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MALCOLM'S HEIR. A TALE OF WONDER.
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O, go not by Dunorloch's walls |
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When the moon is in the wane, |
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And cross not o'er Dunorloch's bridge, |
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The farther bank to gain! |
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For there the Lady of the Stream |
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In dripping robes you'll spy, |
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A-singing to her pale wan babe |
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An eldrich lullaby. |
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And stop not at the house of Merne, |
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On the eve of good Saint John; |
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For then the swathed knight walks his rounds |
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With many a heavy moan. |
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All swathed is he in coffin-weeds, |
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And a wound is in his breast, |
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And he points still to the gloomy vault, |
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Where they say his corse doth rest. |
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But pass not near Glencroman's Tower, |
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Though the sun shine e'er so bright; |
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More dreaded is that in the noon of day |
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Than these in the noon of night. |
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The night-shade rank grows in the court, |
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And snakes coil in the wall, |
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And bats lodge in the rifted spire, |
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And owls in the murky hall. |
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On it there shsine no cheerful light, |
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But the deep-red setting sun |
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Gleams bloody red on its battlements, |
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When day's fair course is run. |
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And fearfully in night's pale beams, |
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When the moon peers o'er the wood, |
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Its shadow grim stretched on the ground |
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Lies blackening many a rood. |
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No sweet bird's chirping there is heard, |
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No herd-boy's horn doth blow; |
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But the owlet hoots and the pent blast sobs, |
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And loud croaks the carrion-crow. |
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No marvel! for within its walls |
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Was done the deed unblest, |
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And in its noisome vaults the bones |
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Of a father's murderer rest. |
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He laid his father in the tomb, |
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With deep and solemn woe, |
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As rumour tells, but righteous Heaven |
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Would not be mocked so. |
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There rest his bones in the mouldering earth, |
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By lord and by carl forgot; |
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But the foul, fell spirit, that in them dwelt, |
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Rest hath it none, I wot! |
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"Another night," quoth Malcolm's heir, |
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As he turned him fiercely round, |
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And closely clenched his ireful hand, |
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And stamped upon the ground; — |
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"Another night within your walls |
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I will not lay my head, |
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Though the clouds of Heaven my roof shall be, |
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And the cold dank earth my bed. |
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"Your younger son has now your love, |
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And my stepdame false your ear; |
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And his are your hawks, and his are your hounds, |
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And his are your dark-brown deer. |
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"To him you have given your noble steed, |
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As fleet as the passing wind; |
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But me have you shamed before my friends, |
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Like the son of a base-born hind." |
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Soft answer made the white-haired chief, |
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Dim was his tearful eye,— |
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''Proud son, thy anger is all too keen, |
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Thy spirit is all too high: |
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"Yet rest this night beneath my roof, |
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The wind blows cold and shrill, |
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With to-morrow's dawn, if it so must be, |
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Even follow thy wayward will." |
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Yet nothing moved was Malcolm's heir, |
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And never a word did he say; |
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But cursed his father in his heart, |
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And sternly strode away. |
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And his coal-black steed he mounted straight, |
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As twilight gathered round, |
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And at his feet, with eager speed, |
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Ran Swain, his faithful hound. |
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Loud rose the blast, yet nevertheless, |
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With furious speed rode he, |
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Till night, like the gloom of a caverned mine, |
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Had closed o'er tower and tree. |
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Loud rose the blast, thick fell the rain, |
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Keen flashed the lightning red, |
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And loud the awful thunder roared |
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O'er his unsheltered head. |
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At length full close before him shot |
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A flash of sheeted light, |
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And the high arched gate of Glencroman's Tower |
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Glared on his dazzled sight. |
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His steed stood still, nor step would move, |
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Up looked his faithful Swain, |
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And wagged his tail, and feebly whined; |
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He lighted down amain. |
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Through porch and court he passed, and still |
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His listening ear he bowed, |
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Till, beneath the hoofs of his trampling steed, |
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The paved hall echoed loud. |
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And other echoes answer gave |
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From arches wide and grand; |
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Close to his horse and his faithful dog, |
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He took his fearful stand. |
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The night-birds shrieked from the creviced roof, |
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And the fitful wind sung shrill, |
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Yet, ere the mid-watch of the night, |
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Were all things hushed and still. |
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But in the mid-watch of the night, |
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When hushed was every sound, |
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Faint doleful music reached his ear, |
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As if rising from the ground. |
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And loud and louder still it waxed, |
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And upward still it wore, |
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Till it seemed at the end of the farthest aisle |
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To enter the eastern door. |
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O! never did music of mortal make |
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Such dismal sounds contain; |
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A horrid eldrich dirge it seemed,— |
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A wild unearthly strain. |
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The yell of pain and the wail of woe, |
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And the short, shrill shriek of fear, |
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Through the winnowing sound of a furnace flame |
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Confusedly struck his ear; |
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And the serpent's hiss, and the tiger's growl, |
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And the famished vulture's cry, |
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Were mixed at times, as with measured skill, |
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In this horrid harmony. |
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Up bristled the locks of Malcolm's heir, |
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And his heart it quickly beat, |
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And his trembling steed shook under his hand, |
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And Swain cowered close to his feet. |
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When lo! a faint light, through the porch, |
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Still strong and stronger grew, |
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And shed on the walls and the lofty roof |
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Its wan and dismal hue. |
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And slowly entering then appeared, |
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Approaching with soundless tread, |
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A funeral band in dark array, |
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As in honour of the dead. |
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The first that walked were torch-men ten |
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To lighten their gloomy road, |
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And each wore the face of an angry fiend, |
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And on cloven goat's feet trod; |
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And the next that walked as mourners meet, |
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Were murderers twain and twain, |
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With bloody hands and surtout red, |
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Befouled with many a stain; |
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Each with a cut cord round his neck, |
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And red-strained starting een, |
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Shewed that, upon the gibbet tree |
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His earthly end had been; |
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And after these in solemn state |
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There came an open bier, |
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Borne on black, shapeless, rampant forms, |
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That did but half appear. |
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And on that bier a corse was laid, |
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As corse could never lie, |
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That did, by decent hands composed, |
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In nature's struggles die. |
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Nor stretched, nor wound, but every limb |
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In strong distortion lay,— |
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As in the throes of a violent death, |
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Is fixed the lifeless clay; |
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And in its breast was a broken knife, |
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With the black-blood oozing slow; |
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And its face was the face of an aged man, |
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With locks of the winter snow: |
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Its features were fixed in horrid strength, |
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And the glaze of its half-closed eye |
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A last dread parting look expressed, |
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Of woe and agony. |
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But oh I that horrid form to trace, |
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Which followed it close behind, |
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In fashion of the chief mourner, |
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What words shall minstrel find? |
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In his lifted hand, with straining grasp, |
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A broken knife he prest, |
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The other half of the cursed blade |
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Was that in the corse's breast. |
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And in his blasted, horrid face |
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Full strongly marked, I ween, |
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The features of the aged corse, |
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In life's full prime were seen. |
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Ay; gnash thy teeth and tear thy hair, |
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And roll thine eyeballs wild, |
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Thou horrible, accursed son, |
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With a father's blood defiled! |
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Back from the corse, with strong recoil, |
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Still onward as they go, |
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Doth he in vain his harrowed head |
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And writhing body throw; |
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For closing round, a band of fiends |
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Full fiercely with him deal, |
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And force him o'er the bier to bend, |
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With their fangs of red-hot steel. |
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Still on they moved, and stopped at length |
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In the midst of the trembling hall, |
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When the dismal dirge from its loudest pitch, |
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Sunk to a dying fall. |
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But what of horror next ensued, |
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No mortal tongue can tell, |
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For the thrilled life paused in Malcolm's heir, |
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In a death-like trance he fell. |
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The morning rose with cheerful light |
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On the country far and near, |
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But neither in country, town, nor tower, |
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Could they find Sir Malcolm's heir. |
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They sought him east, they sought him west, |
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O'er hill and dale they ran, |
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And met him at last on the blasted heath, |
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A crazed and wretched man. |
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He will to no one utter his tale, |
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But the Priest of Saint Cuthbert's Cell, |
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And aye, when the midnight warning sounds, |
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He hastens his beads to tell. |
NOTE.
The yell of pain, and the wail of woe,
And the short, shrill shriek of fear,
Through the winnowing sound of a furnace flame, &c.
In Miss Holford's (now Mrs. Hodson) Margaret of Anjou, there
is an assemblage of sounds, preceding a scene of terrific incan-
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tation, which is finely imagined, and produces a powerful effect;
and this passage in the above ballad may, perhaps, lead the
reader to suppose that I had that description in my mind when I wrote it. Had this been the case, I should have owned it
readily. But the Ballad of Malcolm's Heir was written several years before the publication of that Poem; and in the hands
of
the immediate friends of my own family; though as no copy of
it was ever given away, it was impossible it could ever reach
further. I, therefore, claim it, though acknowledging great inferiority, as a coincidence of thought with that distinguished
Author.
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"Their senses reeled, for every sound |
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Which the ear loves not, filled the air; |
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Each din that reason might confound |
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Echoed in ceaseless tumult there; |
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Swift whirling wheels,—the shriek intense |
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Of one who dies by violence; |
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Yell, hoarse and deep, from blood-hound's throat; |
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The night-crow's evil-boding note; |
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Such wild and chattering sounds as throng |
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Upon the moon-struck idiot's tongue: |
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The roar of bursting flames, the dash |
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Of waters wildly swelling round, |
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Which unrestrained by dyke or mound, |
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Leap down at once with hideous crash." |
MARGARET OF ANJOU, Cant. VII.
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