THE CONQUEROR
My fleet on the waters again. I behold
I pointed to England, and proudly behind
"Pevensey!" The shout from a thousand ships rung;
And calm was the evening, the moon it was round,
My army from slumber awakened each day
Fecamp glows before me, -- the feasts debonair,
The seutcheon of Conqueror shines on the wall;
I Remember Falaise and the songs that we sang
When eventide gathered the old and the young,
And over the vineyards the golden moon hung,
In the years that are fled.
The gunfanons waiving, the pennons of gold,
The three bannered Lions of Normandy old,
As in years that are fled.
The wings of a thousand ships rose on the wind,
And the sun, sinking low, on the serried shields shined,
In the years that are fled.
To Hastings we marched the green hillsides among,
And there the great war-song of Roland we sung,
In the years that are fled.
The dead and the dying lay thick on the ground,
As I stood by the side of young Harold discrowned,
In the years that are fled.
The yeomen to harry, the foeman to slay.
They fought by the Number, they fought by the Tay,
In the years that are fled.
The troubadours' dance in the torch-lighted air,
The full wine that flowed 'neath the coronals there,
In the years that are fled.
My triumphs are arrased in yonder bright hall;
And chronicled there, where the tapestries fall,
Are the years that are fled.