When not great Arthur's tomb nor holy Joseph's grave Michael Drayton. THE BALLAD OF GLASTONBURY: GLASTONBURY, anciently called Avalon, is a place much celebrated both in tradition and history. It was here, according to old legends, when the neighboring moors were covered by the sea, that St. Joseph of Arimathea landed, and built the first church in England. It was here that the glorious king Arthur was buried, with the inscription : Hic jacet Arturus, rer quondam, rerque futurus. THE hills have on their royal robes of purple and of gold, In heaps are onward rolled; That British eye may see, A broad expanse and free. Rolled off the morning mist, To wander where it list, So roll, thou ancient chronicler, The ages' mist away; A dream of the former day. At once the flood of the Severn sea Flowed over half the plain, Above the flood remain : And the lordly Parret's way As in the former day. Of shining sails that thronged that stream There resteth never a one, Comes bounding in alone; It comes full merrily, Tibi gloria, Domine. * By this the vessel had floated nigh To the turf upon the strand, And first that holy man of joy Stepped on the Promise-land; Until the rest, in order blest, Were ranged, and, kneeling there, Gave blessing to the God of heaven In a lowly chanted prayer. Then over the brow of the seaward hill In their order blest they pass, At every change in the psalmody Kissing the holy grass, Till they come where they may see full near That pointed mountain rise, Darkening with its ancient cone The light of the eastern skies. “This staff hath borne me long and well,” Then spake that saint divine, On quest of the Promise-sign; And God do no more to me Tibi gloria, Domine.” A cloud is on them, the vision is changed, And voices of melody, Comes over the inland sea ; The hallowed ages glide; Rolls up the Mendip side. With mourning stole and solemn step, Up that same seaward hill, A company sad and still; There went before an open bier, And, sleeping in a charm, There lay an arméd form. It is the winter deep, and all The glittering fields that morn In Avalon's isle were over-snowed The day the Lord was born; And as they cross the northward brow, See white, but not with snow, The mystic thorn beside their path Its holy blossoms show. They carry him where from chapel low Rings clear the angel-bell, — He was the flower of knights and lords, So chant the requiem well : His wound was deep, and his holy sleep Shall last him many a day, Till the cry of crime in the latter time Shall melt the charm away. A cloud is on them, the vision fades, And cries of woe and fear, And sounds unblest of neighboring war, Are thronging on mine ear: Long and loud was the battle-cry, And the groans of them that died; And once again the mist from the plain Rolls up the Mendip side. From the postern-door of an abbaye pile, Passes with heavy cheer For the shouting foes are near : In alb and stole they stand; The incense-fumes the temple fill From blesséd children's hand. Slow past the king that seaward brow, Whence turning he might see, The pagan blazonry; And rolling next on high Angered the twilight sky. The cloud comes on, - the vision is changed, And songs of victory, And hymns of praise to the Lord of Peace, Come over the inland sea; The plain is green and wide; Rolls up the Mendip side. The plats were green with lavish growth, And, like a silver cord, Its glittering water poured. |