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By weird and weakness warring

By December 7, 2023No Comments
But dark and thick as thronged the host,
          With drum and torch and blade,
          The still-eyed King sat pondering,
          As one that watches a live thing,
          The scoured chalk; and he said,

          "Though I give this land to Our Lady,
          That helped me in Athelney,
          Though lordlier trees and lustier sod
          And happier hills hath no flesh trod
          Than the garden of the Mother of God
          Between Thames side and the sea,

          "I know that weeds shall grow in it
          Faster than men can burn;
          And though they scatter now and go,
          In some far century, sad and slow,
          I have a vision, and I know
          The heathen shall return.

          "They shall not come with warships,
          They shall not waste with brands,
          But books be all their eating,
          And ink be on their hands.

          "Not with the humour of hunters
          Or savage skill in war,
          But ordering all things with dead words,
          Strings shall they make of beasts and birds,
          And wheels of wind and star.

          "They shall come mild as monkish clerks,
          With many a scroll and pen;
          And backward shall ye turn and gaze,
          Desiring one of Alfred's days,
          When pagans still were men.

          "The dear sun dwarfed of dreadful suns,
          Like fiercer flowers on stalk,
          Earth lost and little like a pea
          In high heaven's towering forestry,
          —These be the small weeds ye shall see
          Crawl, covering the chalk.

          "But though they bridge St. Mary's sea,
          Or steal St. Michael's wing—
          Though they rear marvels over us,
          Greater than great Vergilius
          Wrought for the Roman king;

          "By this sign you shall know them,
          The breaking of the sword,
          And man no more a free knight,
          That loves or hates his lord.

          "Yea, this shall be the sign of them,
          The sign of the dying fire;
          And Man made like a half-wit,
          That knows not of his sire.

          "What though they come with scroll and pen,
          And grave as a shaven clerk,
          By this sign you shall know them,
          That they ruin and make dark;

          "By all men bond to Nothing,
          Being slaves without a lord,
          By one blind idiot world obeyed,
          Too blind to be abhorred;

          "By terror and the cruel tales
          Of curse in bone and kin,
          By weird and weakness winning,
          Accursed from the beginning,
          By detail of the sinning,
          And denial of the sin;

          "By thought a crawling ruin,
          By life a leaping mire,
          By a broken heart in the breast of the world,
          And the end of the world's desire;

          "By God and man dishonoured,
          By death and life made vain,
          Know ye the old barbarian,
          The barbarian come again—

          "When is great talk of trend and tide,
          And wisdom and destiny,
          Hail that undying heathen
          That is sadder than the sea.

          "In what wise men shall smite him,
          Or the Cross stand up again,
          Or charity or chivalry,
          My vision saith not; and I see
          No more; but now ride doubtfully
          To the battle of the plain."

          And the grass-edge of the great down
          Was cut clean as a lawn,
          While the levies thronged from near and far,
          From the warm woods of the western star,
          And the King went out to his last war
          On a tall grey horse at dawn.

          And news of his far-off fighting
          Came slowly and brokenly
          From the land of the East Saxons,
          From the sunrise and the sea.

          From the plains of the white sunrise,
          And sad St. Edmund's crown,
          Where the pools of Essex pale and gleam
          Out beyond London Town—

          In mighty and doubtful fragments,
          Like faint or fabled wars,
          Climbed the old hills of his renown,
          Where the bald brow of White Horse Down
          Is close to the cold stars.

          But away in the eastern places
          The wind of death walked high,
          And a raid was driven athwart the raid,
          The sky reddened and the smoke swayed,
          And the tall grey horse went by.

          The gates of the great river
          Were breached as with a barge,
          The walls sank crowded, say the scribes,
          And high towers populous with tribes
          Seemed leaning from the charge.

          Smoke like rebellious heavens rolled
          Curled over coloured flames,
          Mirrored in monstrous purple dreams
          In the mighty pools of Thames.

          Loud was the war on London wall,
          And loud in London gates,
          And loud the sea-kings in the cloud
          Broke through their dreaming gods, and loud
          Cried on their dreadful Fates.

          And all the while on White Horse Hill
          The horse lay long and wan,
          The turf crawled and the fungus crept,
          And the little sorrel, while all men slept,
          Unwrought the work of man.

          With velvet finger, velvet foot,
          The fierce soft mosses then
          Crept on the large white commonweal
          All folk had striven to strip and peel,
          And the grass, like a great green witch's wheel,
          Unwound the toils of men.

          And clover and silent thistle throve,
          And buds burst silently,
          With little care for the Thames Valley
          Or what things there might be—

          That away on the widening river,
          In the eastern plains for crown
          Stood up in the pale purple sky
          One turret of smoke like ivory;
          And the smoke changed and the wind went by,
          And the King took London Town.

          From The Ballad of the White Horse, by GK Chesterton