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A Forgotten Tale

Topics: classic

[The scene of this ancient fight, recorded by Froissart, is still called 'Altura de los Inglesos.' Five hundred years later Wellington's soldiers were fighting on the same ground.]     'Say, what saw you on the hill,     Campesino Garcia?'     'I saw my brindled heifer there,     A trail of bowmen, spent and bare,     And a little man on a sorrel mare     Riding slow before them.'     'Say, what saw you in the vale,     Campesino Garcia?'     'There I saw my lambing ewe     And an army riding through,     Thick and brave the pennons flew     From the lances o'er them.'     'Then what saw you on the hill,     Campesino Garcia?'     'I saw beside the milking byre,     White with want and black with mire,     The little man with eyes afire     Marshalling his bowmen.'     'Then what saw you in the vale,     Campesino Garcia?'     'There I saw my bullocks twain,     And amid my uncut grain     All the hardy men of Spain     Spurring for their foemen.'     'Nay, but there is more to tell,     Campesino Garcia!'     'I could not bide the end to view;     I had graver things to do     Tending on the lambing ewe     Down among the clover.'     'Ah, but tell me what you heard,     Campesino Garcia!'     'Shouting from the mountain-side,     Shouting until eventide;     But it dwindled and it died     Ere milking time was over.'     'Nay, but saw you nothing more,     Campesino Garcia?'     'Yes, I saw them lying there,     The little man and sorrel mare;     And in their ranks the bowmen fair,     With their staves before them.'     'And the hardy men of Spain,     Campesino Garcia?'     'Hush! but we are Spanish too;     More I may not say to you:     May God's benison, like dew,     Gently settle o'er them.'

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"[The scene of this ancient fight, recorded by Froissart, is still called 'Altura de los Inglesos.' Five hundred years later Wellington's soldiers were fighting on the same ground.]..."

Exploring the themes of classic, Arthur Conan Doyle delivers a powerful performance in "A Forgotten Tale"... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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