Page:Troubadour.pdf/151

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THE TROUBADOUR.
147


    Red was the battle, but in vain
    Hiss'd the hot embers with the rain.
    It wasted to a single spark;
    That faded, and all round was dark:
    Then, like a madman who has burst
    The chain which made him doubly curst,
    I fled away. I may not tell
    The agony that on me fell:—
    I fled away, for fiends were near,
    My brain was fire, my heart was fear!

        I was borne on an eagle's wing,
    Till with the noon-sun perishing;
    Then I stood in a world alone,
    From which all other life was gone,
    Whence warmth, and breath, and light were fled,
    A world o'er which a curse was said: