The Poetry Corner

The Blind Harper.

By Madison Julius Cawein

And thus it came my feet were led To wizard walls that hairy hung Old as their rock the moss made dead; And, like a ditch of fire flung Around it, uncouth flowers red Thrust spur and fang and tongue. And here I harped. Did dead men list? Or was it hollow hinges gnarred Huge, iron scorn in donjon-twist? And when I thought a face sword-scarred Would curse me, lo! a woman kissed At me hands ringed and starred. And so I sang; for she had leaned Rare beauty to me, dark and tall; I sang of Love, whose Court is queened Of Alinor the virginal, Nor saw how rolled on me a fiend Wolf-eyeballs from the wall. Oh, how I sang! until she laughed Red lips that made lute harmony; I sang of knights who fought and quaffed To Love's own paragon, Marie - Nor saw the suzerain whose shaft Was bowed and bent on me. And I had harped until she wept; But when I sang of Ermengarde Of Anjou, - where her Court is kept By brave, by beauty, and by bard, - She turned a raven there and swept Me, like a fury, 'ward. A bleeding beak had pierced my sight; A crimson claw each cheek had lined; One glimpse: wild walls of threatening night Heaped raven battlements behind A moat of blazing serpents bright - And then I wandered blind.