she was, was to crown him with flowers and gird a
sword about him; after the ‘Te Deum’ had
been sung for the victory, and almost all the city
were at that time either in the Church, or hard by
it, or else were by the hill that was near the river
where the crowning was to be: but I sat alone
in the garden of my house as I said; sat grieving
for the loss of my brave brother, who was slain by
my side in that same fight. I sat beneath an
elm tree; and as I sat and pondered on that still,
windless day, I heard suddenly a breath of air rustle
through the boughs of the elm. I looked up, and
my heart almost stopped beating, I knew not why, as
I watched the path of that breeze over the bowing
lilies and the rushes by the fountain; but when I
looked to the place whence the breeze had come, I became
all at once aware of an appearance that told me why
my heart stopped beating. Ah! there they were,
those two whom before I had but seen in dreams by night,
now before my waking eyes in broad daylight.
One, a knight (for so he seemed), with long hair mingled
with golden threads, flowing over his mail-coat, and
a bright crestless helmet on his head, his face sad-looking,
but calm; and by his side, but not touching him, walked
a wondrously fair maiden, clad in white, her eyelids
just shadowing her blue eyes: her arms and hands
seeming to float along with her as she moved on quickly,
yet very softly; great rest on them both, though sorrow
gleamed through it.
“When they came opposite to where I stood, these
two stopped for a while, being in nowise shadowy,
as I have heard men say ghosts are, but clear and
distinct. They stopped close by me, as I stood
motionless, unable to pray; they turned to each other,
face to face, and the maiden said, ’Love, for
this our last true meeting before the end of all, we
need a witness; let this man, softened by sorrow,
even as we are, go with us.’
“I never heard such music as her words were;
though I used to wonder when I was young whether the
angels in heaven sung better than the choiresters
sang in our church, and though, even then the sound
of the triumphant hymn came up to me in a breath of
wind, and floated round me, making dreams, in that
moment of awe and great dread, of the old long-past
days in that old church, of her who lay under the
pavement of it; whose sweet voice once, once long
ago, once only to me—yet I shall see her
again.” He became silent as he said this,
and no man cared to break in upon his thoughts, seeing
the choking movement in his throat, the fierce clenching
of hand and foot, the stiffening of the muscles all
over him; but soon, with an upward jerk of his head,
he threw back the long elf locks that had fallen over
his eyes while his head was bent down, and went on
as before: