Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
France: Vols. IX–X. 1876–79.
Bertrand de Born
By Bertrand de Born (c. 1140c. 1215)T
When flowers and leaves are growing;
And it pleases my heart to hear the swell
Of the birds’ sweet chorus flowing
In the echoing wood;
And I love to see, all scattered around,
Pavilions, tents, on the martial ground;
And my spirit finds it good
To see, on the level plains beyond,
Gay knights and steeds caparisoned.
Set men and armies flying;
And it pleases me, too, to hear around
The voice of the soldiers crying;
And joy is mine
When the castles strong, besieged, shake,
And walls uprooted totter and crack,
And I see the foemen join,
On the moated shore all compassed round
With the palisade and guarded mound.
And shields, dismantled and broken,
On the verge of the bloody battle-scene,
The field of wrath betoken;
And the vassals are there,
And there fly the steeds of the dying and dead;
And where the mingled strife is spread,
The noblest warrior’s care
Is to cleave the foeman’s limbs and head,—
The conqueror less of the living than dead.
Or banqueting or reposing,
Like the onset-cry of “Charge them!” rung
From each side, as in battle closing,
Where the horses neigh,
And the call to “Aid!” is echoing loud;
And there on the earth the lowly and proud
In the fosse together lie;
And yonder is piled the mangled heap
Of the brave that scaled the trench’s steep.
Your cities and villages too,
Before ye haste to the battle-scene!
And, Papiol, quickly go,
And tell the Lord of “Oc and No!”
That peace already too long hath been!