The Ballad of the White Horse | Page 4

G.K. Chesterton
out of the grass.
Before the gods that made the gods
Had drunk at dawn their fill,

The White Horse of the White Horse Vale
Was hoary on the hill.
Age beyond age on British land,
Aeons on aeons gone,
Was peace
and war in western hills,
And the White Horse looked on.
For the White Horse knew England
When there was none to know;

He saw the first oar break or bend,
He saw heaven fall and the world
end,
O God, how long ago.
For the end of the world was long ago,
And all we dwell to-day
As
children of some second birth,
Like a strange people left on earth

After a judgment day.
For the end of the world was long ago,
When the ends of the world
waxed free,
When Rome was sunk in a waste of slaves,
And the sun
drowned in the sea.
When Caesar's sun fell out of the sky
And whoso hearkened right

Could only hear the plunging
Of the nations in the night.
When the ends of the earth came marching in
To torch and cresset
gleam.
And the roads of the world that lead to Rome
Were filled
with faces that moved like foam,
Like faces in a dream.
And men rode out of the eastern lands,
Broad river and burning plain;

Trees that are Titan flowers to see,
And tiger skies, striped horribly,

With tints of tropic rain.
Where Ind's enamelled peaks arise
Around that inmost one,
Where

ancient eagles on its brink,
Vast as archangels, gather and drink
The
sacrament of the sun.
And men brake out of the northern lands,
Enormous lands alone,

Where a spell is laid upon life and lust
And the rain is changed to a
silver dust
And the sea to a great green stone.
And a Shape that moveth murkily
In mirrors of ice and night,
Hath
blanched with fear all beasts and birds,
As death and a shock of evil
words
Blast a man's hair with white.
And the cry of the palms and the purple moons,
Or the cry of the frost
and foam,
Swept ever around an inmost place,
And the din of
distant race on race
Cried and replied round Rome.
And there was death on the Emperor
And night upon the Pope:
And
Alfred, hiding in deep grass,
Hardened his heart with hope.
A sea-folk blinder than the sea
Broke all about his land,
But Alfred
up against them bare
And gripped the ground and grasped the air,

Staggered, and strove to stand.
He bent them back with spear and spade,
With desperate dyke and
wall,
With foemen leaning on his shield
And roaring on him when
he reeled;
And no help came at all.
He broke them with a broken sword
A little towards the sea,
And
for one hour of panting peace,
Ringed with a roar that would not
cease,
With golden crown and girded fleece
Made laws under a
tree.
The Northmen came about our land
A Christless chivalry:
Who
knew not of the arch or pen,
Great, beautiful half-witted men
From
the sunrise and the sea.

Misshapen ships stood on the deep
Full of strange gold and fire,

And hairy men, as huge as sin
With horned heads, came wading in

Through the long, low sea-mire.
Our towns were shaken of tall kings
With scarlet beards like blood:

The world turned empty where they trod,
They took the kindly cross
of God
And cut it up for wood.
Their souls were drifting as the sea,
And all good towns and lands

They only saw with heavy eyes,
And broke with heavy hands,
Their gods were sadder than the sea,
Gods of a wandering will,

Who cried for blood like beasts at night,
Sadly, from hill to hill.
They seemed as trees walking the earth,
As witless and as tall,
Yet
they took hold upon the heavens
And no help came at all.
They bred like birds in English woods,
They rooted like the rose,

When Alfred came to Athelney
To hide him from their bows
There was not English armour left,
Nor any English thing,
When
Alfred came to Athelney
To be an English king.
For earthquake swallowing earthquake
Uprent the Wessex tree;
The
whirlpool of the pagan sway
Had swirled his sires as sticks away

When a flood smites the sea.
And the great kings of Wessex
Wearied and sank in gore,
And even
their ghosts in that great stress
Grew greyer and greyer, less and less,

With the lords that died in Lyonesse
And the king that comes no
more.
And the God of the Golden Dragon
Was dumb upon his throne,

And the lord of the Golden Dragon
Ran in the woods alone.

And if ever he climbed the crest of luck
And set the flag before,

Returning as a wheel returns,
Came ruin and the rain that burns,

And all began once more.
And naught was left King Alfred
But shameful tears of rage,
In the
island in the river
In the end of all his age.
In the island in the river
He was broken to his knee:
And he read,
writ with an iron pen,
That God had wearied of Wessex men
And
given their country, field and fen,
To the devils of the sea.
And he saw in a little picture,
Tiny and far away,
His mother sitting
in Egbert's hall,
And a book she showed him, very small,
Where a
sapphire Mary
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