XII.
BALLAD.
Alice Brand.
Merry it is in the good greenwood,
When the mavis[241] and merle[242] are singing,
When the deer sweeps by, and the hounds are in cry,
And the hunter’s horn is ringing.
“O Alice Brand, my native land
Is lost for love of you;
And we must hold by wood and wold,[243]
As outlaws wont to do.
“O Alice, ’twas all for thy locks so bright,
And ’twas all for thine eyes so blue,
That on the night of our luckless flight,
Thy brother bold I slew.
“Now must I teach to hew the beech
The hand that held the glaive,
For leaves to spread our lowly bed,
And stakes to fence our cave.
“And for vest of pall,[244] thy finger small,
That wont on harp to stray,
A cloak must shear from the slaughter’d deer,
To keep the cold away.”—
“O Richard! if my brother died,
’Twas but a fatal chance;
For darkling[245] was the battle tried,
And fortune sped the lance.
“If pall and vair[246] no more I wear,
Nor thou the crimson sheen,
As warm, we’ll say, is the russet[247] gray,
As gay the forest-green.[248]
“And, Richard, if our lot be hard,
And lost thy native land,
Still Alice has her own Richard,
And he his Alice Brand.”