Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Queen Hilda Of Virland by Henry Lawson
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Queen Hilda Of Virland

    By Henry Lawson



I

    Queen Hilda rode along the lines,
    And she was young and fair;
    And forward on her shoulders fell
    The heavy braids of hair:
    No gold was ever dug from earth
    Like that burnished there,
    No sky so blue as were her eyes
    Had man seen anywhere.

    'Twas so her gay court poets sang,
    And we believed it true.
    But men must fight for golden hair
    And die for eyes of blue!
    Cheer after cheer, the long half mile
    (It has been ever thus),
    And evermore her winsome smile
    She turned and turned on us.

    The Spring-burst over wood and sea,
    The day was warm and bright,
    Young Clarence stood on my left hand,
    Old Withen on the right.
    With fifteen thousand men, or more,
    With plumes and banners gay,
    To sail that day to foreign war,
    And our ships swarmed on the bay.

    Old Withen muttered in his beard I listened with a sigh,
    "Good Faith! for such a chit as that
    Strong men must kill and die.
    She'll back to her embroideree,
    And fools that bow and smirk,
    And we must sail across the sea
    And go to other work.

    "And wherefore? Wherefore," Withen said,
    "Is this red quarrel sought?
    Because of clacking painted hags
    And foreign fops at Court!
    Because 'tis said a drunken king,
    In lands we've never seen,
    Said something foolish in his cups
    Of our young silly queen!

    "Good faith! in her old great-aunt's time
    'Twere different, I vow:
    If old Dame Ruth were here, she'd get
    Some sharp advising now!"
    (At this a grim smile went about
    For men could say in sooth
    That none who'd seen her face could doubt
    The fair fame of Dame Ruth.)

    If Clarence heard, he said no word;
    His soul was fresh and clean;
    The glory in his boyish eyes
    Was shining for his Queen!
    And as she passed, he gazed as one
    An angel might regard.
    (Old Withen looked as if he'd like
    To take and smack her hard.)

    We only smiled at anything
    That good old Withen said,
    For he, half blind, through smoke and flame
    Had borne her grandsire dead;
    And he, in Virland's danger time,
    Where both her brothers died,
    Had ridden to red victory
    By her brave father's side.

    Queen Hilda rode along the lines
    'Mid thundering cheers the while,
    And each man sought, and seemed to get,
    Her proud and happy smile.
    Queen Hilda little dreamed, Ah, me!,
    On what dark miry plain,
    And what blood-blinded eyes would see
    Her girlish smile again!

    Queen Hilda rode on through the crowd,
    We heard the distant roar;
    We heard the clack of gear and plank,
    The sailors on the shore.
    Queen Hilda sought her "bower" to rest,
    (For her day's work was done),
    We kissed our wives, or others' wives,
    And sailed ere set of sun.

    (Some sail because they're married men,
    And some because they're free,
    To come or not come back agen,
    And such of old were we.
    Some sail for fame and some for loot
    And some for love, or lust,
    And some to fish and some to shoot
    And some because they must.

    (Some sail who know not why they roam
    When they are come aboard,
    And some for wives and loves at home,
    And some for those abroad.
    Some sail because the path is plain,
    And some because they choose,
    And some with nothing left to gain
    And nothing left to lose.

    (And we have sailed from Virland, we,
    For a woman's right or wrong,
    And we are One, and One, and Three,
    And Fifteen Thousand strong.
    For Right or Wrong and Virland's fame,
    You dared us and we come
    To write in blood a woman's name
    And take a letter home.)

II

    King Death came riding down the lines
    And broken lines were they,
    With scarce a soldier who could tell
    Where friend or foeman lay:
    The storm cloud looming over all,
    Save where the west was red,
    And on the field, of friend and foe,
    Ten thousand men lay dead.

    Boy Clarence lay in slush and blood
    With his face deathly white;
    Old Withen lay by his left side
    And I knelt at his right.
    And Clarence ever whispered,
    Though with dying eyes serene:
    "I loved her for her girlhood,.
    Will someone tell the Queen?"

    And this old Withen's message,
    When his time shortly came:
    "I loved her for her father's sake
    But I fought for Virland's fame:
    Go, take you this, a message
    From me," Old Withen said,
    "Who knelt beside her father,
    And his when they were dead:

    "I who in sport or council,
    I who as boy and man,
    Would aye speak plainly to them
    Were it Court, or battle's van,
    (Nay! fear not, she will listen
    And my words be understood,
    And she will heed my message,
    For I know her father's blood.)

    "If shame there was, (I judge not
    As I'd not be judged above:
    The Royal blood of Virland
    Was ever hot to love,
    Or fight.), the slander's wiped out,
    As witness here the slain:
    But, if shame there was, then tell her
    Let it not be again."

    At home once more in Virland
    The glorious Spring-burst shines:
    Queen Hilda rides right proudly
    Down our victorious lines.
    The gaps were filled with striplings,
    And Hilda wears a rose:
    And what the wrong or right of it
    Queen Hilda only knows.

    But, be it state or nation
    Or castle, town, or shed,
    Or be she wife or monarch
    Or widowed or unwed,
    Now this is for your comfort,
    And it has ever been:
    That, wrong or right, a man must fight
    For his country and his queen.



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