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In snowy robe array'd, To tell each trembling villager Where sleeps the murder'd maid. It was a Sabbath's eve of love, When nature seem'd more holy; And nought in life was dull, but she Whose look was melancholy. She lean'd her tear-stain'd cheek of health Upon her lily arm, Poor, hapless girl! she could not tell What caus'd her wild alarm. Around the roses of her face Her flaxen ringlets fell; No lovelier bosom than her own Could guiltless sorrow swell! The holy book before her lay, That boon to mortals given, To teach the way from weeping earth To ever-glorious heaven; And Mary read prophetic words, That whisper'd of her doom-- "Oh! they will search for me, but where I am, they cannot come!" The tears forsook her gentle eyes, And wet the sacred lore; And such a terror shook her frame, She ne'er had known before. She ceas'd to weep, but deeper gloom Her tearless musing brought; And darker wan'd the evening hour, And darker Mary's thought. The sun, he set behind the hills, And threw his fading fire On mountain rock and village home, And lit the distant spire. (Sweet fane of truth and mercy! where The tombs of other years Discourse of virtuous life and hope, And tell of by-gone tears!) It was a night of nature's calm, For earth and sky were still; And childhood's revelry was o'er, Upon the daisied hill. The ale-house, with its gilded sign, Hung on the beechen bough, Was mute within, and tranquilly The hamlet stream did flow. The room where sat this grieving girl Was one of ancient years; Its antique state was well display'd To conjure up her fears; With massy walls of sable oak, And roof of quaint design, And lattic'd window, darkly hid By rose and eglantine. The summer moon now sweetly shone All softly and serene; She clos'd the casement tremblingly Upon the beauteous scene. Above that carved mantle hung, Clad in the garb of gloom, A painting of rich feudal state,-- An old baronial room. The Norman windows scarcely cast A light upon the wall, Where shone the shields of warrior knights Within the lonely hall. And, pendent from each rusty nail, Helmet and steely dress, With bright and gilded morion, To grace that dim recess. Then Mary thought
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