Delphi complete works of.., p.390

Delphi Complete Works of George Borrow 1st ed. (2023), page 390

 part  #1 of  Delphi Classics Series

 

Delphi Complete Works of George Borrow 1st ed. (2023)
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  And stood before the table;

  He was I ween, a clever lad,

  And well to speak was able.

  “Hear thou, my lord, Little Engel,

  Rise up and straight begone;

  For here Sir Godey Loumand comes

  By four ways to the town.”

  “I fear not four, Solwey Johnsen,

  Nor five fear I, nor ten!

  I fear not Godey Sir Loumand, though

  He come with thirty men.”

  “O there are more than four, Sir,

  Or five, Sir, or than ten;

  Here cometh Godey Sir Loumand with

  A hundred armed men.”

  It was the little Engel, he

  Took Malfred in his arm:

  “Now, dearest heart, some counsel give

  May free us from this harm.”

  It was the little Engel, her

  Upon the white cheek kiss’d:

  “Now do thou hear, my bosom’s dear,

  With counsel us assist.”

  “The best advice that I can give

  I’ll give thee in this case;

  To Mary’s Church we will retire,

  They’ll ne’er destroy that place.

  “We’ll gold and silver take, and on

  The scale we’ll pile them high;

  To-morrow from the Churchmen we

  The holy place will buy.

  “Around you call your merry men all

  To whom you’ve given bread;

  For refuge we to the Kirk will flee

  Since we are thus bestead.

  “Do you take all your merry men who

  Your coursers’ backs have prest;

  We’ll hie us to our Lady’s church,

  And set our hearts at rest.

  “That’s the best counsel, love, I know,

  A simple woman I;

  In Mary’s house we’ll lock ourselves,

  And there our foes defy.”

  It was the little Engel,

  Into the church he went:

  Sir Loumand to beleaguer him

  A hundred men has sent.

  Before the kirk his men they lay

  Till full five months were past;

  It was Godey Sir Loumand

  So wrathful grew at last.

  Then spake the mother of little Malfred,

  With hate ‘gainst her was fill’d:

  “The Kirk of Maria burn with fire,

  And it with gold rebuild.”

  The fire began to burn, to burn,

  The sparkles in they flew;

  At that adread was little Malfred,

  And ashy pale she grew.

  It was so hot in the Kirk yard when

  Abroad the blazes sped;

  But in the Kirk still hotter when

  In poured the melted lead.

  It was the little Malfred,

  So frantic was her mood:

  “O let us quick the horses stick,

  And cool us with their blood.”

  Then little Engel answer made,

  As on the floor he stood:

  “But coolness small shall we derive

  From our good coursers’ blood.”

  Answered the groom who loved the steeds

  As dearly as his breath:

  “Ye’d better little Malfred stick,

  She well deserveth death.”

  It was the little Engel,

  His arms round Malfred twin’d:

  “No death hast thou deserved from us,

  And none from us shalt find.

  “My little Malfred, do thou hear

  What I now say to thee;

  If a son this year thou chance to bear,

  That son name after me.”

  They placed her on a buckler,

  They placed their spears below,

  And through the window lifted her

  With hearts so full of woe.

  It was the little Malfred round

  The church goes staggering now,

  Scorched were her scarlet robes, and scorched

  The ringlets on her brow.

  It was the little Malfred fell

  Upon her white bare knee:

  “O may I bear a son this year,

  The avenger of this to be.”

  So they the little Malfred took

  And in a mantle roll’d,

  And sorrowfully lifted her

  Upon a courser bold.

  Outspake the little Malfred when

  She reached the verdant plain:

  “Burnt is our Lady’s house this day,

  And burnt so bold a swain.

  “Burnt is our Lady’s house, and burnt

  Therein so brave a swain;

  His equal till the day of doom

  We ne’er shall see again.”

  It happened in the autumn tide,

  The autumn of that year,

  That she within her secret bower,

  A beauteous boy did bear.

  To the holy Kirk they carried him,

  They christened him at night;

  They called him little Engel, and

  Concealed him whilst they might.

  They fostered him for winter one,

  And so on, till he grew

  The fairest knight beneath the sun

  That you did ever view.

  So well he grew and throve until

  Seven years had passed away:

  “Thy uncle slew thy sire, my boy,

  For the first time, that I say.”

  Still with his mother he remained

  Till five more years were sped:

  “Thy uncle slew thy father, boy,”

  He heard most often said.

  “Now do thou hear, my mother dear,

  Who sittest clad in pall;

  Up under Oe I’ll riding go,

  And serve in the Monarch’s hall.”

  “Yes, ride thee hence to Court, and there

  To win thee honor try;

  Forget not who thy father slew,

  For the last time I cry.”

  He served so long at court that he

  His friend the Dane King made;

  With heavy heart he’d sit apart

  Whilst others laugh’d and play’d.

  The Danish King observed at last

  He grieved at seasons all:

  “Now hear, good youth, I’d know forsooth

  Why thou art sorrow’s thrall.

  “Thou grievest like the little bird

  The greenwood bough upon;

  Thou seemest like the lonely wight

  Whose friends are dead and gone.”

  “Now do thou hear, thou King of the Danes,

  With grief I down am weigh’d;

  My uncle slew my sire of old,

  And no atonement made.”

  “If thou wilt up of the country ride,

  And well avenge that deed,

  As many of my men to thee

  I’ll lend, as thou shalt need.

  “If thou’lt avenge thy father’s death,

  Thou shalt have fitting aid;

  Three hundred of my men to thee

  I’ll lend, in steel array’d.”

  It was the little Engel, he

  Rides in the greenwood shade;

  He marshals there his good men all,

  And sets him at their head.

  In haste came in the little footboy,

  And stood before the table;

  He was I ween a clever lad,

  And well to speak was able.

  “Now hear, Sir Godey Loumand, hear,

  Arise and straight begone;

  Little Engel’s coming with his troop

  By four ways to the town.

  “Little Engel’s coming with his troop,

  And he’ll be on us soon;

  And wroth is he, as wroth can be,

  His war-lance scrapes the moon.”

  “At Stevn and Ting, my boy, I’ve been,

  And wherever people mingle;

  But ne’er, I swear, have I been where

  I’ve heard of little Engel.”

  It was Godey Sir Loumand,

  He stroked the page’s cheek;

  “If thou canst give any good advice,

  My pretty footboy, speak.”

  “If I can give any good advice

  Most certainly I will;

  In your stone bower yourself immure

  From the approaching ill.

  “The walls they are of marble stone,

  The doors they are of lead;

  ‘Twill wondrous be, my lord, if we

  Therein are prisoners made.”

  It was the little Engel, he

  Halted a while to gaze:

  “O there doth lie the Kirk, where died

  My sire in smoke and blaze.

  “And there doth stand the castle, where

  My uncle doth reside;

  The amends that he shall pay this day

  The Lord in heaven decide.”

  By four ways they the bower beset,

  And for admission call:

  The little Engel, sprightly elf,

  Was foremost of them all.

  It was Godey Sir Loumand, through

  The casement out looked he:

  “Now hark, ye knaves, bid your captain tell

  Why ye bawl so furiously?”

  Then answered little Engel straight

  Beneath his mantle ruddy:

  “Engel he’s stiled, your sister’s child,

  And I am he, Sir Godey.”

  Then answered Godey Sir Loumand, he

  Was surely wroth thereat:

  “Ride hence, and boast not of thy birth,

  Thou art a bastard brat.”

  “And though a bastard brat I be,

  My fortune’s not the worse;

  Enough I hold of silver and gold,

  And ride on a gallant horse.

  “And if a bastard brat I be,

  Thou mad’st me that I trow;

  But still I’ve towers, and pleasant bowers,

  And of green woods enow.

  “My sire thou slew’st, and no amends

  To me didst ever make;

  Now scoff thou hast upon me cast,

  For which thy life I’ll take.

  “Bring gold, my merry men, and that

  Before the threshold lay;

  We’ll burn the bower this very hour,

  We well for it can pay.”

  ’Twas hot within the foreroom when

  The fire began to roar;

  But hotter in the stone bower, when

  The lead began to pour.

  It was the little Engel, he

  His courser never turned

  To ride away from the castelaye

  Before the bower was burned.

  Away at last he rode, and waved

  His hand in exultation,

  Upon espying his uncle lying

  Amidst the conflagration.

  Said little Engel, when he saw

  His uncle’s body shrink:

  “Now thou hast quaffed the self same draught

  Thou mad’st my father drink.”

  It was the little Engel, rode

  Home to his mother’s hall;

  Before it stood his mother good,

  So fair arrayed in pall.

  “Here dost thou stand, my mother dear,

  Arrayed in robes of pall;

  I’ve ridden up the land, and well

  Avenged my father’s fall.”

  It was the fair Dame Malfred, wrung

  Her hands and wept amain:

  “I’d but one care before to bear,

  And now, alas, have twain!”

  “Dear mother, thou wouldst have it so,

  Now thee in tears I find,

  When duteously thy will I’ve done:

  How strange is woman’s mind!”

  He turned his steed and rode away,

  His face with anger red;

  With dishevelled hair, the Dame stood there,

  Such woeful tears she shed.

  The little Engel hied him to

  The King his master’s court;

  Abroad the Dane King stood, and hailed

  The youth in kindest sort.

  Into the hall Sir Engel then

  With the good monarch went:

  “My choicest thanks, thou noble King,

  For thy brave warriors lent.

  “Now I’ve avenged my father’s death,

  Burnt is Sir Godey’s bower;

  And he therein has found a tomb,

  Who slew my sire of yore.”

  AN ELEGY.

  Where shall I rest my hapless head,

  Heavy with grief? how plenteously

  Must I the briny torrents shed —

  Alack and woe is me!

  Our chief is gone, at last, at last,

  The safeguard of our nation he;

  The glory of our age is past —

  Alack and woe is me!

  Unto the swords, O father dear,

  Of foemen thirsting horribly

  For blood, why leave thy children here?

  Alack and woe is me!

  Of justice is the fountain dried,

  And mute the law’s high symphony;

  Fallen is Europa’s brightest pride —

  Alack and woe is me.

  There is a change of times and things

  That passeth on eternally.

  Decreed by Him, the King of Kings —

  ’Tis right — but woe is me!

  Now is the earth with violets gay,

  And flowers manifold to see;

  Now frozen ‘neath the winter’s sway —

  How brief the roses be!

  Now shews the sun his head of gold

  With a superior brilliancy;

  Now hides as were he dead and cold —

  Alack and woe is me.

  O father! I will lave thy tomb

  With tear-drops well becoming me;

  Thy tomb with flowery herbs perfume —

  How brief the roses be!

  EPIGRAMS. From the Persian.

  1.

  Hear what once the pigmy clever

  To the stupid giant said:

  Things are not of highest value

  Which do highest rear their head;

  The sluggish horse is nothing better

  Than the donkey lowest bred.

  2.

  The man who of his words is sparing

  His strength and weakness hidden keeps;

  Think not every thicket empty,

  Perchance in one a tiger sleeps.

  3.

  If thou would’st ruin ‘scape, and blackest woe,

  Unto these words, these precious words attend:

  Never be heedless of a mortal foe,

  Nor choose a proud and envious man for friend.

  4.

  Sit down with your friends in delightful repose

  When war and contention you see ‘midst your foes;

  But when to an end their contentions they bring,

  Then, then seize the bow, and get ready the sling.

  5.

  The hungry hound upon the bone will pounce

  He prowling finds, and not mistrustful pass;

  He asks not whom it did belong to once,

  The prophet’s camel or the sinner’s ass.

  6.

  Great Aaroun is dead, and is nothing, the man

  Who left forty castles replete with gold store;

  But living though dead is the great Nourshwan,

  In the good name he left he has death triumphed o’er.

  7.

  Though God provides our daily bread,

  Yet all must seek that bread I ween;

  Though all must die, there is no need

  To rush the dragon’s jaws between.

  8.

  THE KING AND HIS FOLLOWERS.

  If in the boor’s garden the King eats a pear,

  His servants rapacious the tree will uptear;

  For every five eggs he gives bounteously, more

  Than five hundred fowls will his armies devour.

  THE DEVOUT MAN AND THE TYRANT.

  If the half of a loaf the devout man receives,

  The half of that half to the wretched he gives;

  But no sooner a tyrant one kingdom has ta’en,

  Than the wish of his heart is another to gain.

  10.

  THE CAT AND THE BEGGAR.

  If a cat could the power of flying enjoy,

  She all the world’s sparrows would quickly destroy;

  If power in the hands of a beggar you place,

  No mercy he’ll show to the beggarly race.

  11.

  THE KING AND TAYLOR.

  The taylor who travels in far foreign lands,

  Can always get bread by the work of his hands;

  But the King who from throne and from country has fled,

  Must oft without supper go sighing to bed.

  12.

  GOLD COIN AND STAMPED LEATHER.

  Of the children of wisdom how like is the face

  To pure gold that’s accepted in every place;

  But the ignorant great are much like leather cash,

  At home which though current, abroad is but trash.

  13.

  So much like a friend with your foe ever deal,

  That you never need dread the least scratch from his steel;

  But ne’er with your friend deal so much like a foe,

  That you ever must dread from his faulchion a blow.

  Marsk Stig: A Ballad (1914)

  CONTENTS

  PART I.

  PART II.

  PART III.

  PART IV.

  PART I.

  Marsk Stig he out of the country rode

  To win him fame with his good bright sword;

  At home meantide the King will bide

  In hope to lure his heart’s ador’d.

  The King sends word to the Marshal Stig

  That he to the fields of war should fare;

  Himself will deign at home to remain

  And take the charge of his Lady fair.

  In came the Marshal’s serving man,

  And a kirtle of green that man he wore:

  “Of our good liege the little foot-page

  Is standing out the gate before.”

  Up stood the young Sir Marshal Stig,

  By the side of his bed his clothes put on;

  And to speak the boy, the King’s envoy,

  Down to the gate is the Marshal gone.

  “Now hear thou, Marsk Stig Andersen,

  ’Tis truth and sooth what I say to thee;

  Thou must away to the King’s palay,

  Then mount thy horse and follow with me.

  “Oh, I know nought of my Lord King’s thought

  That I to thee can now declare,

  Except that thou to the war must go

 

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