C.D. Warner, et al., comp. The Library of the World’s Best Literature.
An Anthology in Thirty Volumes. 1917.
The Second-Sight
By Dante Gabriel Rossetti (18281882)
A
That year the King bade call
I’ the Black Friars’ Charterhouse of Perth
A solemn festival.
In a close-ranked company;
But not till the sun had sunk from his throne
Did we reach the Scotish Sea.
’Neath a toilsome moon half seen:
The cloud stooped low and the surf rose high;
And where there was a line of the sky,
Wild wings loomed dark between.
By the veiled moon dimly lit,
There was something seemed to heave with life
As the King drew nigh to it.
Or brake of the waste sea-wold?
Or was it an eagle bent to the blast?
When near we came, we knew it at last
For a woman tattered and old.
Her writhen limbs were wrung;
And as soon as the King was close to her
She stood up gaunt and strong.
On high in her hollow dome;
And still as aloft with hoary crest
Each clamorous wave rang home,
Like fire in snow the moonlight blazed
Amid the champing foam.
“O King, thou art come at last;
But thy wraith has haunted the Scotish Sea
To my sight for four years past.
’Twixt the Duchray and the Dhu,
A shape whose feet clung close in a shroud,
And that shape for thine I knew.
I saw thee pass in the breeze,
With the cerecloth risen above thy feet
And wound about thy knees.
As a wanderer without rest,
Thou cam’st with both thine arms i’ the shroud
That clung high up thy breast.
And well mine eyes may note
That the winding-sheet hath passed thy breast
And risen around thy throat.
That of death hast such sore drouth,—
Except thou turn again on this shore,
The winding-sheet will have moved once more
And covered thine eyes and mouth.
Of thy fate be not so fain;
But these my words for God’s message take,
And turn thy steed, O King, for her sake
Who rides beside thy rein!”
As if it would breast the sea,
And the Queen turned pale as she heard on the gale
The voice die dolorously.
But the King gazed on her yet;
And in silence save for the wail of the sea
His eyes and her eyes met.
Man is but shadow and dust.
Last night I prayed by his altar-stone;
To-night I wend to the Feast of his Son:
And in him I set my trust.
And have not feared the sting
Of proud men’s hate,—to His will resigned
Who has but one same death for a hind
And one same death for a king.
The day when I must die,
That day by water or fire or air
My feet shall fall in the destined snare
Wherever my road may lie.
Thy sorcery on my path,
My heart with the fear of death to fill,
And turn me against God’s very will
To sink in his burning wrath?”
And moved nor limb nor eye;
And when we were shipped, we saw her there
Still standing against the sky.
Sank low in her rising pall;
And I thought of the shrouded wraith of the King,
And I said, “The Heavens know all.”