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at Christian burial he may have, While for his soul we sing." The messengers reached the hut in the wood At the hour of midnight drear. "Wake, Edith of the Swan's Neck, rise And follow without fear. "The Duke of Normandy has won The battle, to our bane. On the field of Hastings, where he fought, The king is lying slain. "Arise and come with us; we seek His body among the dead. To Waltham Abbey it shall be borne. 'Twas thus our Abbot said." The woman arose and girded her gown, And silently went behind The hurrying monks. Her grizzly hair Streamed wildly on the wind. Barefoot through bog and bush and briar She followed and did not stay, Till Hastings and the cliffs of chalk They saw at dawn of day. The mist, that like a sheet of white The field of battle cloaked, Melted anon; with hideous din The daws flew up and croaked. In thousands on the bloody plain Lay strewn the piteous corses, Wounded and torn and maimed and stripped, Among the fallen horses. The woman stopped not for the blood; She waded barefoot through, And from her fixed and staring eyes The arrowy glances flew. Long, with the panting monks behind, And pausing but to scare The greedy ravens from their food, She searched with eager care. She searched and toiled the livelong day, Until the night was nigh; Then sudden from her breast there burst A shrill and awful cry. For on the battle-field at last His body she had found. She kissed, without a tear or word, The wan face on the ground. She kissed his brow, she kissed his mouth, She clasped him close, and pressed Her poor lips to the bloody wounds That gaped upon his breast. His shoulder stark she kisses too, When, searching, she discovers Three little scars her teeth had made When they were happy lovers. The monks had been and gotten boughs, And of these boughs they made A simple bier, whereon the corse Of the fallen king was laid. To Waltham Abbey to his tomb The king was thus removed; And Edith of the Swan's Neck walked By the body that she loved. She chanted litanies for his soul With a childish, weird lament That shuddered through the night. The monks Prayed softly as they went. * * * * * THE ASRA[47] (1855) Every e
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