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THE CHILDREN'S CRUSADE

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

[A FRAGMENT.]

 

I

 

What is this I read in history,

Full of marvel, full of mystery,

Difficult to understand?

Is it fiction, is it truth?

Children in the flower of youth,

Heart in heart, and hand in hand,

Ignorant of what helps or harms,

Without armor, without arms,

Journeying to the Holy Land!

 

Who shall answer or divine?

Never since the world was made

Such a wonderful crusade

Started forth for Palestine.

Never while the world shall last

Will it reproduce the past;

Never will it see again

Such an army, such a band,

Over mountain, over main,

Journeying to the Holy Land.

 

Like a shower of blossoms blown

From the parent trees were they;

Like a flock of birds that fly

Through the unfrequented sky,

Holding nothing as their own,

Passed they into lands unknown,

Passed to suffer and to die.

 

O the simple, child-like trust!

O the faith that could believe

What the harnessed, iron-mailed

Knights of Christendom had failed,

By their prowess, to achieve,

They the children, could and must?

 

Little thought the Hermit, preaching

Holy Wars to knight and baron,

That the words dropped in his teaching,

His entreaty, his beseeching,

Would by children's hands be gleaned,

And the staff on which he leaned

Blossom like the rod of Aaron.

 

As a summer wind upheaves

The innumerable leaves

In the bosom of a wood,--

Not as separate leaves, but massed

All together by the blast,--

So for evil or for good

His resistless breath upheaved

All at once the many-leaved,

Many-thoughted multitude.

 

In the tumult of the air

Rock the boughs with all the nests

Cradled on their tossing crests;

By the fervor of his prayer

Troubled hearts were everywhere

Rocked and tossed in human breasts.

 

For a century, at least,

His prophetic voice had ceased;

But the air was heated still

By his lurid words and will,

As from fires in far-off woods,

In the autumn of the year,

An unwonted fever broods

In the sultry atmosphere.

 

 

II

 

In Cologne the bells were ringing,

In Cologne the nuns were singing

Hymns and canticles divine;

Loud the monks sang in their stalls,

And the thronging streets were loud

With the voices of the crowd;--

Underneath the city walls

Silent flowed the river Rhine.

 

From the gates, that summer day,

Clad in robes of hodden gray,

With the red cross on the breast,

Azure-eyed and golden-haired,

Forth the young crusaders fared;

While above the band devoted

Consecrated banners floated,

Fluttered many a flag and streamer,

And the cross o'er all the rest!

Singing lowly, meekly, slowly,

"Give us, give us back the holy

Sepulchre of the Redeemer!"

On the vast procession pressed,

Youths and maidens. . . .