Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
Switzerland and Austria: Vol. XVI. 1876–79.
The Battle of Murten
By Veil Weber (17621837)T
At Murten lies Burgund;
And all make haste, for fatherland,
To battle with Burgund.
Shouted the squire and knight;
Loud shouted René of Lorraine,
“We ’ll forward to the fight!”
Too long it still appeared;—
“Ah, God! when ends the long debate?
Are they perchance afeard?
The sun in his tent of blue;
We laggards let the hours go by!
When shall we hack and hew?”
We cared not what befell;
We were not in the heat dismayed,
If this or that man fell.
Draws back the mighty spear;
Thirsted for blood the good broadsword,
Blood drank the mighty spear.
Soldier and champion fled,
And the broad field of battle lay
Knee-deep with spears o’erspread.
To hide from the sunlight sought;
Many sprang headlong into the lake,
Although they thirsted not.
Like ducks swam here and there;
As they a flock of ducks had been,
We shot them in the mere.
With oars we smote them dead,
And piteously we heard them wail;
The green lake turned to red.
We shot them there like crows;
Their feathers helped them not to fly,
No wind to waft them blows.
And many foemen lay
All hacked and hewed upon the ground,
When sunset closed the day;
And they who yet alive were found
Thanks to the night did pay.
Fell to the Switzer’s hand;
Carl made the beggars rich apace
In needy Switzerland.
’T is a Leaguer now that tries;
He took from the king his pawns away;
His flank unguarded lies.
His knights were in a strait;
Turn him whatever way he choose,
There threatens him checkmate.
Who did this rhyme indite:
Till evening mowed he with the sword;
He sang the stour at night.
Fiddler and fighter true,
Champion of lady and of lord,
Dancer and prelate too.
Amen.