White and chill from the wintry skies,
The starlight falls upon ancient Eire:
The wind makes moan thro’ the leafless trees
Of Devenish Isle, like a soul in fear,—
Deep in the heart of its snowy woods,
Fanning a peat-flame, lone and drear.
[Pg 10]
The ruined hut where that turf-fire glows
Hath never a roof of thatch or stone,
But bow and spear on the rude walls hang,
And a bed of skins on the floor is strewn,
Where, close to the embers, stern and still,
Ragnal the leper sits alone.
Ragnal of Errigal, prince of doom,
His face, a death-mask of despair;—
The foul disorder’s loathly scales
Lacquer his skin with their hideous glair:
Dulling the blue of his brave young eye,
Dimming the gold of his tangled hair.
Bowed like a churl of three-score ten,
His peakéd chin in his wasted hands,
He watches the flames with a sluggish eye,
Sparkle and glow in their fiery dance;
Till, deep in the embers, pictured, lie
His life’s lost hopes—its dead romance.
[Pg 11]
A royal castle beside the sea,
On breezy cliffs, exultant, set:
A Prince and Princess, young and fair,
Pacing the grassy parapet,
The golden fringe of his long, bright hair
Sweeping the maiden’s locks of jet.
Thro’ perfum’d air, replete with peace,
The swallows skim the blue waves’ flow:
The lovely Dympna’s hand, at rest
On her lover’s arm (a thing of snow)—
Thrills, as he bends his head, and breathes
In her blushing ear, a whisper low.
She gathers the fleece of her floating veil
From the nodding shade of his raven plume,
As, gravely pleading, he bends again
To hear those bright lips speak his doom.
—Why does she start and lift her head?
Why are her cheeks devoid of bloom?
[Pg 12]
He sees the flash of her wide, dark eye,
He hears her clear voice rise and fall:
“Sooner than sell my faith in Christ,
My life I’d yield—my love—my all!
Content my bridal vows should prove
A martyr’s grave and a virgin’s pall!”
Then, in the flames, his other self
He sees, erect in scorn and pride:
“Sooner would I a leper be,
Far from the world to crouch and hide,
Than bend to a Christian priest mine knee,
Or take to mine arms a Christian bride!”
The royal blood leaps in her face,
Her voice rings out its golden knell:
“O Christ! incline Thy pitying grace,
And pardon this poor infidel!”
Then, with averted, shuddering gaze,
“Unhappy Ragnal! fare thee well!”
[Pg 13]
A sudden darkness shuts her in ...
The flutter of her snowy gown—
The sunlit towers—the sparkling waves
In pallid embers, crumble down;
As Ragnal by the fire sits,
A leprous Prince without a crown!
“O lily, nurtured by the sea!
Sweet Dympna, long-lost, promised bride!
Thine unknown Christ”—(he cries aloud):
“This night hath triumph’d o’er my pride!
Forgive me!”—Lo! a gust of song
Fills all the wintry world outside!