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PAGE 3

The Romance Of Britomarte
by [?]

And as one whom the fierce wind storms in the face,
With spikes of hail and with splinters of rain,
I, while we fled through St. Hubert’s Chase,
Bent till my cheek was amongst her mane.
To the north, full a league of the deer-park lay,
Smooth, springy turf, and she fairly flew,
And the sound of their hoof-strokes died away,
And their far shots faint in the distance grew.
Loudly I laughed, having won the start,
At the folly of following Britomarte.

They had posted a guard at the northern gate–
Some dozen of pikemen and musketeers.
To the tall park palings I turn’d her straight;
She veer’d in her flight as the swallow veers.
And some blew matches and some drew swords,
And one of them wildly hurl’d his pike,
But she clear’d by inches the oaken boards,
And she carried me yards beyond the dyke;
Then gaily over the long green down
We gallop’d, heading for Westbrooke town.

The green down slopes to the great grey moor,
The grey moor sinks to the gleaming Skelt–
Sudden and sullen, and swift and sure,
The whirling water was round my belt.
She breasted the bank with a savage snort,
And a backward glance of her bloodshot eye,
And “Our Lady of Andover’s” flash’d like thought,
And flitted St. Agatha’s nunnery,
And the firs at “The Ferngrove” fled on the right,
And “Falconer’s Tower” on the left took flight.

And over “The Ravenswold” we raced–
We rounded the hill by “The Hermit’s Well”–
We burst on the Westbrooke Bridge–“What haste?
What errand?” shouted the sentinel.
“To Beelzebub with the Brewer’s knave!”
“Carolus Rex and he of the Rhine!”
Galloping past him, I got and gave
In the gallop password and countersign,
All soak’d with water and soil’d with mud,
With the sleeve of my jerkin half drench’d in blood.

Now, Heaven be praised that I found him there–
Lord Guy. He said, having heard my tale,
“Leigh, let my own man look to your mare,
Rest and recruit with our wine and ale;
But first must our surgeon attend to you;
You are somewhat shrewdly stricken, no doubt.”
Then he snatched a horn from the wall and blew,
Making “Boot and Saddle” ring sharply out.
“Have I done good service this day?” quoth I.
“Then I will ride back in your troop, Lord Guy.”

In the street I heard how the trumpets peal’d,
And I caught the gleam of a morion
From the window–then to the door I reel’d;
I had lost more blood than I reckon’d upon;
He eyed me calmly with keen grey eyes–
Stern grey eyes of a steel-blue grey–
Said, “The wilful man can never be wise,
Nathless, the wilful must have his way,”
And he pour’d from a flagon some fiery wine;
I drain’d it, and straightway strength was mine.

* * * * *

I was with them all the way on the brown–
“Guy to the rescue!” “God and the king!”
We were just in time, for the doors were down;
And didn’t our sword-blades rasp and ring,
And didn’t we hew and didn’t we hack?
The sport scarce lasted minutes ten–
(Aye, those were the days when my beard was black;
I like to remember them now and then).
Though they fought like fiends, we were four to one,
And we captured those that refused to run.

We have not forgotten it, Cuthbert, boy!
That supper scene when the lamps were lit;
How the women (some of them) sobb’d for joy,
How the soldiers drank the deeper for it;
How the dame did honours, and Gwendoline,
How grandly she glided into the hall,
How she stoop’d with the grace of a girlish queen,
And kiss’d me gravely before them all;
And the stern Lord Guy, how gaily he laugh’d,
Till more of his cup was spilt than quaff’d.