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Poetical Remains of the Late Mrs Hemans/The Chieftain's Son

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For other versions of this work, see The Chieftain's Son.


THE CHIEFTAIN'S SON.*[1]




    Yes, it is ours!—the field is won,
        A dark and evil field!
    Lift from the ground my noble son,
And bear him homewards on his bloody shield!

    Let me not hear your trumpets ring,
        Swell not the battle-horn!
    Thoughts far too sad those notes will bring,
When to the grave my glorious flower is borne!


    Speak not of victory!—in the name
        There is too much of woe!
    Hush'd be the empty voice of Fame—
Call me back his whose graceful head is low.

    Speak not of victory!—from my halls
        The sunny hour is gone!
    The ancient banner on my walls,
Must sink ere long—I had but him—but one!

    Within the dwelling of my sires
        The hearths will soon be cold,
    With me must die the beacon-fires
That stream'd at midnight from the mountain-hold.

    And let them fade, since this must be,
        My lovely and my brave!
    Was thy bright blood pour'd forth for me,
And is there but for stately youth a grave?


    Speak to me once again, my boy!
        Wilt thou not hear my call?
    Thou wert so full of life and joy,
I had not dreamt of this—that thou couldst fall!

    Thy mother watches from the steep
        For thy returning plume;
    How shall I tell her that thy sleep
Is of the silent house, th' untimely tomb?

    Thou didst not seem as one to die,
        With all thy young renown!
    —Ye saw his falchion's flash on high,
In the mid-fight, when spears and crests went down!

    Slow be your march! the field is won!
        A dark and evil field!
    Lift from the ground my noble son,
And bear him homewards on his bloody shield.

  1. *From a publication now out of print.