The Effigies

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Warrior! whose image on thy tomb,
 With shield and crested head,
Sleeps proudly in the purple gloom
 By the stain'd window shed;
The records of thy name and race
 Have faded from the stone,
Yet, through a cloud of years, I trace
 What thou hast been and done.

A banner, from its flashing spear,
 Flung out o'er many a fight;
A war-cry ringing far and clear,
 And strong to turn the flight;
An arm that bravely bore the lance
 On for the holy shrine;
A haughty heart and a kingly glance–
 Chief! were not these things thine?

A lofty place where leaders sate
 Around the council-board;
In festive halls a chair of state
 When the blood-red wine was pour'd;
A name that drew a prouder tone
 From herald, harp, and bard;–
Surely these things were all thine own,–
 So hadst thou thy reward.

Woman! whose sculptur'd form at rest
 By the armed knight is laid,
With meek hands folded o'er a breast
 In matron robes array'd;
What was thy tale?–Oh! gentle mate
 Of him, the bold and free,
Bound unto his victorious fate,
 What bard hath sung of thee?

He woo'd a bright and burning star–
 Thine was the void, the gloom,
The straining eye that follow'd far
 His fast-receding plume;
The heart-sick listening while his steed
 Sent echoes on the breeze;
The pang–but when did Fame take heed
 Of griefs obscure as these?

Thy silent and secluded hours
 Thro' many a lonely day,
While bending o'er thy broider'd flowers,
 With spirit far away;
Thy weeping midnight prayers for him
 Who fought on Syrian plains,
Thy watchings till the torch grew dim–
 These fill no minstrel strains.

A still, sad life was thine!–long years
 With tasks unguerdon'd fraught,
Deep, quiet love, submissive tears,
 Vigils of anxious thought;
Prayer at the cross in fervour pour'd,
 Alms to the pilgrim given–
Oh! happy, happier than thy lord,
 In that lone path to heaven!

© Felicia Dorothea Hemans