Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
France: Vols. IX–X. 1876–79.
Romance of Dunois
By Queen Hortense (17831837)
I
Was bound for Palestine,
But first he made his orisons
Before St. Mary’s shrine:
“And grant, immortal queen of heaven,”
Was still the soldier’s prayer,
“That I may prove the bravest knight,
And love the fairest fair.”
He graved it with his sword,
And followed to the holy land
The banner of his lord;
Where, faithful to his noble vow,
His war-cry filled the air,
“Be honored aye the bravest knight,
Beloved the fairest fair.”
And then his liege-lord said,
“The heart that has for honor beat,
By bliss must be repaid,—
My daughter Isabel and thou
Shall be a wedded pair,
For thou art bravest of the brave,
She fairest of the fair.”
Before St. Mary’s shrine,
That makes a paradise on earth,
If hearts and hands combine;
And every lord and lady bright
That were in chapel there,
Cried, “Honored be the bravest knight,
Beloved the fairest fair!”