• What fragrant-footed comer
      Is stepping o’er my head?
    Behold, my queen! the Summer!
      Who deems her warriors dead.
    Now rise, ye knights of many fights,
      From out your sleep profound!
    Make sharp your spears, my gallant peers,
      And prick the frozen ground.

    Before the White Host harm her,
      We ’ll hurry to her aid;...

  • From “The Faërie Queene,” Book I. Canto I.
      A GENTLE Knight was pricking on the plaine,
      Ycladd in mightie armes and silver shielde,
      Wherein old dints of deepe woundes did remaine,
      The cruell markes of many a bloody fielde;
      Yet armes till that time did he never wield:
      His angry steede did chide his foming bitt,
      As much...

  • From “Marmion,” Canto I.
    DAY set on Norham’s castled steep,
    And Tweed’s fair river, broad and deep,
      And Cheviot’s mountains lone:
    The battled towers, the donjon keep,
    The loophole grates where captives weep,
    The flanking walls that round it sweep,
      In yellow lustre shone.
    The warriors on the turrets high,
    Moving athwart...

  • Where is the grave of Sir Arthur O’Kellyn?
    Where may the grave of that good man be?—
    By the side of a spring, on the breast of Helvellyn,
    Under the twigs of a young birch-tree!
    The oak that in summer was sweet to hear,
    And rustled its leaves in the fall of the year,
    And whistled and roared in the winter alone,
    Is gone,—and the birch in...