Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The King Of Ys by Bliss Carman (William)
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The King Of Ys

    By Bliss Carman (William)



    Wild across the Breton country,
    Fabled centuries ago,
    Riding from the black sea border,
    Came the squadrons of the snow.

    Piping dread at every latch-hole,
    Moaning death at every sill,
    The white Yule came down in vengeance
    Upon Ys, and had its will.

    Walled and dreamy stood the city,
    Wide and dazzling shone the sea,
    When the gods set hand to smother
    Ys, the pride of Brittany.

    Morning drenched her towers in purple;
    Light of heart were king and fool;
    Fair forebode the merrymaking
    Of the seven days of Yule.

    Laughed the king, "Once more, my mistress,
    Time and place and joy are one!"
    Bade the balconies with banners
    Match the splendor of the sun;

    Eyes of urchins shine with silver,
    And with gold the pavement ring;
    Bade the war-horns sound their bravest
    In The Mistress of the King.

    Mountebanks and ballad-mongers
    And all strolling traffickers
    Should block up the market corners
    With none other name than hers.

    Laughed the fool, "To-day, my Folly,
    Thou shalt be the king of Ys!"
    O wise fool! How long must wisdom
    Under motley hold her peace?

    Then the storm came down. The valleys
    Wailed and ciphered to the dune
    Like huge organ pipes; a midnight
    Stalked those gala streets at noon;

    And the sea rose, rocked and tilted
    Like a beaker in the hand,
    Till the moon-hung tide broke tether
    And stampeded in for land.

    All day long with doom portentous,
    Shreds of pennons shrieked and flew
    Over Ys; and black fear shuddered
    On the hearthstone all night through.

    Fear, which freezes up the marrow
    Of the heart, from door to door
    Like a plague went through the city,
    And filled up the devil's score;

    Filled her tally of the craven,
    To the sea-wind's dismal note;
    While a panic superstition
    Took the people by the throat.

    As with morning still the sea rose
    With vast wreckage on the tide,
    And their pasture rills, grown rivers,
    Thundered in the mountain side,

    "Vengeance, vengeance, gods to vengeance!"
    Rose a storm of muttering;
    And the human flood came pouring
    To the palace of the king.

    "Save, O king, before we perish
    In the whirlpools of the sea,
    Ys thy city, us thy people!"
    Growled the king then, "What would ye?"

    But his wolf's eyes talked defiance,
    And his bearded mouth meant scorn.
    "O our king, the gods are angry;
    And no longer to be borne

    "Is the shameless face that greets us
    From thy windows, at thy side,
    Smiling infamy. And therefore
    Thou shall take her up, and ride

    "Down with her into the sea's mouth,
    And there leave her; else we die,
    And thy name goes down to story
    A new word for cruelty."

    Ah, but she was fair, this woman!
    Warm and flaxen waved her hair;
    Her blue Breton eyes made summer
    In that bleak December air.

    There she stood whose burning beauty
    Made the world's high roof tree ring,
    A white poppy tall and wind-blown
    In the garden of the king.

    Her throat shook, but not with terror;
    Her eyes swam, but not with fear;
    While her two hands caught and clung to
    The one man they had found dear.

    "Lord and lover,"--thus she smiled him
    Her last word,--"it shall be so,
    Only the sea's arms shall hold me,
    When from out thine arms I go."

    Swore he, "By the gods, my mistress,
    Thou shall have queen's burial.
    Pearls and amber shall thy tomb be;
    Shot with gold and green thy pall.

    "And a million-throated chorus
    Shall take up thy dirge to-night;
    Where thy slumber's starry watch-fires
    Shall a thousand years be bright."

    Then they brought the coal-black stallion,
    Chafing on the bit. Astride
    Sprang the young king; shouted, "Way there!"
    Caught the girl up to his side;

    And a path through that scared rabble
    Rode in pageant to the sea.
    And the coal-black mane was mingled
    With gold hair against his knee.

    Sure as the wild gulls make seaward,
    From the west gate to the beach
    Rode these two for whom now freedom
    Landward lay beyond their reach.

    And the great horse, scenting peril,
    Snorted at the flying spume,
    Flicked with courage, as how often,
    When the tides were racing doom,

    Ridden, he had plunged to rescue
    From that seething icy hell
    Some poor sailor wrecked a-fishing
    On the coast. What fears should quell

    That high spirit? Knee to shoulder,
    King and stallion reared and sprang
    Clear above the long white combers
    And that turmoil's iron clang.

    What a launching! For a moment,
    While the tempest held its breath
    And a thousand eyes looked wonder,
    Swimming in that trough of death,

    Steering seaward through the welter,
    Ere they settled out of sight,
    Waved above them one gold streamer.
    Valor, bid the world good-night!...

    Not a trace, while the long summers
    Warm the heart of Brittany,
    Save one stone of Ys, as remnant,
    For a white mark in the sea.



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