4646872The Ballad of the White Horse — The Woman in the Forest1911Gilbert Keith Chesterton

THE WOMAN IN THE FOREST

The thunder of the snorting swine,Enormous in the gloam,Rending among all roots that clingAnd the wild horses whinnyingWere the night's noises when the King,Shouldering his harp, went home.
With eyes of owl and feet of fox,Full of all thoughts he went;He marked the tilt of the pagan camp,The paling of pine, the sentries' tramp,And the one great stolen altar-lampOver Guthrum in his tent.
By scrub and thorn in EthanduneThat night the foe had lain;Whence ran across the heather greyThe old stones of a Roman way;And in a wood not far awayThe pale road split in twain.
He marked the wood and the cloven waysWith an old captain's eycs, And he thought how many a time had heSought to see Doom he could not see,How ruin had come and victoryAnd both were a surprise.
Even as he had watched and wondered,Under Ashdown from the plains;With Ethelred praying in his tent,Till the white hawthorn swung and bentAs Alfred rushed his spears and rentThe shield-wall of the Danes.
Even so he had watched and wondered,Knowing neither less nor more,Till all his lords lay dyingAnd axes on axes plying,Flung him, and drove him flyingLike a pirate to the shore.
Wise he had been before defeat,And wise before success;Wise in both hours, and ignorant,Knowing neither more nor less.
As he went down to the river-hutHe knew a night-shade scent,Owls did as evil cherubs rise, With little wings and lantern eyes,As though he sank through the under-skies;But down and down he went.
As he went down to the river-hutHe went as one that fell;Seeing the high forest domes and sparsDim green or torn with golden scars,As the proud look up at the evil stars,In the red heavens of hell.
For he must meet by the river-hutThem he had bidden to arm,Mark from the towers of ItalyAnd Colan of the Sacred Tree,And Eldred who beside the seaHeld heavily his farm.
The roof leaned gaping to the grass,As a monstrous mushroom lies;Echoing and empty seemed the place;But opened in a little spaceA great grey woman, with scarred faceAnd strong and humbled eyes.
King Alfred was but a meagre man,Bright eyed, but lean and pale; And swordless with his harp and rags,He seemed a beggar, such as lagsLooking for crusts and ale.
And the woman, with a woman's eyesOf pity at once and ire,Said, when that she had glared a span,"There is a cake for any manIf he will watch the fire."
And Alfred, bowing heavily,Sat down the fire to stir,And even as the woman pitied himSo did he pity her;
Saying, "O great heart in the night,O best cast forth for worst,Twilight shall melt and morning stir,And no kind thing shall come to her,Till God shall turn the world overAnd all the last are first.
"And well may God with the serving-folkCast in His dreadful lot;Is not He too a servantAnd is not He forgot?
"For was not God my gardenerAnd silent like a slave;That opened oaks on the uplandsOr thicket in graveyard gave?
"And was not God my armourer,All patient and unpaid,That sealed my skull as a helmetAnd ribs for hauberk made?
"Did not a great grey servantOf all my sires and me,Build this pavilion of the pines,And herd the fowls and fill the vines,And labour and pass and leave no signsSave mercy and mystery?
"For God is a great servantAnd rose before the day,From some primordial slumber torn;But all things living later bornSleep on, and rise after the morn,And the Lord has gone away.
"On things half sprung from sleeping,All sleepy suns have shone;They stretch stiff arms, the yawning trees,The beasts blink upon hands and knees, Man is awake and does and sees —But Heaven has done and gone.
"For who shall guess the good riddleOr speak of the Holiest,Save in faint figures and failing words,Who loves, yet laughs among the swords,Labours and is at rest?
"But some see God like GuthrumCrowned, with a great beard curled,But I see God like a good giant,That, labouring, lifts the world.
"Wherefore was God in Golgotha,Slain as a serf is slain;And hate He had of prince and peer,And love He had and made good cheerOf them that, like this woman here,Go powerfully in pain.
"But in this grey morn of man's lifeCometh sometime to the mindA little light that leaps and flies,Like a star blown on the wind.
"A star of nowhere, a nameless star,A light that spins and swirls, And cries that even in hedge and hill,Even on earth, it may go illAt last, with the evil earls.
"A dancing sparkle, a doubtful star,On the waste wind whirled and driven,But it seems to sing of a wilder worth,A time discrowned of doom and birth,And the kingdom of the poor on earthCome, as it is in heaven.
"But, even though such days endureHow shall it profit her?Who shall go groaning to the grave,With many a meek and mighty slave,Field-breaker and fisher on the wave,And woodman and waggoner.
"Bake ye the big world all againA cake with kinder leaven;Yet these are sorry evermore —Unless there be a little door,A little door in heaven."
And as he wept for the womanHe let her business be,And like his royal oath and rashThe good food fell upon the ashAnd blackened instantly.
Screaming, the woman caught a cakeYet burning from the bar,And struck him suddenly on the face,Leaving a scarlet scar.
King Alfred stood up wordless,A man dead with surprise,And torture stood and the evil thingsThat are in the childish hearts of kingsAn instant in his eyes.
And even as he stood and staredDrew round him in the duskThose friends creeping from far-off farms,Marcus with all his slaves in arms,And the strange spears hung with ancient charmsOf Colan of the Usk.
With one whole farm marching afootThe trampled road resounds,Farm-hands and farm-beasts blundering byAnd jars of mead and stores of rye,Where Eldred strode above his highAnd thunder-throated hounds;
And grey cattle and silver lowedAgainst the unlifted morn,And straw clung to the spear-shafts tall, And a boy went before them allBlowing a ram's horn.
As mocking such rude revelry,The dim clan of the GaelCame like a bad king's burial-end,With dismal robes that drop and rendAnd demon pipes that wail —
In long, outlandish garments,Torn, though of antique worth,With Druid beards and Druid spears,As a resurrected race appearsOut of an elder earth.
And though the King had called them forthAnd knew them for his own,So still each eye was, like a gem,So spectral hung each broidered hemGrey carven men he fancied them,Hewn in an age of stone.
And the two wild peoples of the northStood fronting in the gloam,And heard and knew each in his mindA third great sound upon the wind,The living walls that hedge mankind,The walking walls of Rome.
Mark's were the mixed tribes of the westOf many a hue and strain,Gurth, with rank hair like yellow grass;And the Cornish fisher, Gorlias,And Halmer, come from his first mass,Lately baptized, a Dane.
But like one man in armourThose hundreds trod the field,From red Arabia to the TyneThe earth had heard that marching-line,Since the cry on the hill Capitoline,And the fall of the golden shield.
And the earth shook and the King stood stillUnder the greenwood bough,And the smoking cake lay at his feetAnd the blow was on his brow.
Then Alfred laughed out suddenly,Like the thunder in the spring,Till shook aloud the lintel-beams,And the squirrels stirred in dusty dreams,And the startled birds went up in streams,For the laughter of the King.
And the beasts of the earth and the birds looked down,In a wild solemnity, On a stranger sight than a sylph or elf,On a man laughing at himselfUnder the greenwood tree —
The giant laughter of Christian menThat roars through a thousand tales,Where greed is an ape and pride is an ass,And Jack's away with his master's lass,And the miser is banged with all his brass,The farmer with all his flails;
Tales that tumble and tales that trick,Yet end not all in scorning —Of kings and clowns in a merry plight,And the clock gone wrong and the world gone right,That the mummers sing upon Christmas nightAnd Christmas Day in the morning.
"Now here is a good warrant,"Cried Alfred, "by my sword;For he that is struck for an ill servantShould be a kind lord.
"He that has been a servantKnows more than priests and kings,But he that has been an ill servant,He knows all earthly things.
"Pride flings frail palaces at the sky,As a man flings up sand,But the firm feet of humilityTake hold of heavy land.
"Pride juggles with her toppling towers,They strike the sun and cease,But the firm feet of humilityThey grip the ground like trees.
"He that hath failed in a little thingHath a sign upon the brow;And the Earls of the Great ArmyHave no such seal to show.
"The red print on my foreheadSmall flame for a red star,In the van of the violent marching, thenWhen the sky is torn of the trumpets ten,And the hands of the happy howling menFling wide the gates of war,
"This blow that I return notTen times will I returnOn kings and earls of all degree,And armies wide as empires beShall slide like landslips to the sea,If the red star burn.
"One man shall drive a hundred,As the dead kings drave;Before me rocking hosts be riven,And battering cohorts backwards driven,For I am the first king known of heavenThat has been struck like a slave.
"Up on the old white road, brothers,Up on the Roman walls!For this is the night of the drawing of swords,And the painted tower of the heathen hordesLeans to our hammers, fires and cords,Leans a little and falls.
"Follow the star that lives and leaps,Follow the sword that sings,For we go gathering heathen men,A terrible harvest, ten by ten,As the wrath of the last red autumn — thenWhen Christ reaps down the kings.
"Follow a light that leaps and spins,Follow the fire unfurled!For riseth up against realm and rod,A thing forgotten, a thing down trod,The last lost giant, even God,Is risen against the world."
Roaring they went o'er the Roman wall,And roaring up the lane,Their torches tossed, a ladder of fire,Higher their hymn was heard and higher,More sweet for hate and for heart's desire.And up in the northern scrub and brierThey fell upon the Dane.