Under King Constantine eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 53 pages of information about Under King Constantine.

Under King Constantine eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 53 pages of information about Under King Constantine.

Sweet Greane’s heart thrills with pride of Christalan,
And with the spirit of the solemn scene;
But, also, with a fierce rebellious pang,
That she is but a useless, silly girl. 
She wishes she too had been born a lad,
To take the knightly vow, and leave the home,
And go forth to the world and its delight.

Now Christalan turns from the altar-rail
To see the love upon his mother’s face. 
Back to the castle, in a goodly train,
They take their way, in joyous merriment
And festal cheer.

A banquet for the lad
Is given in the hall, where gather soon
The Noel-garde retainers, come to greet
The noble boy, and say a long farewell.

The Lady Agathar still smiles, and fills
The moment with all pleasure and delight,
No shadow of her sorrow or her pain
Shall fall upon her Christalan to-day,
But deep within her heart she maketh moan,
“My Christalan goes forth to-morrow morn.”

Amid the revel Greane and Christalan
Are missing for a time from the gay feast,
And Agathar’s quick eyes have followed them
To where they sit apart, the two young heads,
Of golden beauty and of softest brown,
Forming a picture that for evermore
Her memory will hold to solace grief,
Or make it greater, as her mood may be.

“O Christalan how can I let you go?”
Says sweet Greane, weeping “Who will climb with me
The rocks to find the bird’s nest? who will play
At arms, forgetting that I am a girl,
And helping me forget it?”

Christalan,
Lifting the nut-brown curl to find her ear,
Low whispers tenderly, “I love you, Greane,
A hundred times more than were you a boy,
And always have, e’en when I laughed at you.”

Greane nestles to him, lays her pretty head
Upon his breast, her slender shapely hand,
Sun-browned and thorn scratched, wanders lovingly
Over his face and hair,—­then to the words
Upon his doublet, tracing thoughtfully
Their broidered curving with her forefinger,

Valiant and True” she says:  “My Christalan, When you are great and famous in the world, Which would you be, could you be only one?”

“Why, Greane, they go together, like the light
And morning:  no knight could be really true
And not be valiant to the death; and yet,
No valiant knight could live and not be true.”

“But if you could be only one?” says Greane, With child’s persistency.

Quickly he starts,
Throws back his head impatiently, replies,
“I would be valiant, could I be but one.”

“O Christalan, I would be true,” says Greane.

“Well, Greane, you teased me into saying it,
So do not look so scornful!  I should die
If I could not exalt my father’s name
In valiant deeds of knighthood and of war. 
You have to choose, for you are but a girl;
I need not choose, thank God!  I will be both.”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Under King Constantine from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.