The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 02, No. 11, September, 1858 by Various
page 65 of 294 (22%)
page 65 of 294 (22%)
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The good old crone that tended me
Through sickly childhood, lonely youth, Told me the story: so, you see, I know it is God's sacred truth, That holy lips and holy hands In secrecy had blessed the bands. And well he knew it, too,--the accursed!-- To whom my grandsire gave his child With dying breath;--for from the first He saw, and tried to snare the wild And frightened love that thought to rest Its wings upon my father's breast. You may have seen him riding by,-- This same Count Bernard, stern and cold; You know, then, how his creeping eye One's very soul in charm will hold. Snow-locks he wears, and gracious art; But hell is whiter than his heart. Well, as I said, the secret rite Had joined them, and the two were one; And so it chanced, one summer night, When the half-moon had set, and none But faint star-shadows on the grass Lay watching for his feet to pass, Led by the waiting light that gleamed From out one chamber-window, came |
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