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	<title>enlightened horsemanship through touch &#187; Alfred Lord Tennyson</title>
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		<title>Verse Thursday: Alfred, Lord Tennyson</title>
		<link>http://www.enlightenedhorsemanship.net/2009/05/verse-thursday-alfred-lord-tennyson/</link>
		<comments>http://www.enlightenedhorsemanship.net/2009/05/verse-thursday-alfred-lord-tennyson/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 07 May 2009 05:45:15 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Verse Thursday]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Alfred Lord Tennyson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Lady of Shalott]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[See if you can find the horsie bits. ;)

<em>Alfred Lord Tennyson (1809-1892)</em>

<strong>The Lady of Shalott (1842)</strong>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>See if you can find the horsie bits. <img src='http://www.enlightenedhorsemanship.net/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_wink.gif' alt=';)' class='wp-smiley' /> </p>
<p><em>Alfred Lord Tennyson (1809-1892)</em></p>
<p><strong>The Lady of Shalott (1842)</strong></p>
<p>Part I<br />
              On either side the river lie<br />
              Long fields of barley and of rye,<br />
              That clothe the wold and meet the sky;<br />
              And thro&#8217; the field the road runs by<br />
              To many-tower&#8217;d Camelot;<br />
              And up and down the people go,<br />
              Gazing where the lilies blow<br />
              Round an island there below,<br />
              The island of Shalott.</p>
<p>             Willows whiten, aspens quiver,<br />
             Little breezes dusk and shiver<br />
             Thro&#8217; the wave that runs for ever<br />
             By the island in the river<br />
             Flowing down to Camelot.<br />
             Four gray walls, and four gray towers,<br />
             Overlook a space of flowers,<br />
             And the silent isle imbowers<br />
            The Lady of Shalott.</p>
<p>            By the margin, willow veil&#8217;d,<br />
            Slide the heavy barges trail&#8217;d<br />
            By slow horses; and unhail&#8217;d<br />
            The shallop flitteth silken-sail&#8217;d<br />
            Skimming down to Camelot:<br />
            But who hath seen her wave her hand?<br />
            Or at the casement seen her stand?<br />
            Or is she known in all the land,<br />
            The Lady of Shalott?</p>
<p>            Only reapers, reaping early<br />
            In among the bearded barley,<br />
            Hear a song that echoes cheerly<br />
            From the river winding clearly,<br />
            Down to tower&#8217;d Camelot:<br />
            And by the moon the reaper weary,<br />
            Piling sheaves in uplands airy,<br />
            Listening, whispers &#8221; &#8216;Tis the fairy<br />
            Lady of Shalott.&#8221;</p>
<p>Part II<br />
            There she weaves by night and day<br />
            A magic web with colours gay.<br />
            She has heard a whisper say,<br />
            A curse is on her if she stay<br />
            To look down to Camelot.<br />
            She knows not what the curse may be,<br />
            And so she weaveth steadily,<br />
            And little other care hath she,<br />
            The Lady of Shalott.</p>
<p>            And moving thro&#8217; a mirror clear<br />
            That hangs before her all the year,<br />
            Shadows of the world appear.<br />
            There she sees the highway near<br />
            Winding down to Camelot:<br />
            There the river eddy whirls,<br />
            And there the surly village-churls,<br />
            And the red cloaks of market girls,<br />
            Pass onward from Shalott.</p>
<p>            Sometimes a troop of damsels glad,<br />
            An abbot on an ambling pad,<br />
            Sometimes a curly shepherd-lad,<br />
            Or long-hair&#8217;d page in crimson clad,<br />
            Goes by to tower&#8217;d Camelot;<br />
            And sometimes thro&#8217; the mirror blue<br />
            The knights come riding two and two:<br />
            She hath no loyal knight and true,<br />
            The Lady of Shalott.</p>
<p>            But in her web she still delights<br />
            To weave the mirror&#8217;s magic sights,<br />
            For often thro&#8217; the silent nights<br />
            A funeral, with plumes and lights<br />
            And music, went to Camelot:<br />
            Or when the moon was overhead,<br />
            Came two young lovers lately wed:<br />
            &#8220;I am half sick of shadows,&#8221; said<br />
            The Lady of Shalott.</p>
<p>Part III<br />
            A bow-shot from her bower-eaves,<br />
            He rode between the barley-sheaves,<br />
            The sun came dazzling thro&#8217; the leaves,<br />
            And flamed upon the brazen greaves<br />
            Of bold Sir Lancelot.<br />
            A red-cross knight for ever kneel&#8217;d<br />
            To a lady in his shield,<br />
            That sparkled on the yellow field,<br />
            Beside remote Shalott.</p>
<p>            The gemmy bridle glitter&#8217;d free,<br />
            Like to some branch of stars we see<br />
            Hung in the golden Galaxy.<br />
            The bridle bells rang merrily<br />
            As he rode down to Camelot:<br />
            And from his blazon&#8217;d baldric slung<br />
            A mighty silver bugle hung,<br />
            And as he rode his armour rung,<br />
            Beside remote Shalott.</p>
<p>            All in the blue unclouded weather<br />
            Thick-jewell&#8217;d shone the saddle-leather,<br />
            The helmet and the helmet-feather<br />
            Burn&#8217;d like one burning flame together,<br />
            As he rode down to Camelot.<br />
            As often thro&#8217; the purple night,<br />
            Below the starry clusters bright,<br />
            Some bearded meteor, trailing light,<br />
            Moves over still Shalott.</p>
<p>          His broad clear brow in sunlight glow&#8217;d;<br />
          On burnish&#8217;d hooves his war-horse trode;<br />
          From underneath his helmet flow&#8217;d<br />
          His coal-black curls as on he rode,<br />
          As he rode down to Camelot.<br />
          From the bank and from the river<br />
          He flash&#8217;d into the crystal mirror,<br />
          &#8220;Tirra lirra,&#8221; by the river<br />
           Sang Sir Lancelot.</p>
<p>          She left the web, she left the loom,<br />
          She made three paces thro&#8217; the room,<br />
          She saw the water-lily bloom,<br />
          She saw the helmet and the plume,<br />
          She look&#8217;d down to Camelot.<br />
          Out flew the web and floated wide;<br />
          The mirror crack&#8217;d from side to side;<br />
          &#8220;The curse is come upon me,&#8221; cried<br />
          The Lady of Shalott.</p>
<p>Part IV<br />
          In the stormy east-wind straining,<br />
          The pale yellow woods were waning,<br />
          The broad stream in his banks complaining,<br />
          Heavily the low sky raining<br />
          Over tower&#8217;d Camelot;<br />
          Down she came and found a boat<br />
          Beneath a willow left afloat,<br />
          And round about the prow she wrote<br />
          The Lady of Shalott.</p>
<p>          And down the river&#8217;s dim expanse<br />
          Like some bold seër in a trance,<br />
          Seeing all his own mischance&#8211;<br />
          With a glassy countenance<br />
          Did she look to Camelot.<br />
          And at the closing of the day<br />
          She loosed the chain, and down she lay;<br />
          The broad stream bore her far away,<br />
          The Lady of Shalott.</p>
<p>          Lying, robed in snowy white<br />
          That loosely flew to left and right&#8211;<br />
          The leaves upon her falling light&#8211;<br />
          Thro&#8217; the noises of the night<br />
          She floated down to Camelot:<br />
          And as the boat-head wound along<br />
          The willowy hills and fields among,<br />
          They heard her singing her last song,<br />
          The Lady of Shalott.</p>
<p>          Heard a carol, mournful, holy,<br />
          Chanted loudly, chanted lowly,<br />
          Till her blood was frozen slowly,<br />
          And her eyes were darken&#8217;d wholly,<br />
          Turn&#8217;d to tower&#8217;d Camelot.<br />
          For ere she reach&#8217;d upon the tide<br />
          The first house by the water-side,<br />
          Singing in her song she died,<br />
          The Lady of Shalott.</p>
<p>          Under tower and balcony,<br />
          By garden-wall and gallery,<br />
          A gleaming shape she floated by,<br />
          Dead-pale between the houses high,<br />
          Silent into Camelot.<br />
          Out upon the wharfs they came,<br />
          Knight and burgher, lord and dame,<br />
          And round the prow they read her name,<br />
          The Lady of Shalott.</p>
<p>          Who is this? and what is here?<br />
          And in the lighted palace near<br />
          Died the sound of royal cheer;<br />
          And they cross&#8217;d themselves for fear,<br />
          All the knights at Camelot:<br />
          But Lancelot mused a little space;<br />
          He said, &#8220;She has a lovely face;<br />
          God in his mercy lend her grace,<br />
          The Lady of Shalott.&#8221;</p>
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