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A Battle

SLOWLY the Moon her banderoles of light

Unfurls upon the sky; her fingers drip

Pale, silvery tides; her armoured warriors

Leave Day's bright tents of azure and of gold,

Wherein they hid them, and in silence flock

Upon the solemn battlefield of Night

To try great issues with the blind old king,

The Titan Darkness, who great Pharoah fought

With groping hands, and conquered for a span.

 

The starry hosts with silver lances *****

The scarlet fringes of the tents of Day,

And turn their crystal shields upon their *******

And point their radiant lances, and so wait

The stirring of the giant in his caves.

 

The solitary hills send long, sad sighs

As the blind Titan grasps their locks of pine

And trembling larch to drag him toward the sky,

That his wild-seeking hands may clutch the Moon

From her war-chariot, scythed and wheeled with light,

Crush bright-mailed stars, and so, a sightless king,

Reign in black desolation! Low-set vales

Weep under the black hollow of his foot,

While sobs the sea beneath his lashing hair

Of rolling mists, which, strong as iron cords,

Twine round tall masts and drag them to the reefs.

 

Swifter rolls up Astarte's light-scythed car;

Dense rise the jewelled lances, groves of light;

Red flouts Mars' banner in the voiceless war

(The mightiest combat is the tongueless one);

The silvery dartings of the lances *****

His fingers from the mountains, catch his locks

And toss them in black fragments to the winds,

Pierce the vast hollow of his misty foot,

Level their diamond tips against his breast,

And force him down to lair within his pit

And thro' its chinks ****** down his groping hands

To quicken Hell with horror-for the strength

That is not of the Heavens is of Hell.

i
Written by
Isabella Valancy Crawford
1850-1887 / Canadian
Lines·Words
38·297
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