoared,

To keep her mind alight.

X

- The crawling creature, called in scorn

A woman!--with this pen

We sign a paper that may warn

His crowing fellowmen.

XI

- We read them lesson of a power

They slight who do us wrong.

That bitter hour this bitter hour

Provokes; by turns the strong!

XII

- That we were woman once is known:

That we are Justice now,

Above our sex, above the throne,

Men quaking shall avow.

XIII

Archduchess Anne ascending flew,

Her heart outsoared, but felt

The demon of her sex pursue,

Incensing or to melt.

XIV

Those counterfloods below at leap

Still in her breast blew storm,

And farther up the heavenly steep

Wrestled in angels' form.

XV

To disentangle one clear wish

Not of her sex, she sought;

And womanish to womanish

Discerned in lighted thought.

XVI

With Louis' chance it went not well

When at herself she raged;

A woman, of whom men might tell

She doted, crazed and aged.

XVII

Or else enamoured of a sweet

Withdrawn, a vengeful crone!

And say, what figure at her feet

Is this that utters moan?

XVIII

The Countess Louis from her head

Drew veil: 'Great Lady, hear!

My husband deems you Justice dread,

I know you Mercy dear.

XIX

'His error upon him may fall;

He will not breathe a nay.

I am his helpless mate in all,

Except for grace to pray.

XX

'Perchance on me his choice inclined,

To give his House an heir:

I had not marriage with his mind,

His counsel could not share.

XXI

'I brought no portion for his weal

But this one instinct true,

Which bids me in my weakness kneel,

Archduchess Anne, to you.'

XXII

The frowning Lady uttered, 'Forth!'

Her look forbade delay:

'It is not mine to weigh your worth;

Your husband's others weigh.

XXIII

'Hence with the woman in your speech,'

For nothing it avails

In woman's fashion to beseech

Where Justice holds the scales.'

XXIV

Then bent and went the lady wan,

Whose girlishness made grey

The thoughts that through Archduchess Anne

Shattered like stormy spray.

XXV

Long sat she there, as flame that strives

To hold on beating wind:

- His wife must be the fool of wives,

Or cunningly designed!

XXVI

She sat until the tempest-pitch

In her torn bosom fell;

- His wife must be a subtle witch

Or else God loves her well!

3--I

Old Kraken read a missive penned

By his great Lady's hand.

Her condescension called him friend,

To raise the crest she fanned.

II

Swiftly to where he lay encamped

It flew, yet breathed aloof

From woman's feeling, and he stamped

A heel more like a hoof.

III

She wrote of Mercy: 'She was loth

Too hard to ga foe.'

He stamped, as when men drive an oath

Devils transcribe below.

IV

She wrote: 'We have him half by theft.'

His wrinkles glistened keen:

And see the Winter storm-cloud cleft

To lurid skies between!

V

When read old Kraken: 'Christ our Guide,'

His eyes were spikes of spar:

And see the white snow-storm divide

About an icy star!

VI

'She trusted him to understand,'

She wrote, and further prayed

That policy might rule the land.

Old Kraken's laughter neighed.

VII

Her words he took; her nods and winks

Treated as woman's fog.

The man-dog for his mistress thinks,

Not less her faithful dog.

VIII

She hugged a cloak old Kraken ripped;

Disguise to him he loathed.

- Your mercy, madam, shows you stripped,

While mine will keep you clothed.

IX

A rough ill-soldered scar in haste

He rubbed on his cheek-bone.

- Our policy the man shall taste;

Our mercy shall be shown.

X

'Count Louis, honour to your race

Decrees the Council-hall:

You 'scape the rope by special grace,

And like a soldier fall.'

XI

- I am a man of many sins,

Who for one virtue die,

Count Louis said.--They play at shins,

Who kick, was the reply.

XII

Uprose the day of crimson sight,

The day without a God.

At morn the hero said Good-night:

See there that stain on sod!

XIII

At morn the Countess Louis heard

Young light sing in the lark.

Ere eve it was that other bird,

Which brings the starless dark.

XIV

To heaven she vowed herself, and yearned

Beside her lord to lie.

Archduchess Anne on Kraken turned,

All white as a dead eye.

XV

If I could kill thee! shrieked her look:

If lightning sprang from Will!

An oaken head old Kraken shook,

And she might thank or kill.

XVI

The pride that fenced her heart in mail

By mortal pain was torn.

Forth from her bosom leaped a wail,

As of a babe new-born.

XVII

She clad herself in courtly use,

And one who heard them prate

Had said they differed upon views

Where statecraft raised debate.

XVIII

The wretch detested must she trust,

The servant master own:

Confide to godless cause so just,

And for God's blessing moan.

XIX

Austerely she her heart kept down,

Her woman's tongue was mute

When voice of People, voice of Crown,

In cannon held dispute.

XX

The Crown on seas of blood, like swine,

Swam forefoot at the throat:

It drank of its dear veins for wine,

Enough if it might float!

XXI

It sank with piteous yelp, resurged

Electrical with fear.

O had she on old Kraken urged

Her word of mercy clear!

XXII

O had they with Count Louis been

Accordant in his plea!

Cursed are the women vowed to screen

A heart that all can see!

XXIII

The godless drove unto a goal

Was worse than vile defeat.

Did vengeance prick Count Louis' soul

They dressed him luscious meat.

XXIV

Worms will the faithless find their lies

In the close treasure-chest.

Without a God no day can rise,

Though it should slay our best.

XXV

The Crown it furled a draggled flag,

It sheathed a broken blade.

Behold its triumph in the hag

That lives with looks decayed!

XXVI

And lo, the man of oaken head,

Of soldier's honour bare,

He fled his land, but most he fled

His Lady's frigid stare.

XXVII

Judged by the issue we discern

God's blessing, and the bane.

Count Louis' dust would fill an urn,

His deeds are waving grain.

XXVIII

And she that helped to slay, yet bade

To spare the fated man,

Great were her errors, but she had

Great heart, Archduchess Anne.

This book comes from:m.funovel.com。

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