Page:A History of Italian Literature - Garnett (1898).djvu/154

136 No help availed that baron bold, I ween, Felled like a four-year child beneath the clout, Scarce touched he earth, ere he who thus had mauled him, Caught by the heels and round the meadow hauled him. Each of those ladies three a garland wore, Of roses twined, deep damask or snow-white;  Each from her head its garniture now tore, Since other weapons failed them for the fight, And though the knight cried mercy o'er and o'er, They ceased not, e'en when tired, to scourge and smite, And dragged him round, and did with blows belabour, Until the noonday sun shone on their labour. Nor hauberk stout, nor iron plate of mail, Those blows could fend, or parry their fierce might; But all his flesh was bruised with wound and wale, Beneath his arms, and with such fire alight,  That souls condemned, in the infernal vale, Must of a surety suffer pains more slight Than those in which this baron sore did languish, When like to die of utter fear and anguish.

Nor could he tell if gods or men were those, Nor prayers availed, nor aught such foes could rout; And thus continued they, nor took repose, Till on their shoulders wings began to sprout, Of white and gold, vermilion blent with rose; While from each plume a living eye looked out, Not peacock-orbed, or other fowl's in seeming, But like a lovely maiden's softly gleaming. Then straight did they uplift themselves in flight, And one by one unto high heaven upsoared, Rinaldo, on the lawn, in doleful plight, Now left alone, with tears his state deplored, O'erwhelmed so sore with pain and woe that quite His senses ebbed away, in grief outpoured; And in the end such anguish did invade him, That, as one dead, down on the sward he laid him."