Poems of Felicia Hemans in Friendship's Offering, 1826/A Monarch's Death-bed

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For other versions of this work, see A Monarch's Death-bed.

A MONARCH'S DEATH-BED.




The Emperor Albert First, assassinated by his nephew, John, surnamed the Parricide, expired on the banks of the river Reuss, in the field afterwards called Königsfelden, supported only by a female peasant, who was accidentally passing at the time.




A monarch in his death-pangs lay—
    Did censers breathe perfume,
And soft lamps pour their silvery ray,
    Through his proud chamber's gloom?—
He lay upon a greensward bed,
    Beneath a darkening sky,
A lone tree waving o'er his head,
    A swift stream rolling by.

Had he then fallen as warriors fall,
    Where spear strikes fire with spear?
Was there a banner for his pall,
    A buckler for his bier?
Not so:—nor cloven shields nor helms
    Had strewn the bloody sod,
Where he, the helpless lord of realms,
    Yielded his soul to God!

Were there not friends with words of cheer,
    And princely vassals nigh?
And priests, the crucifix to rear
    Before the fading eye?—
A peasant girl that royal head
    Upon her bosom laid,
And, shrinking not for woman's dread,
    The face of death surveyed.

Alone she sat:—from hill and wood
    Red sank the mournful sun;
Fast gushed the fount of noble blood,
    Treason its worst had done.
With her long hair she vainly prest
    The wounds, to staunch their tide;—
Unknown, on that meek, humble breast,
    Imperial Albert died!
F. H.