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第6章

the tale of balen-第6章

小说: the tale of balen 字数: 每页3500字

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Or hold herein my right。〃

Then gat he leave to wear his sword
Beside the strange king's festal board
Where feasted many a knight and lord
In seemliness of fair accord:
And Balen asked of one beside;
〃Is there not in this court; if fame
Keep faith; a knight that hath to name
Garlon?〃 and saying that word of shame;
He scanned that place of pride。

〃Yonder he goeth against the light;
He with the face as swart as night;〃
Quoth the other:  〃but he rides to fight
Hid round by charms from all men's sight;
And many a noble knight he hath slain;
Being wrapt in darkness deep as hell
And silence dark as shame。〃  〃Ah; well;〃
Said Balen; 〃is that he? the spell
May be the sorcerer's bane。〃

Then Balen gazed upon him long;
And thought; 〃If here I wreak my wrong;
Alive I may not scape; so strong
The felon's friends about him throng;
And if I leave him here alive;
This chance perchance may life not give
Again:  much evil; if he live;
He needs must do; should fear forgive
When wrongs bid strike and strive。〃

And Garlon; seeing how Balen's eye
Dwelt on him as his heart waxed high
With joy in wrath to see him nigh;
Rose wolf…like with a wolfish cry
And crossed and smote him on the face;
Saying; 〃Knight; what wouldst thou with me?  Eat;
For shame; and gaze not:  eat thy meat
Do that thou art come for:  stands thy seat
Next ours of royal race?〃

〃Well hast thou said:  thy rede rings true;
That which I came for will I do;〃
Quoth Balen:  forth his fleet sword flew;
And clove the head of Garlon through
Clean to the shoulders。  Then he cried
Loud to his lady; 〃Give me here
The truncheon of the shameful spear
Wherewith he slew your knight; when fear
Bade hate in darkness ride。〃

And gladly; bright with grief made glad;
She gave the truncheon as he bade;
For still she bare it with her; sad
And strong in hopeless hope she had;
Through all dark days of thwarting fear;
To see if doom should fall aright
And as God's fire…fraught thunder smite
That head; clothed round with hell…faced night;
Bare now before her here。

And Balen smote therewith the dead
Dark felon's body through; and said
Aloud; 〃With even this truncheon; red
With baser blood than brave men bled
Whom in thy shameful hand it slew;
Thou hast slain a nobler knight; and now
It clings and cleaves thy body:  thou
Shall cleave again no brave man's brow;
Though hell would aid anew。〃

And toward his host he turned and spake;
〃Now for your son's long…suffering sake
Blood ye may fetch enough; and take
Wherewith to heal his hurt; and make
Death warm as life。〃  Then rose a cry
Loud as the wind's when stormy spring
Makes all the woodland rage and ring:
〃Thou hast slain my brother;〃 said the king;
〃And here with him shalt die。〃

〃Ay?〃 Balen laughed him answer。  〃Well;
Do it then thyself。〃  And the answer fell
Fierce as a blast of hate from hell;
〃No man of mine that with me dwell
Shall strike at thee but I their lord
For love of this my brother slain。〃
And Pellam caught and grasped amain
A grim great weapon; fierce and fain
To feed his hungering sword。

And eagerly he smote; and sped
Not well:  for Balen's blade; yet red
With lifeblood of the murderous dead;
Between the swordstroke and his head
Shone; and the strength of the eager stroke
Shore it in sunder:  then the knight;
Naked and weaponless for fight;
Ran seeking him a sword to smite
As hope within him woke。

And so their flight for deathward fast
From chamber forth to chamber passed
Where lay no weapon; till the last
Whose doors made way for Balen cast
Upon him as a sudden spell
Wonder that even as lightning leapt
Across his heart and eyes; and swept
As storm across his soul that kept
Wild watch; and watched not well。

For there the deed he did; being near
Death's danger; breathless as the deer
Driven hard to bay; but void of fear;
Brought sorrow down for many a year
On many a man in many a land。
All glorious shone that chamber; bright
As burns at sunrise heaven's own height:
With cloth of gold the bed was dight;
That flamed on either hand。

And one he saw within it lie:
A table of all clear gold thereby
Stood stately; fair as morning's eye;
With four strong silver pillars; high
And firm as faith and hope may be:
And on it shone the gift he sought;
A spear most marvellously wrought;
That when his eye and handgrip caught
Small fear at heart had he。

Right on King Pellam then; as fire
Turns when the thwarting winds wax higher;
He turned; and smote him down。  So dire
The stroke was; when his heart's desire
Struck; and had all its fill of hate;
That as the king fell swooning down
Fell the walls; rent from base to crown;
Prone as prone seas that break and drown
Ships fraught with doom for freight。

And there for three days' silent space
Balen and Pellam face to face
Lay dead or deathlike; and the place
Was death's blind kingdom; till the grace
That God had given the sacred seer
For counsel or for comfort led
His Merlin thither; and he said;
Standing between the quick and dead;
〃Rise up; and rest not here。〃

And Balen rose and set his eyes
Against the seer's as one that tries
His heart against the sea's and sky's
And fears not if he lives or dies;
Saying; 〃I would have my damosel;
Ere I fare forth; to fare with me。〃
And sadly Merlin answered; 〃See
Where now she lies; death knows if she
Shall now fare ill or well。

〃And in this world we meet no more;
Balen。〃  And Balen; sorrowing sore;
Though fearless yet the heart he bore
Beat toward the life that lay before;
Rode forth through many a wild waste land
Where men cried out against him; mad
With grievous faith in fear that bade
Their wrath make moan for doubt they had
Lest hell had armed his hand。

For in that chamber's wondrous shrine
Was part of Christ's own blood; the wine
Shed of the true triumphal vine
Whose growth bids earth's deep darkness shine
As heaven's deep light through the air and sea;
That mystery toward our northern shore
Arimathean Joseph bore
For healing of our sins of yore;
That grace even there might be。

And with that spear there shrined apart
Was Christ's side smitten to the heart。
And fiercer than the lightning's dart
The stroke was; and the deathlike smart
Wherewith; nigh drained of blood and breath;
The king lay stricken as one long dead:
And Joseph's was the blood there shed;
For near akin was he that bled;
Near even as life to death。

And therefore fell on all that land
Sorrow:  for still on either hand;
As Balen rode alone and scanned
Bright fields and cities built to stand
Till time should break them; dead men lay;
And loud and long from all their folk
Living; one cry that cursed him broke;
Three countries had his dolorous stroke
Slain; or should surely slay。



VII



In winter; when the year burns low
As fire wherein no firebrands glow;
And winds dishevel as they blow
The lovely stormy wings of snow;
The hearts of northern men burn bright
With joy that mocks the joy of spring
To hear all heaven's keen clarions ring
Music that bids the spirit sing
And day give thanks for night。

Aloud and dark as hell or hate
Round Balen's head the wind of fate
Blew storm and cloud from death's wide gate:
But joy as grief in him was great
To face God's doom and live or die;
Sorrowing for ill wrought unaware;
Rejoicing in desire to dare
All ill that innocence might bear
With changeless heart and eye。

Yet passing fain he was when past
Those lands and woes at length and last。
Eight times; as thence he fared forth fast;
Dawn rose and even was overcast
With starry darkness dear as day;
Before his venturous quest might meet
Adventure; seeing within a sweet
Green low…lying forest; hushed in heat;
A tower that barred his way。

Strong summer; dumb with rapture; bound
With golden calm the woodlands round
Wherethrough the knight forth faring found
A knight that on the greenwood ground
Sat mourning:  fair he was to see;
And moulded as for love or fight
A maiden's dreams might frame her knight;
But sad in joy's far…flowering sight
As grief's blind thrall might be。

〃God save you;〃 Balen softly said;
〃What grief bows down your heart and head
Thus; as one sorrowing for his dead?
Tell me; if haply I may stead
In aught your sorrow; that I may。〃
〃Sir knight;〃 that other said; 〃thy word
Makes my grief heavier that I heard。〃
And pity and wonder inly stirred
Drew Balen thence away。

And so withdrawn with silent speed
He saw the sad knight's stately steed;
A war…horse meet for warrior's need;
That none who passed might choose but heed;
So strong he stood; so great; so fair;
With eyes afire for flight or fight;
A joy to look on; mild in might;
And swift and keen and kind as light;
And all as clear of care。

And Balen; gazing on him; heard
Again his master's woful word
Sound sorrow through the calm unstirred
By fluttering wind or flickering bird;
Thus:  〃Ah; fair lady and faithless; why
Break thy pledged faith to meet me? soon
An hour beyond thy trothplight noon
Shall strike my death…bell; and thy boon
Is this; that here I die。

〃My curse for all thy gifts may be
Heavier than death or night on thee;
For now this sword thou gavest me
Shall set me from thy bondage free。〃
And there the man had died self…slain;
But Balen leapt on him and caught
The blind fierce hand that fain had wrought
Self…murder; stung with fire of thought;
As rage makes anguish fain。

Then; mad for thwarted grief; 〃Let go
My hand;〃 the fool of wrath and woe
Cried; 〃or I slay thee。〃  Scarce the glow
In Balen's cheek and eye might show;
As dawn shows day while seas lie chill;
He heard; though pity took not heed;
But smiled and spake; 〃That shall not need:
What man may do to bid you speed
I; so God speed me; will。〃

And the other craved his name; beguiled
By hope that made his madness mild。
Again Sir Balen spake and smiled:
〃My name is Balen; called the Wild
By knights whom kings and courts make tame
Because I ride alone afar
And follow but my soul for star。〃
〃Ah; sir; I know the knight you are
And all your fiery fame。

〃The knight that bears two swords I know;
Most praised of all men; friend and foe;
For prowess of your hands; that show
Dark war the way where balefires glow
And kindle glory like the dawn's。〃
So spake the sorrowing knight; and stood
As one whose heart fresh hope made good:
And forth they rode by wold and wood
And down the glimmering lawns。

And Balen craved his name who rode
Beside him; where the wild wood glowed
With joy to feel how noontide flowed
Through glade and glen and rough green road
Till earth grew joyful as the sea。
〃My name is Garnysshe of the Mount;
A poor man's son of none account;〃
He said; 〃where springs of loftier fount
Laugh loud with pride to be。

〃But strength in weakness lives and stands
As rocks that rise through shifting sands;
And for the prowess of my hands
One made me knight and gave me lands;
Duke Hermel; lord from far to near;
Our prince; and she that loved meshe
I love; and deemed she loved but me;
His daughter; pledged her faith to be
Ere now beside me here。〃

And Balen; brief of speech as light
Whose word; beheld of depth and height;
Strikes silence through the stars of night;
Spake; and his fac

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