The Vow of the Peacock and Other Poems/The Danish Warrior’s Death Song

For other versions of this work, see The Danish Warrior’s Death Song.
2522662The Vow of the Peacock and Other Poems — The Danish Warrior’s Death SongLetitia Elizabeth Landon


THE DANISH WARRIOR'S DEATH SONG.


Away, away! your care is vain;
    No leech could aid me now;
The chill of death is at my heart,
    Its damp upon my brow.

Weep not—I shame to see such tears
    Within a warrior's eyes:
Away! how can ye weep for him
    Who in the battle dies?

If I had died with idle head
    Upon my lady's knee—
Had Fate stood by my silken bed,

    Then might ye weep for me.


But I lie on my own proud deck
    Before the sea and sky;
The wind that sweeps my gallant sails
    Will have my latest sigh.

My banner floats amid the clouds,
    Another droops below:
Well with my heart's best blood is paid
    Such purchase from a foe.

Go ye and seek my halls, there dwells
    A fair-hair'd boy of mine;
Give him my sword, while yet the blood
    Darkens that falchion's shine.

Tell him that only other blood
    Should wash such stains away;

And if he be his father's child,
    There needs no more to say.

Farewell, my bark! farewell, my friends!
    Now fling me on the wave;
One cup of wine, and one of blood,
    Pour on my bounding grave.