"Poetry is truth in its Sunday clothes." -Joseph Roux
"The Highwayman's Footsteps", Tristan Elwell
The Highwayman, by Alfred Noyes
PART TWO
He did not come in the dawning. He did not come at
noon;
And out of the tawny sunset, before the rise of the
moon,
When the road was a gypsy’s ribbon, looping the purple
moor,
A red-coat troop came marching—
Marching—marching—
King George’s men came marching, up to the old inn-door.
They said no word to the landlord. They drank his ale
instead.
But they gagged his daughter, and bound her, to the foot of
her narrow bed.
Two of them knelt at her casement, with muskets at their
side!
There was death at every window;
And hell at
one dark window;
For Bess could see, through her casement, the road that he
would ride.
They had tied her up to attention, with many a sniggering
jest.
They had bound a musket beside her, with the muzzle beneath
her breast!
“Now, keep good watch!” and they kissed her. She heard the
doomed man say—
Look for me by moonlight;
Watch for me
by moonlight;
I’ll come to thee by moonlight, though hell should bar the
way!
She twisted her hands behind her; but all the knots held
good!
She writhed her hands till her fingers were wet with sweat
or blood!
They stretched and strained in the darkness, and the hours
crawled by like years
Till, now, on the stroke of midnight,
Cold, on the
stroke of midnight,
The tip of one finger touched it! The trigger at least was
hers!
The tip of one finger touched it. She strove no more for the
rest.
Up, she stood up to attention, with the muzzle beneath her
breast.
She would not risk their hearing; she would not strive
again;
For the road lay bare in the moonlight;
Blank and bare in the moonlight;
And the blood of her veins, in the moonlight, throbbed to
her love’s refrain.
Tlot-tlot; tlot-tlot! Had they heard it? The horsehoofs
ringing clear;
Tlot-tlot; tlot-tlot, in the distance? Were they deaf that
they did not hear?
Down the ribbon of moonlight, over the brow of the hill,
The highwayman came riding—
Riding—riding—
The red coats looked to their priming! She stood up,
straight and still.
Tlot-tlot, in the frosty silence! Tlot-tlot, in the echoing
night!
Nearer he came and nearer. Her face was like a light.
Her eyes grew wide for a moment; she drew one last deep
breath,
Then her finger moved in the moonlight,
Her musket
shattered the moonlight,
Shattered her breast in the moonlight and warned him—with
her death.
He turned. He spurred to the west; he did not know who
stood
Bowed, with her head o’er the musket, drenched with her own
blood!
Not till the dawn he heard it, and his face grew grey to
hear
How Bess, the landlord’s daughter,
The
landlord’s black-eyed daughter,
Had watched for her love in the moonlight, and died in the
darkness there.
Back, he spurred like a madman, shouting a curse to the sky,
With the white road smoking behind him and his rapier
brandished high.
Blood red were his spurs in the golden noon; wine-red was
his velvet coat;
When they shot him down on the highway,
Down like a
dog on the highway,
And he lay in his blood on the highway, with a bunch of lace
at his throat.
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