Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
England: Vols. I–IV. 1876–79.
Warlock Woods
By Walter Thornbury (18281876)T
Soon they ’ll come crashing through the hazel copse;
Already rocking like poor wind-tossed ships,
I see their reeling spars and waving tops.
The knights have yielded to King Mammon’s lords;
Rent is the good escutcheon,—sable, gules;
Shivered at last the brave Crusaders’ swords.
Will strew the covert, all o’ergrown with fern:
I hear the jarring axe that cleaves and splits;
I see the woodmen’s fires that crackling burn.
When boughs are snapped, and branches tempest-cleft,
When dead leaves drift across the rainy skies,
And not a wayside flower of hope is left.
When hyacinths in shade grow blue and rank,
When echoing cuckoos greet the spring again,
And violets purple every primrose bank.
Waiting the footfall and the pitying eyes;
And here, with sullen psalms and gloomy prayers,
The Ironsides have doled their prophecies.
Strung their big bows, and filed their arrow-heads,
While the wine-jug went round so fierce and fast,
When near them lay the fallow-deer just dead.
The suicide’s last prayer, the lover’s sigh,
The murdered one’s wild scream: it is for this
I hold them bound to man in sympathy.
Old giants, centuries long without a fear,
Fall prostrate at one scornful tap from thee,
Frail ivory hammer of the auctioneer.
No more to be the homes of hawk or owl;
No more on stormy nights the banshee wind
Shall through thy riven branches gasp and howl.