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The Legend Of The Iron Cross.

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"There dwelt a nun in Dryburgh bower      Who ne'er beheld the day."     Twilight o'er the East is stealing,     And the sun is in the vale:     'T is a fitting moment, stranger,     To relate a wondrous tale.     'Neath this moss-grown rock and hoary     We will pause awhile to rest;     See, the drowsy surf no longer     Beats against its aged breast.     Years ago, traditions tell us,     When rebellion stirred the land,     And the fiery cross was carried     O'er the hills from band to band,--     And the yeoman at its summons     Left his yet unfurrowed field,     And the leader from his fortress     Sallied forth with sword and shield,--     Where the iron cross is standing     On yon rude and crumbling wall,     Dwelt a chieftain's orphan daughter,     In her broad ancestral hall.     And her faith to one was plighted,     Lord of fief and domain wide,     Who, ere he went forth undaunted     War's disastrous strife to bide,     'Mid his armed and mounted vassals     Paused before her castle gate,     While she waved a last adieu     From the battlements in state.     But when nodding plume and banner     Faded from her straining sight,     And the mists from o'er the mountains     Crept like phantoms with the night,--     Low before the sacred altar     At the crucifix she bowed,     And, with fervent supplication     To the Holy Mother, vowed     That, till he returned from battle,     Scotland's hills and passes o'er,     Saved by her divine protection,     She would see the sun no more!     In a low and vaulted chapel,     Where no sunbeam entrance found,     Many a day was passed in penance,     Kneeling on the cold, damp ground.     Autumn blanched the flowers of Summer,     And the forest robes grew sere;     Still in darkness knelt the maiden,     Pleading, "Mary! Mother! hear!"     Cold blasts through the valleys hurried,     Dry leaves fluttered on the gale;     But of him, the loved and absent,     Leaf and tempest told no tale.     Still and pale, a dreamless slumber     Slept he on the battle-plain,--     Steed beneath and vassal o'er him,--     Lost amid the hosts of slain.     Spring, with tranquil breath and fragrant,     Called the primrose from its grave,     Woke the low peal of the harebell,     Bade the purple heather wave;--     Lilies to the warm light opened,     Surges, sparkling, kissed the shore;     But the chieftain's orphan daughter     Saw the sunbeam--never more!     Suitors sent, her hand to purchase,     Some with wealth and some with fame;     But the vow was on her spirit,     And she shrank not from its claim.     Yet when starry worlds looked downwards,     Spirit-like, from realms on high,     And the violets in the valleys     Closed in sleep each dewy eye,--     While the night in wondrous beauty     O'er the softened landscape lay,     She came forth, with noiseless footstep     Moving 'mid the shadows gray,     Gazing ever towards the summit,     Where the gleam of scarf and plume     Faded in the hazy distance,     Leaving her to prayer and gloom.     Years, by her unmarked, unnumbered,     Crossed the dial-plate of Time;     Then she passed, one quiet midnight,     To the unseen Spirit-Clime.     But the twilight has departed,     And the moon is up on high;     Stranger, pass not, in thy journey,     Yon deserted court-yard by;     For it is whispered that, at evening,     Oft a misty form is seen,     In its silent progress casting     Not a shadow on the green,     'Neath the iron cross that standeth     On the mouldering wall and rude,     Like a noble thought uplifted     In the Past's deep solitude.

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""There dwelt a nun in Dryburgh bower..."

"The Legend Of The Iron Cross." is a quintessential example of Mary Gardiner Horsford's signature style... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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