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Old
Spookses’ Pass, Malcolm’s Katie and Other
Poems
by
Isabella Valancy Crawford
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THE
SWORD.
THE
FORGING OF THE SWORD.
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At
the forging of the Sword—
The mountain roots were
stirr’d,
Like the heart-beats of
a bird;
Like flax the tall trees
wav’d,
So fiercely struck the Forgers of the Sword.
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At the forging of the Sword—
So loud the hammers fell,
The thrice seal’d
gates of Hell,
Burst wide their glowing
jaws;
Deep roaring, at the forging of the Sword. [Page
187]
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At the forging of the Sword—
Kind mother Earth was rent,
Like an Arab’s dusky
tent,
And monster-like she fed
On her children; at the forging of the Sword.
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At the forging of the Sword—
So loud the blows they gave,
Up sprang the panting wave;
And blind and furious slew,
Shrill-shouting to the Forgers of the Sword.
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At the forging of the Sword—
The startled air swift whirl’d
The red flames round the
world,
From the Anvil where was
smitten,
The steel, the Forgers wrought into the Sword.
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At the forging of the Sword—
The Maid and Matron fled,
And hid them with the dead;
Fierce prophets sang their
doom,
More deadly, than the wounding of the Sword.
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At the forging of the Sword—
Swift leap’d the quiet
hearts,
In the meadows and the marts;
The tides of men were drawn,
By the gleaming sickle-planet of the Sword!
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——
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Thus
wert thou forged, O lissome sword;
On such dusk anvil wert
thou wrought; [Page 188]
In such red flames thy metal fused!
From such deep hells that
metal brought;
O sword, dread lord, thou speak’st no word,
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But
dumbly rul’st, king and lord!
Less than the Gods by some small span,
Slim sword, how great thy
lieges be!
Glint but in one wild camp-fire’s
light,
Thy God-like vassals rush
to thee.
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O
sword, dread lord, thou speak’st no word,
But dumbly rul’st, king and lord!
Sharp, God, how vast thy altars be!
Green vallies, sacrificial
cups,
Flow with the purple lees of blood;
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Its
smoke is round the mountain tops.
O sword, dread lord, thou speak’st no word,
But dumbly rul’st, king and lord!
O amorous God, fierce lover thou!
Bright sultan of a million
brides,
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Thou
know’st no rival to thy kiss,
Thy loves are thine
whate’re betides,
O sword, dread lord, thou speak’st no word,
But dumbly rul’st, king and lord.
Unflesh thee, sword! No more, no more,
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Thy
steel no more shall sting and shine,
Pass thro’ the fusing fires again;
And learn to prune the laughing
vine.
Fall sword, dread lord, with one accord,
The plough and hook we’ll own as lord! [Page
189]
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