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<h2> BOOK IV. THE WOMAN IN THE FOREST </h2>
<p>Thick thunder of the snorting swine,<br/>
Enormous in the gloam,<br/>
Rending among all roots that cling,<br/>
And the wild horses whinnying,<br/>
Were the night's noises when the King<br/>
Shouldering his harp, went home.<br/>
With eyes of owl and feet of fox,<br/>
Full of all thoughts he went;<br/>
He marked the tilt of the pagan camp,<br/>
The paling of pine, the sentries' tramp,<br/>
And the one great stolen altar-lamp<br/>
Over Guthrum in his tent.<br/>
By scrub and thorn in Ethandune<br/>
That night the foe had lain;<br/>
Whence ran across the heather grey<br/>
The old stones of a Roman way;<br/>
And in a wood not far away<br/>
The pale road split in twain.<br/>
He marked the wood and the cloven ways<br/>
With an old captain's eyes,<br/>
And he thought how many a time had he<br/>
Sought to see Doom he could not see;<br/>
How ruin had come and victory,<br/>
And both were a surprise.<br/>
Even so he had watched and wondered<br/>
Under Ashdown from the plains;<br/>
With Ethelred praying in his tent,<br/>
Till the white hawthorn swung and bent,<br/>
As Alfred rushed his spears and rent<br/>
The shield-wall of the Danes.<br/>
Even so he had watched and wondered,<br/>
Knowing neither less nor more,<br/>
Till all his lords lay dying,<br/>
And axes on axes plying,<br/>
Flung him, and drove him flying<br/>
Like a pirate to the shore.<br/>
Wise he had been before defeat,<br/>
And wise before success;<br/>
Wise in both hours and ignorant,<br/>
Knowing neither more nor less.<br/>
As he went down to the river-hut<br/>
He knew a night-shade scent,<br/>
Owls did as evil cherubs rise,<br/>
With little wings and lantern eyes,<br/>
As though he sank through the under-skies;<br/>
But down and down he went.<br/>
As he went down to the river-hut<br/>
He went as one that fell;<br/>
Seeing the high forest domes and spars.<br/>
Dim green or torn with golden scars,<br/>
As the proud look up at the evil stars,<br/>
In the red heavens of hell.<br/>
For he must meet by the river-hut<br/>
Them he had bidden to arm,<br/>
Mark from the towers of Italy,<br/>
And Colan of the Sacred Tree,<br/>
And Eldred who beside the sea<br/>
Held heavily his farm.<br/>
The roof leaned gaping to the grass,<br/>
As a monstrous mushroom lies;<br/>
Echoing and empty seemed the place;<br/>
But opened in a little space<br/>
A great grey woman with scarred face<br/>
And strong and humbled eyes.<br/>
King Alfred was but a meagre man,<br/>
Bright eyed, but lean and pale:<br/>
And swordless, with his harp and rags,<br/>
He seemed a beggar, such as lags<br/>
Looking for crusts and ale.<br/>
And the woman, with a woman's eyes<br/>
Of pity at once and ire,<br/>
Said, when that she had glared a span,<br/>
"There is a cake for any man<br/>
If he will watch the fire."<br/>
And Alfred, bowing heavily,<br/>
Sat down the fire to stir,<br/>
And even as the woman pitied him<br/>
So did he pity her.<br/>
Saying, "O great heart in the night,<br/>
O best cast forth for worst,<br/>
Twilight shall melt and morning stir,<br/>
And no kind thing shall come to her,<br/>
Till God shall turn the world over<br/>
And all the last are first.<br/>
"And well may God with the serving-folk<br/>
Cast in His dreadful lot;<br/>
Is not He too a servant,<br/>
And is not He forgot?<br/>
"For was not God my gardener<br/>
And silent like a slave;<br/>
That opened oaks on the uplands<br/>
Or thicket in graveyard gave?<br/>
"And was not God my armourer,<br/>
All patient and unpaid,<br/>
That sealed my skull as a helmet,<br/>
And ribs for hauberk made?<br/>
"Did not a great grey servant<br/>
Of all my sires and me,<br/>
Build this pavilion of the pines,<br/>
And herd the fowls and fill the vines,<br/>
And labour and pass and leave no signs<br/>
Save mercy and mystery?<br/>
"For God is a great servant,<br/>
And rose before the day,<br/>
From some primordial slumber torn;<br/>
But all we living later born<br/>
Sleep on, and rise after the morn,<br/>
And the Lord has gone away.<br/>
"On things half sprung from sleeping,<br/>
All sleepy suns have shone,<br/>
They stretch stiff arms, the yawning trees,<br/>
The beasts blink upon hands and knees,<br/>
Man is awake and does and sees—<br/>
But Heaven has done and gone.<br/>
"For who shall guess the good riddle<br/>
Or speak of the Holiest,<br/>
Save in faint figures and failing words,<br/>
Who loves, yet laughs among the swords,<br/>
Labours, and is at rest?<br/>
"But some see God like Guthrum,<br/>
Crowned, with a great beard curled,<br/>
But I see God like a good giant,<br/>
That, labouring, lifts the world.<br/>
"Wherefore was God in Golgotha,<br/>
Slain as a serf is slain;<br/>
And hate He had of prince and peer,<br/>
And love He had and made good cheer,<br/>
Of them that, like this woman here,<br/>
Go powerfully in pain.<br/>
"But in this grey morn of man's life,<br/>
Cometh sometime to the mind<br/>
A little light that leaps and flies,<br/>
Like a star blown on the wind.<br/>
"A star of nowhere, a nameless star,<br/>
A light that spins and swirls,<br/>
And cries that even in hedge and hill,<br/>
Even on earth, it may go ill<br/>
At last with the evil earls.<br/>
"A dancing sparkle, a doubtful star,<br/>
On the waste wind whirled and driven;<br/>
But it seems to sing of a wilder worth,<br/>
A time discrowned of doom and birth,<br/>
And the kingdom of the poor on earth<br/>
Come, as it is in heaven.<br/>
"But even though such days endure,<br/>
How shall it profit her?<br/>
Who shall go groaning to the grave,<br/>
With many a meek and mighty slave,<br/>
Field-breaker and fisher on the wave,<br/>
And woodman and waggoner.<br/>
"Bake ye the big world all again<br/>
A cake with kinder leaven;<br/>
Yet these are sorry evermore—<br/>
Unless there be a little door,<br/>
A little door in heaven."<br/>
And as he wept for the woman<br/>
He let her business be,<br/>
And like his royal oath and rash<br/>
The good food fell upon the ash<br/>
And blackened instantly.<br/>
Screaming, the woman caught a cake<br/>
Yet burning from the bar,<br/>
And struck him suddenly on the face,<br/>
Leaving a scarlet scar.<br/>
King Alfred stood up wordless,<br/>
A man dead with surprise,<br/>
And torture stood and the evil things<br/>
That are in the childish hearts of kings<br/>
An instant in his eyes.<br/>
And even as he stood and stared<br/>
Drew round him in the dusk<br/>
Those friends creeping from far-off farms,<br/>
Marcus with all his slaves in arms,<br/>
And the strange spears hung with ancient charms<br/>
Of Colan of the Usk.<br/>
With one whole farm marching afoot<br/>
The trampled road resounds,<br/>
Farm-hands and farm-beasts blundering by<br/>
And jars of mead and stores of rye,<br/>
Where Eldred strode above his high<br/>
And thunder-throated hounds.<br/>
And grey cattle and silver lowed<br/>
Against the unlifted morn,<br/>
And straw clung to the spear-shafts tall.<br/>
And a boy went before them all<br/>
Blowing a ram's horn.<br/>
As mocking such rude revelry,<br/>
The dim clan of the Gael<br/>
Came like a bad king's burial-end,<br/>
With dismal robes that drop and rend<br/>
And demon pipes that wail—<br/>
In long, outlandish garments,<br/>
Torn, though of antique worth,<br/>
With Druid beards and Druid spears,<br/>
As a resurrected race appears<br/>
Out of an elder earth.<br/>
And though the King had called them forth<br/>
And knew them for his own,<br/>
So still each eye stood like a gem,<br/>
So spectral hung each broidered hem,<br/>
Grey carven men he fancied them,<br/>
Hewn in an age of stone.<br/>
And the two wild peoples of the north<br/>
Stood fronting in the gloam,<br/>
And heard and knew each in its mind<br/>
The third great thunder on the wind,<br/>
The living walls that hedge mankind,<br/>
The walking walls of Rome.<br/>
Mark's were the mixed tribes of the west,<br/>
Of many a hue and strain,<br/>
Gurth, with rank hair like yellow grass,<br/>
And the Cornish fisher, Gorlias,<br/>
And Halmer, come from his first mass,<br/>
Lately baptized, a Dane.<br/>
But like one man in armour<br/>
Those hundreds trod the field,<br/>
From red Arabia to the Tyne<br/>
The earth had heard that marching-line,<br/>
Since the cry on the hill Capitoline,<br/>
And the fall of the golden shield.<br/>
And the earth shook and the King stood still<br/>
Under the greenwood bough,<br/>
And the smoking cake lay at his feet<br/>
And the blow was on his brow.<br/>
Then Alfred laughed out suddenly,<br/>
Like thunder in the spring,<br/>
Till shook aloud the lintel-beams,<br/>
And the squirrels stirred in dusty dreams,<br/>
And the startled birds went up in streams,<br/>
For the laughter of the King.<br/>
And the beasts of the earth and the birds looked down,<br/>
In a wild solemnity,<br/>
On a stranger sight than a sylph or elf,<br/>
On one man laughing at himself<br/>
Under the greenwood tree—<br/>
The giant laughter of Christian men<br/>
That roars through a thousand tales,<br/>
Where greed is an ape and pride is an ass,<br/>
And Jack's away with his master's lass,<br/>
And the miser is banged with all his brass,<br/>
The farmer with all his flails;<br/>
Tales that tumble and tales that trick,<br/>
Yet end not all in scorning—<br/>
Of kings and clowns in a merry plight,<br/>
And the clock gone wrong and the world gone right,<br/>
That the mummers sing upon Christmas night<br/>
And Christmas Day in the morning.<br/>
"Now here is a good warrant,"<br/>
Cried Alfred, "by my sword;<br/>
For he that is struck for an ill servant<br/>
Should be a kind lord.<br/>
"He that has been a servant<br/>
Knows more than priests and kings,<br/>
But he that has been an ill servant,<br/>
He knows all earthly things.<br/>
"Pride flings frail palaces at the sky,<br/>
As a man flings up sand,<br/>
But the firm feet of humility<br/>
Take hold of heavy land.<br/>
"Pride juggles with her toppling towers,<br/>
They strike the sun and cease,<br/>
But the firm feet of humility<br/>
They grip the ground like trees.<br/>
"He that hath failed in a little thing<br/>
Hath a sign upon the brow;<br/>
And the Earls of the Great Army<br/>
Have no such seal to show.<br/>
"The red print on my forehead,<br/>
Small flame for a red star,<br/>
In the van of the violent marching, then<br/>
When the sky is torn of the trumpets ten,<br/>
And the hands of the happy howling men<br/>
Fling wide the gates of war.<br/>
"This blow that I return not<br/>
Ten times will I return<br/>
On kings and earls of all degree,<br/>
And armies wide as empires be<br/>
Shall slide like landslips to the sea<br/>
If the red star burn.<br/>
"One man shall drive a hundred,<br/>
As the dead kings drave;<br/>
Before me rocking hosts be riven,<br/>
And battering cohorts backwards driven,<br/>
For I am the first king known of Heaven<br/>
That has been struck like a slave.<br/>
"Up on the old white road, brothers,<br/>
Up on the Roman walls!<br/>
For this is the night of the drawing of swords,<br/>
And the tainted tower of the heathen hordes<br/>
Leans to our hammers, fires and cords,<br/>
Leans a little and falls.<br/>
"Follow the star that lives and leaps,<br/>
Follow the sword that sings,<br/>
For we go gathering heathen men,<br/>
A terrible harvest, ten by ten,<br/>
As the wrath of the last red autumn—then<br/>
When Christ reaps down the kings.<br/>
"Follow a light that leaps and spins,<br/>
Follow the fire unfurled!<br/>
For riseth up against realm and rod,<br/>
A thing forgotten, a thing downtrod,<br/>
The last lost giant, even God,<br/>
Is risen against the world."<br/>
Roaring they went o'er the Roman wall,<br/>
And roaring up the lane,<br/>
Their torches tossed a ladder of fire,<br/>
Higher their hymn was heard and higher,<br/>
More sweet for hate and for heart's desire,<br/>
And up in the northern scrub and brier,<br/>
They fell upon the Dane.<br/></p>
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