Work Text:
She knew the day she married him,
in twilit haze of furs and sweat and mead-
sprays like tiny comets or
an army of migrating honey bees,
that Byrhtnoth’s pride was Byrhtnoth’s sin,
and that dear fault his lasting virtue in.
Treasure had been brought in droves,
as if she were a saint or pageant’s queen
with garnet heart and blossom crown.
But gold had paled that night — the meat was lean,
the sultry wine was dark, loaves warm,
and Byrhtnoth’s men like bears roamed through the charm.
He’d always seem a bear to her;
that paradox of lumbering elegance,
that snuffling moan in sleep that night
would make her smile, his pounding, toppling dance,
his poignant stare, his wild helm.
And, frail as cubs, they both were overwhelmed.
But poetry is written not
for bears or wives of warriors and lords.
When thirsty blades are quenched, shields ripped,
the bards forget her casualty of war.
Curdling with the blood and sand,
a woman’s ghost amidst the fallen band.
Their mead-hall’s light bewildered her.
The English air turned foreign as the moon.
The rivers ran with ashen song.
From thickets of her grief she wove a tomb.
“No, carve a ship,” her dreams beseeched,
but Byrhtnoth’s isle was one no sea could reach.
Silver dogs and scarlet vigil fires.
She let his shadow melt into the flare.
But if you were to stand like him,
I’d shed my skin and make myself a bear,
and if black ravens took you far,
I’d be your Ursa Major in the stars.
You may not be my king, but still I swear:
you will not face the wolves alone,
I’ll match your pride with mine, my heart’s my throne.