THREE DAYS' RIDE
by: Stephen Vincent Benét
- "ROM Belton Castle to Solway side,
- Hard by the bridge, is three days' ride."
- We had fled full fast from her father's keep,
- And the time was come that we must sleep.
- The first day was an ecstasy,
- A golden mist, a burgeoning tree;
- We rode like gods through a world new-made,
- The hawthorn scented hill and glade,
- A faint, still sweetness in the air--
- And, oh, her face and the wind in her hair!
- And the steady beat of our good steeds' hooves,
- Bearing us northward, strong and fast,
- To my high black tower, stark to the blast,
- Like a swimmer stripped where the Solway moves.
- And ever, riding, we chanted a song,
- Challenging Fortune, loud and long,
- "From Belton Castle to Solway side,
- Strive as you may, is three days' ride!"
- She slept for an hour, wrapped in my cloak,
- And I watched her till the morning broke;
- The second day--and a harsher land,
- And grey bare hills on either hand;
- A surly land and a sullen folk,
- And a fog that came like bitter smoke.
- The road wound on like a twisted snake,
- And our horses sobbed as they topped the brake.
- Till we sprang to earth at Wyvern Fen,
- Where fresh steeds stamped, and were off again.
- Weary and sleepless, bruised and worn,
- We still had strength for laughter and scorn;
- Love held us up through the mire and mist,
- Love fed us, while we clasped and kissed,
- And still we sang as the night closed in,
- Stealthy and slow as a hidden sin,
- "From Belton Castle to Solway side,
- Ride how you will, is three days' ride."
- My love drooped low on the black mare's back,
- Drowned in her hair . . . the reins went slack . . .
- Yet she could not sleep, save to dream bad dreams
- And wake all trembling, till at last
- Her golden head lay on my breast.
- At last we saw the first faint gleams
- Of day. Dawn broke. A sickly light
- Came from the withered sun--a blight
- Was on the land, and poisonous mist
- Shrouded the rotting trees, unkissed
- By any wind, and the black crags glared
- Like sightless, awful faces, spared
- From death to live accursed for aye.
- Dragging slow chains the hours went by.
- We rode on, drunk and drugged with sleep,
- Too deadly weary now to say
- Whether our horses kept the way
- Or no--like slaves stretched on a heap
- Of poisoned arrows. Every limb
- Shot with sharp pain; pain seemed to swim
- Like a red cloud before our eyes. . . .
- The mist broke, and a moment showed,
- Sharp as the Devil's oxen-goad,
- The spear-points where the hot chase rode.
- Idly I watched them dance and rise
- Till white wreaths wiped them out again . . .
- My love jerked at the bridle rein;
- The black mare, dying, broke her heart
- In one swift gallop; for my part
- I dozed; and ever in my brain,
- Four hoofs of fire beat out refrain,
- A dirge to light us down to death,
- A silly rhyme that saith and saith,
- "From Belton Castle to Solway side,
- Though great hearts break, is three days' ride!"
- The black mare staggered, reeled and fell,
- Bearing my love down . . . a great bell
- Began to toll . . . and sudden fire
- Flared at me from the road, a pyre
- It seemed, to burn our bodies in . . .
- And I fell down, far down, within
- The pit's mouth . . . and my brain went blind. . . .
- I woke--a cold sun rose behind
- Black evil hills--my love knelt near
- Beside a stream, her golden hair
- Streaming across the grass--below
- The Solway eddied to and fro,
- White with fierce whirlpools . . . my love turned. . . .
- Thank God, some hours of joy are burned
- Into the mind, and will remain,
- Fierce-blazing still, in spite of pain!
- They came behind us as we kissed,
- Stealthily from the dripping mist,
- Her brothers and their evil band.
- They bound me fast and made me stand.
- They forced her down upon her knees.
- She did not strive or cry or call,
- But knelt there dumb before them all--
- I could not turn away my eyes--
- There was no fear upon her face,
- Although they slew her in that place.
- The daggers rent and tore her breast
- Like dogs that snarl above a kill,
- Her proud face gazed above them still,
- Seeking rest--Oh, seeking rest!
- The blood swept like a crimson dress
- Over her bosom's nakedness,
- A curtain for her weary eyes,
- A muffling-cloth to stop her sighs . . .
- And she was gone--and a red thing lay
- Silent on the trampled clay.
- Beneath my horse my feet are bound,
- My hands are bound behind my back,
- I feel the sinews start to crack--
- And ever to the hoof-beats' sound,
- As we draw near the gallows-tree,
- Where I shall hang right speedily,
- A crazy tune rings in my brain,
- Four hoofs of fire tramp the refrain,
- Crashing clear o'er the roaring crowd,
- Steadily galloping, strong and loud,
- "From Belton Castle to Solway side,
- Hard by the bridge, is three days' ride!"
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