Page:010 Once a week Volume X Dec 1863 to Jun 64.pdf/150

142 Beneath the avenue of beeches The nettles sprout amidst the grass, And many a weed climbs up and reaches The windows with their clouded glass. The stainèd walls, the rusted bell, The weed-choked garden, blister'd door, The step with dank moss cover'd o'er, The broken windlass of the well, The window corners cobweb deckt, All speak of long years of neglect,— Some think it haunted ground; But there's a sad tale, sad but true, Of that pale lady, known by few Of these who live around; For most of them, the simple youth, Prefer the ghost-tale to the truth.

The tale runs thus:—Some years ago The bells rang out a merry chime, One sunny morning, in the time When first the summer breezes blow; Rang out a chime of gladsome strife For th' fair daughter of the Grange, Who pass'd below a new-made wife, And happy in the change. For youth was hers, and wealth and love, And all the blessings that can move The heart to joy and gladness; But, as 'tis said, extremes do meet, So sweetest joy, and hers was sweet, Is oft allied with sadness.

The board was spread, The speeches said, Fond words of love and hope were spoken, And for the old dear life now broken Some simple tears were shed. Last words were breathed, last kisses taken, Good wishes utter'd and hands shaken, And they must go,—one minute more, For one last kiss the bride did linger, And then a stranger, by the door, A stranger never mark'd before, Beckon'd the bridegroom with his finger, And merely mutter'd: "Come with me." They pass'd into the shrubbery, And they were seen no more.

A cry was raised, a merry cry, They did not know how near was sorrow, "Where is the bridegroom?" no reply Came to the question. Then, around, They search'd about the garden ground, But all that day he was not found, Nor on the morrow. The search began in busy sort, A merry scampering up and down, As though it were some joyful sport, Until the truth was known. He was not there, there was no trace, Not e'en a footstep near the place; No! not the slightest sign was seen; But still again, and yet again, Each corner where he might remain, They search'd, but only search'd in vain: It was as though he ne'er had been.

Did he still live, or was he dead? Or had that stranger by the door, Who never had been seen before, Whisper'd some tale at which he fled? No man could say, But from that day His face was seen no more.

And many years have pass'd since then, Her parents in the churchyard rest, Eased of the burden as 'tis best, And youths have grown grey-headed men. But she still sits, from early dawn, From early dawn to ev'ning late, And has sat, ever since the morn When she was render'd desolate, Sits weariedly forlorn.

The bridal robe is dingy now, But she still wears it; and the hair Is golden still upon her brow, And she is very fair. Her heart is dead, her tears ne'er flow, There is no sign of care, Except a touch of dreaminess, Which is not pain, but something less, Just bordering on despair.

For Time seems to have pass'd her by, As one who is not of this earth,— And still, as on that day of mirth, Her face shows youthfully; Except a wrinkle here and there, A grey streak in the golden hair, A blankness of the eye.

A weary watch for ever keeping, A pain without a word of woe, Without the sweet relief of weeping, 'Tis so the long years onward go. For ever watching for his coming, Sad and still without a change, From the sunrise to the gloaming, Ever steadfast at her post, Waiting for a love that's lost, Sits the Lady of the Grange. W. G.

we consider the matter, it does seem extraordinary that the strong platform on which the main industry of this country rests, was scarcely begun to be built a hundred years ago. Before that time our principal iron-works were to be found amid the woodland districts of Sussex. The then existing circumstances of smelting, determining the manufacture to that rural part of the island, in the same manner as those at present in operation have fixed our iron-foundries in totally different localities—namely, the presence of the fuel used for extracting the ore. A hundred years ago all our smelting was done with charcoal, therefore those iron-mines in the neighbourhood of woodlands were the most advantageously worked; just as now the presence of a coal-field is a necessary condition of the manufacture. In the time of Elizabeth the great seat of the iron-manufacture was a perfect paradise contrasted with what it at present occupies. We can scarcely imagine two pictures more utterly unlike than the so-called "black country" around Wolverhampton, that Pandemonium on earth, in which everything like