The Complete Poems of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,299 pages of information about The Complete Poems of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.
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The Complete Poems of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,299 pages of information about The Complete Poems of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.

A horn sounds.

What ho! that merry, sudden blast
Reminds me of the days long past! 
And, as of old resounding, grate
The heavy hinges of the gate,
And, clattering loud, with iron clank,
Down goes the sounding bridge of plank,
As if it were in haste to greet
The pressure of a traveller’s feet!

Enter WALTER the Minnesinger.

WALTER. 
How now, my friend!  This looks quite lonely! 
No banner flying from the walls,
No pages and no seneschals,
No warders, and one porter only! 
Is it you, Hubert?

HUBERT. 
                  Ah!  Master Walter!

WALTER. 
Alas! how forms and faces alter! 
I did not know you.  You look older! 
Your hair has grown much grayer and thinner,
And you stoop a little in the shoulder!

HUBERT. 
Alack!  I am a poor old sinner,
And, like these towers, begin to moulder;
And you have been absent many a year!

WALTER. 
How is the Prince?

HUBERT. 
                  He is not here;
He has been ill:  and now has fled.

WALTER. 
Speak it out frankly:  say he’s dead! 
Is it not so?

HUBERT. 
              No; if you please,
A strange, mysterious disease
Fell on him with a sudden blight. 
Whole hours together he would stand
Upon the terrace in a dream,
Resting his head upon his hand,
Best pleased when he was most alone,
Like Saint John Nepomuck in stone,
Looking down into a stream. 
In the Round Tower, night after night,
He sat and bleared his eyes with books;
Until one morning we found him there
Stretched on the floor, as if in a swoon
He had fallen from his chair. 
We hardly recognized his sweet looks!

WALTER. 
Poor Prince!

HUBERT. 
       I think he might have mended;
And he did mend; but very soon
The priests came flocking in, like rooks,
With all their crosiers and their crooks,
And so at last the matter ended.

WALTER. 
How did it end?

HUBERT. 
                Why, in Saint Rochus
They made him stand and wait his doom;
And, as if he were condemned to the tomb,
Began to mutter their hocus-pocus. 
First, the Mass for the Dead they chanted,
Then three times laid upon his head
A shovelful of churchyard clay,
Saying to him, as he stood undaunted,
“This is a sign that thou art dead,
So in thy heart be penitent!”
And forth from the chapel door he went
Into disgrace and banishment,
Clothed in a cloak of hodden gray,
And hearing a wallet, and a bell,
Whose sound should be a perpetual knell
To keep all travellers away.

WALTER. 
Oh, horrible fate!  Outcast, rejected,
As one with pestilence infected!

HUBERT. 
Then was the family tomb unsealed,
And broken helmet, sword, and shield
Buried together, in common wreck,
As is the custom when the last
Of any princely house has passed,
And thrice, as with a trumpet-blast,
A herald shouted down the stair
The words of warning and despair,—­
“O Hoheneck!  O Hoheneck!”

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Project Gutenberg
The Complete Poems of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.