Oh, bright the day when England’s crown
Came forth to crown the king;
And in the minds of those around
It seemed no trifling thing.
“Give back the crown!” was William’s word,
“Or my good sword shall pay,
With heavy thrust and bleeding cut,
For this you’ve done to-day.”
For Edward’s will that crown had sent
To grace stern William’s head,
But Harold too had claimed the right,
And for that right he bled.{20}
Aye! bled, and died, and lost the crown
He’d struggled so to save,
And ah! that struggle led him to
His solitary grave.
Yes! Godwin’s son was born to fight—
To chase and not to fly,
And he was born for Hasting’s fate,
And that fate was to die.
Ah! weep ye noble Saxon men—
The last king of your line
Shall sleep the cold, still sleep of death,
That solemn sleep divine.
To-day we merry are and joy
Doth reign supreme around,
And music seems in every noise
And ev’ry passing sound.
To-morrow comes—that joy is gone—
There lies the human clay,
The spirit to its rest has gone
Where brighter shines the day.
We know not when that bidding comes,
That bears us from the earth;
How few the years that stand between
Our death-call and our birth.
Thus was’t with Harold—in the night,
Carousing in the tent,
His joy was great, but ’morrows light,
His knee in suppliance bent.{21}
The cup went round,—and small thought they
Upon the next day’s fight,
That Harold soon in death should lie
Within the waning light.
In William’s camp no cup went round,
But heads were bent in prayer,
And plans were laid; then silence kept
Its peaceful reigning there.
Oh! solemn was the prayer they said—
And solemn was the scene;
The archers with their bows stood by
With grave and silent mien.
The morning came,—the proud array
Stood silent as the dead;
The battle-axes in their hands
Did rise far overhead.
And in the midst, his armor bright,
Stood Harold with his sword,
And far and near around stood those
Who waited at his word.
The banner rose above them all—
Its warrior stood on high,
And precious stones did mark him there
That scarcely wealth could buy.
Duke William led his heroes forth
And gave them to the fray,
Ah, many of those heroes there
Ne’er saw another day.{22}
The battle raged, and sunset came,
And flashed on armor bright,
And all around were mangled men—
It was an awful sight.
King Harold fell, the arrow pierced
And bore him to the ground;
Ah! then was heard a trampling noise—
A wildly flying sound.
The warrior and the banner fell,
And dyed were they in blood
No more the Saxon’s sang their shout:
“God’s rood! aye, holy rood!”