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     id="a.1-1878.blms"
     metatype="web.poem, web.manuscript"
     workcode="1-1878"
     version="blms">
    
    
    
    
    <ramheader>
        <filedesc>
            <titlestmt>
                <title>The White Ship</title>
                <author>Dante Gabriel Rossetti</author>
                
                
            </titlestmt>
            <editionstmt>
                <edition>1</edition>
                <copyright>By permission of the British Library</copyright>
            </editionstmt>
            <extent/>
            
            
            <notesstmt/>
            <sourcedesc>
                <citnstruct>
                    <title>The White Ship - Dante Gabriel Rossetti - 1880</title>
                    <author>Dante Gabriel Rossetti</author>
                    <msprod>
                        <date compdate="1878,1880">1878-1880</date>
                        <type>fair copy</type>
                        <assign/>
                        <collation>[i-iv], 1-31</collation>
                        <note>The manuscript is on 17 quarto leaves written on the recto sides only.</note>
                    </msprod>
                    <scribe/>
                    <corrector/>
                    <provenance>
                        <location>British Museum Library, Ashley Collection</location>
                        <recnum>Ashley 3855</recnum>
                        <note/>
                    </provenance>
                    <physicaldesc>
                        <binding>
                            <cover/>
                            <endpapers/>
                        </binding>
                        <typography>
                            <typeface>
                                <point/>
                                <font/>
                            </typeface>
                            <pagelines>
                                <number/>
                                <length/>
                            </pagelines>
                            <columns/>
                            <margin type="top"/>
                            <margin type="bottom"/>
                            <margin type="right"/>
                            <margin type="left"/>
                            <note/>
                        </typography>
                        <paper>ruled white laid paper</paper>
                        <watermark>RW[?]</watermark>
                        <size>22 x 17.5 cm</size>
                        <note/>
                    </physicaldesc>
                </citnstruct>
            </sourcedesc>
        </filedesc>
        <encodingdesc/>
        <profiledesc>
            <commentaries>
                <head>Commentary</head>
                <section type="intro">
                    <head>Introduction</head>
                    <p>This bound volume was put together by T. J. Wise to house the holograph
                        manuscript of the ballad, along with the 1881 printed text from the<xref doc="a.2-1881.1stedn.rad" workcode="1-1878" from="71" to="31">
                            <title level="wrk">
                                <hi rend="i">Ballads and Sonnets</hi>
                            </title>
                        </xref> volume.</p>
                </section>
                <section type="texthistcomp">
                    <head>Textual History: Composition</head>
                    <p/>
                </section>
                <section type="texthistrev">
                    <head>Textual History: Revision</head>
                    <p/>
                </section>
                <section type="prodhist">
                    <head>Production History</head>
                    <p/>
                </section>
                <section type="recepthist">
                    <head>Reception History</head>
                    <p/>
                </section>
                <section type="icon">
                    <head>Iconographic</head>
                    <p/>
                </section>
                <section type="printhist">
                    <head>Printing History</head>
                    <p/>
                </section>
                <section type="pictorial">
                    <head>Pictorial</head>
                    <p/>
                </section>
                <section type="historical">
                    <head>Historical</head>
                    <p/>
                </section>
                <section type="literary">
                    <head>Literary</head>
                    <p/>
                </section>
                <section type="translation">
                    <head>Translation</head>
                    <p/>
                </section>
                <section type="autobio">
                    <head>Autobiographical</head>
                    <p/>
                </section>
                <section type="biblio">
                    <head>Bibliographic</head>
                    <p/>
                </section>
            </commentaries>
        </profiledesc>
        <revisiondesc/>
    </ramheader>
    <text>
        <front>
            <div0 anchor="front.1" n="1" type="section">
                <page n="[i]" image="a.1-1878.blms.1.tif"/>
                <div1 anchor="front.1.1" n="1" type="bookplate">
                    <pageheader>
                        <note>Bookplate with standing female angel blowing trumpet and seated female
                            angel. Between the two figures is a flowing banner on which is inscribed
                            the owner's name. Below the figures and the ower's name is an inscribed poem.</note>
                    </pageheader>
                    <div2 anchor="front.1.1.1" n="1" type="epigraph">
                        <p>THOMAS<lb/> JAMES WISE<lb/> HIS BOOK<lb/>
                        </p>
                        <div3 anchor="front.1.1.1.1" n="1" type="poem">
                            <lg n="1">
                                <l n="1">BOOKS BRING ME FRIENDS</l>
                                <l n="2">WHERE'ER ON EARTH I BE.</l>
                                <l n="3">SOLACE OF SOLITUDE&amp;</l>
                                <l n="4">BONDS OF SOCIETY!</l>
                            </lg>
                        </div3>
                    </div2>
                </div1>
                <epage/>
                <page n="[ii]" image="a.1-1878.blms.2.tif"/>
                <page n="[iii]" image="a.1-1878.blms.3.tif"/>
                <div1 anchor="front.1.2" n="2" type="frontispiece">
                    <pageheader>
                        <note>Portrait of Dante Gabriel Rossetti</note>
                        <note>After this page, only the rectos have been tagged.  All the versos in the volume are blank.</note>
                    </pageheader>
                </div1>
            </div0>
            <page n="[iv]" image="a.1-1878.blms.4.tif"/>
            <titlepage>
                <doctitle>
                    <titlepart type="main">
                        <hi rend="sc">
                            <hi rend="u">The White Ship</hi>
                        </hi>
                        <lb/>
                        <hi rend="u">A Ballad<lb/> by<lb/>
                            <hi rend="sc">Dante Gabriel Rossetti</hi>
                        </hi>
                        <lb/>
                        <ornlb>---</ornlb>
                        <hi rend="u">The original holograph Manuscript<lb/> composed during the
                            years 1878 to 1880</hi>
                        <lb/>
                        <ornlb>---</ornlb>
                        <hi rend="u">
                            <hi rend="i">First printed in &#8221;Ballads and Sonnets&#8220;</hi>
                        </hi>
                        <lb/>
                        <hi rend="u">1881</hi>
                    </titlepart>
                </doctitle>
            </titlepage>
            <epage/>
        </front>
        <body>
            <page n="1" image="a.1-1878.blms.6.tif"/>
            <pageheader>
                <ornament/>
                <technotes/>
                <bibliosig/>
                <note/>
            </pageheader>
            <div0 anchor="0.1" n="2" type="section">
                <div1 anchor="0.1.1" n="2" type="ballad" title="The White Ship" workcode="1-1878">
                    <divheader>
                        <del>1</del>
                        <add>1</add>
                    </divheader>
                    <divheader>
                        <title>The White Ship<lb/>(25 Nov: 1120.)<lb/>
                        </title>
                    </divheader>
                    <lg n="1" type="sexain">
                        <l n="1">By none but me can the tale be told,</l>
                        <l n="2">The butcher of Rouen, poor Berold.</l>
                        <l n="3" indent="1">(<hi rend="u">Lands are swayed by a King on a throne</hi>.)</l>
                        <l n="4">'Twas a royal train put forth to sea,</l>
                        <l n="5">Yet the tale can be told by none but me.</l>
                        <l n="6" indent="1">(<hi rend="u">The sea hath no King but God alone</hi>)</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="2" type="couplet">
                        <l n="7">King Henry held it as life's whole gain</l>
                        <l n="8">That after his death his son should reign.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="3" type="couplet">
                        <l n="9">'Twas so in my youth I heard men say,</l>
                        <l n="10">And my old age calls it back today.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="4" type="couplet">
                        <l n="11">King Henry of England's realm was he,</l>
                        <l n="12">And Henry Duke of Normandy.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="5" type="couplet">
                        <l n="13">The times had changed when on either coast</l>
                        <l n="14">&#8220;Clerkly Harry&#8221; was all his boast.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="6" type="tercet">
                        <l n="15">Of ruthless strokes full many an one</l>
                        <l n="16">He had struck to crown himself and his son;</l>
                        <l n="17">And his elder brother's eyes were gone.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <epage/>
                    <page n="2" image="a.1-1878.blms.8.tif"/>
                    <lg n="7" type="couplet">
                        <l n="18">But all the chiefs of the English land</l>
                        <l n="19">Had knelt and kissed the Prince's hand.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="8" type="couplet">
                        <l n="20">And next with his son he sailed to France</l>
                        <l n="21">To claim the Norman allegiance:</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="9" type="couplet">
                        <l n="22">And every baron in Normandy</l>
                        <l n="23">Had taken the oath of fealty.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="10" type="couplet">
                        <l n="24">'Twas sworn and sealed, and the day had come</l>
                        <l n="25">When the King &amp; the Prince might journey home:</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="11" type="couplet">
                        <l n="26">For Christmas cheer is to home hearts dear,</l>
                        <l n="27">And Christmas now was drawing near.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="12" type="couplet">
                        <l n="28">Stout Fitz-Stephen came to the King;&#8212;</l>
                        <l n="29">A pilot famous in sea-faring;</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="13" type="couplet">
                        <l n="30">And he held to the King, in all men's sight,</l>
                        <l n="31">A mark of gold for his tribute's right.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="14" type="tercet">
                        <l n="32">&#8221;Liege Lord! my father guided the ship</l>
                        <l n="33">From whose boat your father's foot did slip</l>
                        <l n="34">When he caught the English soil in his grip,</l>
                    </lg>
                    <epage/>
                    <page n="3" image="a.1-1878.blms.10.tif"/>
                    <lg n="15" type="couplet">
                        <l n="35">&#8220;And cried,&#8221; By this clasp I claim command</l>
                        <l n="36">O'er every rood of English land!&#8221;</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="16" type="couplet">
                        <l n="37">&#8220;He was borne to the realm you rule o'er now</l>
                        <l n="38">In that ship with the archer carved at her prow:</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="17" type="couplet">
                        <l n="39">&#8220;And thither I'll bear, an' it be my due,</l>
                        <l n="40">Your father's son and his grandson too.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="18" type="couplet">
                        <l n="41">&#8220;The famed White Ship is mine in the bay;</l>
                        <l n="42">From Harfleur's harbour she sails today,</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="19" type="couplet">
                        <l n="43">With masts fair-pennon'd as Norman spears</l>
                        <l n="42">And with fifty well-tried mariners.&#8221;</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="20" type="couplet">
                        <l n="43">Quoth the King: &#8220;My ships are chos'n each one,</l>
                        <l n="44">But I'll not say nay to Stephen's son.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="21" type="couplet">
                        <l n="45">&#8220;My son and daughter and fellowship</l>
                        <l n="46">Shall cross the water in the White Ship.&#8221;</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="22" type="couplet">
                        <l n="47">The King set sail with the eve's south wind,</l>
                        <l n="48">And soon he left that coast behind.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <epage/>
                    <page n="4" image="a.1-1878.blms.12.tif"/>
                    <lg n="23" type="couplet">
                        <l n="49">The Prince and all his, a princely show,</l>
                        <l n="50">Remained in the good White Ship to go.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="24" type="tercet">
                        <l n="51">With noble knights and with ladies fair,</l>
                        <l n="52">With courtiers and sailors gathered there,</l>
                        <l n="53">Three hundred living souls we were:</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="25" type="couplet">
                        <l n="54">And I Berold was the meanest hind</l>
                        <l n="55">In all that train to the Prince assign'd.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="26" type="couplet">
                        <l n="56">The Prince was a lawless shameless youth;</l>
                        <l n="57">From his father's loins he sprang without ruth:</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="27" type="couplet">
                        <l n="58">Eighteen years till then he had seen,</l>
                        <l n="59">And the devil's dues in him were eighteen.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="28" type="couplet">
                        <l n="60">And now he cried: &#8220;Bring wine from below;</l>
                        <l n="61">Let the sailors revel ere yet they row:</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="29" type="couplet">
                        <l n="62">&#8220;Our speed shall o'ertake my father's flight</l>
                        <l n="63">Though we sail from the harbour at midnight.&#8221;</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="30" type="couplet">
                        <l n="64">The rowers made good cheer without check,</l>
                        <l n="65">The lords and ladies obeyed his beck;</l>
                        <l n="66">The night was light, and they danced on the deck.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <epage/>
                    <page n="5" image="a.1-1878.blms.14.tif"/>
                    <lg n="31" type="couplet">
                        <l n="67">But at midnight's stroke they cleared the bay,</l>
                        <l n="68">And the White Ship furrowed the water-way.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="32" type="couplet">
                        <l n="69">The sails were set, and the oars kept tune</l>
                        <l n="70">To the double flight of the ship and the moon:</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="33" type="couplet">
                        <l n="71">Swifter and swifter the White Ship sped</l>
                        <l n="72">Till she flew as the spirit flies from the dead:</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="34" type="couplet">
                        <l n="73">As white as a lily glimmered she</l>
                        <l n="74">Like a ship's fair ghost upon the sea.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="35" type="couplet">
                        <l n="75" part="i">And the Prince cried, &#8221;Friends, 'tis the hour
                            to sing!</l>
                        <l n="76">Is a songbird's course so swift on the wing?&#8221;</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="36" type="tercet">
                        <l n="77">And under the winter stars' still throng,</l>
                        <l n="78">From brown throats, white throats, merry &amp; strong,</l>
                        <l n="79">The knights and the ladies raised a song.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="37" type="tercet">
                        <l n="80">A song,&#8212;nay, a shriek that rent the sky,</l>
                        <l n="81">That leaped o'er the deep!&#8212;the grievous cry</l>
                        <l n="82">Of three hundred living that now must die.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <epage/>
                    <page n="6" image="a.1-1878.blms.16.tif"/>
                    <lg n="38" type="couplet">
                        <l n="83">An instant shriek that sprang to the shock</l>
                        <l n="84">As the ship's keel felt the sunken rock.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="39" type="couplet">
                        <l n="85">'Tis said that afar&#8212;a shrill strange sigh&#8212;</l>
                        <l n="86">The King's ships heard it and knew not why.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="40" type="couplet">
                        <l n="87">Pale Fitz-Stephen stood by the helm</l>
                        <l n="88">'Mid all those folk that the waves must whelm.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="41" type="couplet">
                        <l n="89">A great King's heir for the waves to whelm,</l>
                        <l n="90">And the helpless pilot pale at the helm!</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="42" type="couplet">
                        <l n="91">The ship was eager and sucked athirst</l>
                        <l n="92">As a swimming bladder fills when pierc'd;</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="43" type="couplet">
                        <l n="93">And like the moil round a sinking cup,</l>
                        <l n="94">The waters against her crowded up.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="44" type="tercet">
                        <l n="95">A moment the pilot's senses spin,&#8212;</l>
                        <l n="96">The next he snatched the Prince 'mid the din,</l>
                        <l n="97">Cut the boat loose, and the youth leaped in.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="45" type="couplet">
                        <l n="98">A few friends leaped with him, standing near.</l>
                        <l n="99">&#8220;Row! the sea's smooth and the night is clear!&#8221;</l>
                    </lg>
                    <epage/>
                    <page n="7" image="a.1-1878.blms.18.tif"/>
                    <lg n="46" type="couplet">
                        <l n="99">&#8220;What! none to be saved but these and I?&#8221;</l>
                        <l n="100">&#8220;Row, row as you'd live! All here must die.&#8221;</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="47" type="tercet">
                        <l n="101">Out of the churn of the choking ship,</l>
                        <l n="102">Which the gulf grapples and the waves strip,</l>
                        <l n="103">They struck with the strained oars' flash &amp; dip.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="48" type="couplet">
                        <l n="104">'Twas then o'er the splitting bulwarks' brim</l>
                        <l n="105">The Prince's sister screamed to him.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="49" type="couplet">
                        <l n="106">He turned about, still rowing apace,</l>
                        <l n="107">And through the whirled surf he knew her face.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="50" type="couplet">
                        <l n="108">To the toppling decks clave one and all</l>
                        <l n="109">As a fly cleaves to a chamber-wall.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="51" type="tercet">
                        <l n="110">I Berold was clinging anear;</l>
                        <l n="111">I prayed for myself and quaked with fear,</l>
                        <l n="112">But I saw his eyes as he looked at her.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="52" type="couplet">
                        <l n="113">He knew her face and he heard her cry,</l>
                        <l n="114">And he said, &#8220;Put back! she must not die!&#8221;</l>
                    </lg>
                    <epage/>
                    <page n="8" image="a.1-1878.blms.20.tif"/>
                    <lg n="53" type="couplet">
                        <l n="115">And back through the flying foam they reel</l>
                        <l n="116">Like a leaf that scuds in a water-wheel.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="54" type="couplet">
                        <l n="117">'Neath the ship's travail they scarce might float,</l>
                        <l n="118">But he rose and stood in the rocking boat.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="55" type="tercet">
                        <l n="119">Prone the poor ship leaned on the tide:</l>
                        <l n="120">O'er the naked keel as she best might slide,</l>
                        <l n="121">The sister toiled to the brother's side.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="56" type="couplet">
                        <l n="122">He reached an oar to her from below,</l>
                        <l n="123">And stiffened his arms to clutch her so.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="57" type="couplet">
                        <l n="124">But now from the ship some spied the boat,</l>
                        <l n="125">And &#8220;Saved!&#8221; was the cry from many a throat:</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="58" type="tercet">
                        <l n="126">And down to the boat they leaped and fell:</l>
                        <l n="127">It turned as a bucket turns in a well,</l>
                        <l n="128">And nothing was there but the surge &amp; swell.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="59" type="couplet">
                        <l n="129">The Prince that was and the King to come,</l>
                        <l n="130">There in an instant gone to his doom,</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="60" type="couplet">
                        <l n="131">Despite of all England's bended knee</l>
                        <l n="132">And maugre the Norman fealty!</l>
                    </lg>
                    <epage/>
                    <page n="9" image="a.1-1878.blms.22.tif"/>
                    <lg n="61" type="couplet">
                        <l n="133">He was a Prince of lust and pride;</l>
                        <l n="134">He showed no grace till the hour he died.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="62" type="tercet">
                        <l n="135">When he should be King, he oft would vow,</l>
                        <l n="136">He'd yoke the peasant to his own plough.</l>
                        <l n="137">O'er him the ships score their furrows now.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="63" type="couplet">
                        <l n="138">God only knows where his soul did wake,</l>
                        <l n="139">But I saw him die for his sister's sake.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="64" type="sexain">
                        <l n="140">By none but me can the tale be told,</l>
                        <l n="141">The butcher of Rouen, poor Berold.</l>
                        <l n="142">(<hi rend="u">Lands are swayed by a King on a throne</hi>.)</l>
                        <l n="143">'Twas a royal train put forth to sea,</l>
                        <l n="144">Yet the tale can be told by none but me.</l>
                        <l n="145">(<hi rend="u">The sea hath no King but God alone</hi>.)</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="65" type="couplet">
                        <l n="146">And now the end came o'er the waters' womb</l>
                        <l n="147">Like the last great Day that's yet to come.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="66" type="couplet">
                        <l n="148">With prayers in vain and curses in vain,</l>
                        <l n="149">The White Ship sundered on the mid-main:</l>
                    </lg>
                    <epage/>
                    <page n="10" image="a.1-1878.blms.24.tif"/>
                    <lg n="67" type="couplet">
                        <l n="150">And what were men and what was a ship</l>
                        <l n="151">Were toys and splinters in the sea's grip.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="68" type="tercet">
                        <l n="152">I Berold was down in the sea;</l>
                        <l n="153">And passing strange though the thing may be,</l>
                        <l n="164">Of dreams then known I remember me.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="69" type="couplet">
                        <l n="165">Blithe is the shout on Harfleur's strand</l>
                        <l n="166">When morning lights the sails to land:</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="70" type="couplet">
                        <l n="167">And blithe is Honfleur's echoing gloam</l>
                        <l n="168">When mothers call the children home:</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="71" type="couplet">
                        <l n="169">And high do the bells of Rouen beat</l>
                        <l n="170">When the Body of Christ goes down the street.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="72" type="couplet">
                        <l n="171">These things and the like were heard &amp; shown</l>
                        <l n="172">In a moment's trance 'neath the sea alone;</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="73" type="couplet">
                        <l n="173">And when I rose, 'twas the sea did seem,</l>
                        <l n="174">And not these things, to be all a dream.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="74" type="couplet">
                        <l n="175">The ship was gone and the crowd was gone,</l>
                        <l n="176">And the deep shuddered &amp; the moon shone:</l>
                    </lg>
                    <epage/>
                    <page n="11" image="a.1-1878.blms.26.tif"/>
                    <lg n="75" type="tercet">
                        <l n="177">And in a strait grasp my arms did span</l>
                        <l n="178">The mainyard split from the mast where it ran;</l>
                        <l n="179">And on it with me was another man.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="76" type="couplet">
                        <l n="180">Where lands were none 'neath the dim sea-sky,</l>
                        <l n="181">We told our names, that man and I.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="77" type="couplet">
                        <l n="182">&#8220;O I am Godefroy de l'Aigle hight,</l>
                        <l n="183">And son I am to a belted knight.&#8221;</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="78" type="couplet">
                        <l n="184">&#8220;And I am Berold the butcher's son</l>
                        <l n="185">Who slays the beasts in Rouen town.&#8221;</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="79" type="couplet">
                        <l n="186">Then cried we upon God's name, as we</l>
                        <l n="187">Did drift on the bitter winter sea.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="80" type="couplet">
                        <l n="188">But lo! a third man rose o'er the wave,</l>
                        <l n="189">And we said, &#8220;Thank God! us three may He save!&#8221;</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="81" type="couplet">
                        <l n="190">He clutched to the yard with panting stare,</l>
                        <l n="191">And we looked &amp; knew Fitz-Stephen there.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="82" type="tercet">
                        <l n="192">He clung, and &#8220;What of the Prince?&#8221; quoth he.</l>
                        <l n="193">&#8220;Lost, lost!&#8221; we cried. He cried,
                            &#8220;Woe on me!&#8221;</l>
                        <l n="194">And loosed his hold &amp; sank through the sea.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <epage/>
                    <page n="12" image="a.1-1878.blms.28.tif"/>
                    <lg n="83" type="couplet">
                        <l n="195">And soul with soul again in that space</l>
                        <l n="196">We two were together face to face:</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="84" type="couplet">
                        <l n="197">And each knew each, as the moments sped,</l>
                        <l n="198">Less for one living than for one dead:</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="85" type="couplet">
                        <l n="199">And every still star overhead</l>
                        <l n="200">Seemed an eye that knew we were but dead.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="86" type="couplet">
                        <l n="201">And the hours passed; till the noble's son</l>
                        <l n="202">Sighed, &#8220;God be thy help! my strength's foredone!&#8212;</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="87" type="couplet">
                        <l n="203">&#8220;O farewell, friend, for I can no more!&#8221;</l>
                        <l n="204">&#8220;Christ take thee!&#8221; I moaned; &amp;
                            his life was o'er.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="88" type="couplet">
                        <l n="205">Three hundred souls were all lost but one,</l>
                        <l n="206">And I drifted over the sea alone.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="89" type="couplet">
                        <l n="207">At last the morning rose o'er the sea</l>
                        <l n="208">Like an angel's wing that beat tow'rds me.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="90" type="tercet">
                        <l n="209">Sore numbed I was in my sheepskin coat;</l>
                        <l n="210">Half dead I hung, and might nothing note</l>
                        <l n="211">Till I woke sun-warmed in a fisher-boat.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <epage/>
                    <page n="13" image="a.1-1878.blms.30.tif"/>
                    <lg n="91" type="couplet">
                        <l n="212">The sun was high o'er the eastern brim</l>
                        <l n="213">As I praised God and gave thanks to Him.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="92" type="tercet">
                        <l n="214">That day I told my tale to a priest,</l>
                        <l n="215">Who charged me, till the shrift were releas'd,</l>
                        <l n="216">That I should keep it in mine own breast.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="93" type="couplet">
                        <l n="217">And with the priest I thence did fare</l>
                        <l n="218">To King Henry's court at Winchester.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="94" type="tercet">
                        <l n="219">We spoke with the King's high chamberlain,</l>
                        <l n="220">And he wept and mourned again &amp; again,</l>
                        <l n="221">As if his own son had been slain:</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="95" type="couplet">
                        <l n="222">And round us ever there crowded fast</l>
                        <l n="223">Great men with faces all aghast:</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="96" type="tercet">
                        <l n="224">And who so bold that might tell the thing</l>
                        <l n="225">Which now they knew to their lord the King?</l>
                        <l n="226">Much woe I learnt in their communing.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="97" type="couplet">
                        <l n="227">The King had watched with a heart sore stirr'd</l>
                        <l n="228">For two whole days, and this was the third:</l>
                    </lg>
                    <epage/>
                    <page n="14" image="a.1-1878.blms.32.tif"/>
                    <lg n="98" type="couplet">
                        <l n="229">And still to all his court would he say,</l>
                        <l n="230">&#8220;What keeps my son so long away?&#8221;</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="99" type="couplet">
                        <l n="231">And they said:&#8212; &#8220;The ports lie far and wide</l>
                        <l n="232">That skirt the swell of the English tide;</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="100" type="tercet">
                        <l n="233">&#8220;And England's cliffs are not more white</l>
                        <l n="234">Than her women are, and scarce so light</l>
                        <l n="235">Her skies as their eyes are blue and bright;</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="101" type="couplet">
                        <l n="236">&#8220;And in some port that he reached from France</l>
                        <l n="237">The Prince has lingered for his pleasałnce.&#8221;</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="102" type="couplet">
                        <l n="238">But once the King asked: &#8220;What distant cry</l>
                        <l n="239">Was that we heard 'twixt the sea and sky?&#8221;</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="103" type="couplet">
                        <l n="240">And one said: &#8220;With suchlike shouts, pardie!</l>
                        <l n="241">Do the fishers fling their nets at sea.&#8221;</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="104" type="couplet">
                        <l n="242">And one: &#8220;Who knows not the shrieking quest</l>
                        <l n="243">When the sea-mew misses its young from the nest?&#8221;</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="105" type="couplet">
                        <l n="244">'Twas thus till now they had soothed his dread,</l>
                        <l n="245">Albeit they knew not what they said:</l>
                    </lg>
                    <epage/>
                    <page n="15" image="a.1-1878.blms.34.tif"/>
                    <lg n="106" type="couplet">
                        <l n="246">But who should speak today of the thing</l>
                        <l n="247">That all knew there except the King?</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="107" type="couplet">
                        <l n="248">Then pondering much they found a way,</l>
                        <l n="249">And met round the King's high seat that day:</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="108" type="couplet">
                        <l n="250">And the King sat with a heart sore stirr'd,</l>
                        <l n="251">And seldom he spoke and seldom heard.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="109" type="couplet">
                        <l n="252">'Twas then through the hall the King was 'ware</l>
                        <l n="253">Of a little boy with golden hair,</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="110" type="couplet">
                        <l n="254">As bright as the golden poppy is</l>
                        <l n="255">That the beach breeds for the surf to kiss:</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="111" type="couplet">
                        <l n="256">Yet pale his cheek as the thorn in Spring,</l>
                        <l n="257">And his garb black like the raven's wing.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="112" type="couplet">
                        <l n="258">Nothing heard but his foot through the hall,</l>
                        <l n="259">For now the lords were silent all.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="113" type="couplet">
                        <l n="260">And the King wondered, and said, &#8220;Alack!</l>
                        <l n="251">Who sends me a fair boy dressed in black?</l>
                    </lg>
                    <epage/>
                    <page n="16" image="a.1-1878.blms.36.tif"/>
                    <lg n="114" type="couplet">
                        <l n="262">&#8220;Why, sweet heart, do you pace through the hall</l>
                        <l n="263">As though my court were a funeral?&#8221;</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="115" type="couplet">
                        <l n="264">Then lowly knelt the child at the dais,</l>
                        <l n="265">And looked up weeping in the King's face.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="116" type="couplet">
                        <l n="266">&#8220;O wherefore black, O King, ye may say,</l>
                        <l n="267">For white is the hue of death today.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="117" type="couplet">
                        <l n="268">&#8220;Your son and all his fellowship</l>
                        <l n="269">Lie in the Sea's bed with the White Ship.&#8221;</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="118" type="tercet">
                        <l n="270">King Henry fell as a man struck dead;</l>
                        <l n="271">And speechless still he stared from his bed</l>
                        <l n="272">When to him next day my rede I read.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="119" type="couplet">
                        <l n="273">There's many an hour must needs beguile</l>
                        <l n="274">A King's high heart that he should smile,&#8212;</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="120" type="couplet">
                        <l n="275">Full many a lordly hour, full fain</l>
                        <l n="276">Of his realm's rule and pride of his reign:&#8212;</l>
                    </lg>
                    <lg n="121" type="stanza">
                        <l n="277">But this King never smiled again.</l>
                    </lg>
                    <epage/>
                    <page n="17" image="a.1-1878.blms.38.tif"/>
                    <lg n="122" type="sexain">
                        <l n="278">By none but me can the tale be told,</l>
                        <l n="279">The butcher of Rouen, poor Berold.</l>
                        <l n="280" indent="1">(<hi rend="u">Lands are swayed by a King on a throne.</hi>)</l>
                        <l n="281">'Twas a royal train put forth to sea,</l>
                        <l n="282">Yet the tale can be told by none but me.</l>
                        <l n="283" indent="1">(<hi rend="u">The sea hath no King but God alone</hi>.)</l>
                    </lg>
                    <ornlb>------</ornlb>
                </div1>
            </div0>
            <div0 anchor="0.2" n="3" type="section">
                <p>
                    <hi rend="u">D G Rossetti 1880</hi>.<lb/> (To Lucy Rossetti for her
                    children,<lb/> with her brother's and their uncle's love.)<lb/>
                </p>
            </div0>
            <omit extent="Ballads and Sonnets text" reason="relevance to document questionable"/>
                <pagenote>
                    <note>In this bound volume, Wise included the text from the fourth edition (1882) of DGR's <xref doc="a.2-1881.4thed.rad" link="dead" from="69">
                            <title level="wrk">
                                <hi rend="i">Ballads and Sonnets</hi>
                            </title>
                        </xref>, which has been omitted in this transcription.</note>
                </pagenote>
            <epage/>
            
            
            
            

        </body>
    </text>
</ram>
