Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
England: Vols. I–IV. 1876–79.
The Death-Race
By Robert Stephen Hawker (18031875)W
And bearing down for Trebarra Height,
She folds her wings by that rocky strand:
Watch ye, and ward ye, a boat on land!
To greet these strangers of the wave;
Wait! since they pace the seaward glen
With the measured tread of mourning men.
What corse is laid on your solemn bier?
Yon minster-ground were a calmer grave
Than the roving bark or the weedy wave!”
To hew in fair France her narrow bed;
And her angry ghost will win no rest
If your Cornish earth lie on her breast.”
By St. Michael of Carne! ’t was an awful sight!
For those folded hands were meekly laid
On the silent breast of a shrouded maid.
Go, bury your dead where best ye may:
But the Norroway barks are over the deep,
So we watch and ward from our guarded steep.”
Ye may hear far off their clanking speed;
What knight in steel is thundering on?
Ye may know the voice of the grim Sir John.
Borne out for dead at the deep of night?”
“Too late! too late!” cried the warder pale,
“Lo! the full deck, and the rushing sail!”
They have spread their sails to the roaring deep;
Watch ye, and ward ye! with wind and tide,
Fitz-Walter hath won his Cornish bride.