FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   48   49   50   51   52   53   54   55   56   57   58   59   60   61   62   >>  
father's this night, And the battle fain would they see." "For Jesu's love," said Sir Harry Percy, "That died for you and me, Wend to my lord, my father, again, And say thou saw me not with ee; "My troth is plight to yon Scottish knight, It needs me not to layne, That I should bide him upon this bent, And I have his troth again; "And if that I wend off this ground, For sooth unfoughten away, He would me call but a coward knight, In his land another day. "Yet had I lever to be rynde and rent, By Mary that mykel may, Than ever my manhood should be reproved With a Scot another day. "Wherefore shoot, archers, for my sake, And let sharp arrows flee; Minstrels, play up for your warison, And well quit it shall be. "Every man think on his true love, And mark him to the Trinity; For to God I make mine a-vow This day will I not flee." The bloody heart in the Douglas' arms, His standard stood on high, That every man might full well know; Beside stood starres three. The white Li n on the English part, For sooth as I you sayne, The luces and the crescents both The Scots fought them again. Upon Saint Andrew loud did they cry, And thrice they shout on hyght, And syne marked them on our Englishmen, As I have told you right. Saint George the bright, our Lady's knight, To name they were full fain, Our Englishmen they cried on hyght, And thrice they shout again. With that sharp arrows began to flee, I tell you in certain; Men of arms began to join; Many a doughty man was there slain. The Percy and the Douglas met, That either of them was fain; They schapped together, while that they sweat, With swords of fine Collayne; Till the blood from their basenets ran As the roke doth in the rain. "Yield thee to me," said the Douglas, "Or else thou shalt be slain; "For I see by thy bright basenet, Thou art some man of might; And so I do by thy burnished brand, Thou art an earl, or else a knight." "By my good faith," said the noble Percy, "Now hast thou rede full right; Yet will I never yield me to thee, While I may stand and fight." They swapped together, while that they sweat, With
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   48   49   50   51   52   53   54   55   56   57   58   59   60   61   62   >>  



Top keywords:

knight

 

Douglas

 

arrows

 

bright

 

thrice

 

father

 

Englishmen


swapped

 

burnished

 

George

 

marked

 

Andrew

 
fought
 

basenets


schapped

 
swords
 

doughty

 

basenet

 

Collayne

 
unfoughten
 

ground


coward

 

battle

 

Scottish

 
plight
 

manhood

 

reproved

 
standard

bloody

 

Beside

 

starres

 

English

 
Minstrels
 

archers

 

Wherefore


warison

 

Trinity

 
crescents