Here you will find the Long Poem The Troubadour. Canto 3 of poet Letitia Elizabeth Landon
LAND of the olive and the vine, The saint and soldier, sword and shrine! How glorious to young RAYMOND'S eye Swell'd thy bold heights, spread thy clear sky, When first he paused upon the height Where, gather'd, lay the Christian might. Amid a chesnut wood were raised Their white tents, and the red cross blazed Meteor-like, with its crimson shine, O'er many a standard's scutcheon'd line. On the hill opposite there stood The warriors of the Moorish blood,-- With their silver crescents gleaming, And their horse-tail pennons streaming; With cymbals and the clanging gong, The muezzin's unchanging song, The turbans that like rainbows shone, The coursers' gay caparison, As if another world had been Where that small rivulet ran between. And there was desperate strife next day: The little vale below that lay Was like a slaughter-pit, of green Could not one single trace be seen; The Moslem warrior stretch'd beside The Christian chief by whom he died; And by the broken falchion blade The crooked scymeter was laid. And gallantly had RAYMOND borne The red cross through the field that morn, When suddenly he saw a knight Oppress'd by numbers in the fight: Instant his ready spear was flung, Instant amid the band he sprung;-- They fight, fly, fall,--and from the fray He leads the wounded knight away! Gently he gain'd his tent, and there He left him to the leech's care; Then sought the field of death anew,-- Little was there for knight to do. That field was strewn with dead and dying; And mark'd he there DE VALENCE lying Upon the turbann'd heap, which told How dearly had his life been sold. And yet on his curl'd lip was worn The impress of a soldier's scorn; And yet his dark and glazed eye Glared its defiance stern and high: His head was on his shield, his hand Held to the last his own red brand. Felt RAYMOND all too proud for grief In gazing on the gallant chief: So, thought he, should a warrior fall, A victor dying last of all. But sadness moved him when he gave DE VALENCE to his lowly grave,-- The grave where the wild flowers were sleeping, And one pale olive-tree was weeping,-- And placed the rude stone cross to show A Christian hero lay below. With the next morning's dawning light Was RAYMOND by the wounded knight. He heard strange tales,--none knew his name, And none might say from whence he came; He wore no cognizance, his steed Was raven black, and black his weed. All owned his fame, but yet they deem'd More desperate than brave he seem'd; Or as he only dared the field For the swift death that it might yield. Leaning beside the curtain, where Came o'er his brow the morning air, He found the stranger chief; his tone, Surely 'twas one RAYMOND had known! He knew him not, what chord could be Thus waken'd on his memory? At first the knight was cold and stern, As that his spirit shunn'd to learn Aught of affection; as it brought To him some shaft of venom'd thought: When one eve RAYMOND chanced to name Durance's castle, whence he came; And speak of EVA , and her fate, So young and yet so desolate, So beautiful! Then heard he all Her father's wrongs, her mother's fall: For AMIRALD was the knight whose life RAYMOND had saved amid the strife; And now he seem'd to find relief In pouring forth his hidden grief, Which had for years been as the stream Cave-lock'd from either air or beam. LORD AMIRALD'S HISTORY. I LOVED her! ay, I would have given A death-bed certainty of heaven If I had thought it could confer The least of happiness on her! How proudly did I wait the hour When hid no more in lowly bower, She should shine, loveliest of all, The lady of my heart and hall;-- And soon I deem'd the time would be, For many a chief stood leagued with me. It was one evening we had sate In my tower's secret council late, Our bands were number'd, and we said That the pale moon's declining head Should shed her next full light o'er bands With banners raised, and sheathless brands. We parted; I to seek the shade Where my heart's choicest gem was laid; I flung me on my fleetest steed, I urged it to its utmost speed,-- On I went, like the hurrying wind, Hill, dale, and plain were left behind, And yet I thought my courser slow-- Even when the forest lay below. As my wont, in a secret nook I left my horse,--I may not tell With what delight my way I took Till I had reach'd the oak-hid dell. The trees which hitherto had made A more than night, with lighten'd shade Now let the stars and sky shine through, Rejoicing, calm, and bright, and blue. There did not move a leaf that night That I cannot remember now, Nor yet a sing