The Blind Harper.

    By Madison Julius Cawein



    And thus it came my feet were led
    To wizard walls that hairy hung
    Old as their rock the moss made dead;
    And, like a ditch of fire flung
    Around it, uncouth flowers red
    Thrust spur and fang and tongue.

    And here I harped. Did dead men list?
    Or was it hollow hinges gnarred
    Huge, iron scorn in donjon-twist?
    And when I thought a face sword-scarred
    Would curse me, lo! a woman kissed
    At me hands ringed and starred.

    And so I sang; for she had leaned
    Rare beauty to me, dark and tall;
    I sang of Love, whose Court is queened
    Of Aliénor the virginal,
    Nor saw how rolled on me a fiend
    Wolf-eyeballs from the wall.

    Oh, how I sang! until she laughed
    Red lips that made lute harmony;
    I sang of knights who fought and quaffed
    To Love's own paragon, Marie -
    Nor saw the suzerain whose shaft
    Was bowed and bent on me.

    And I had harped until she wept;
    But when I sang of Ermengarde
    Of Anjou, - where her Court is kept
    By brave, by beauty, and by bard, -
    She turned a raven there and swept
    Me, like a fury, 'ward.

    A bleeding beak had pierced my sight;
    A crimson claw each cheek had lined;
    One glimpse: wild walls of threatening night
    Heaped raven battlements behind
    A moat of blazing serpents bright -
    And then I wandered blind.




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