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Rh Draped in his mantle, till the white dawn gleams, He lieth, moveless as a marble form, And unsubdued by sleep the whole night long. Oft at the soft voice of the fair recluse He rises, and returns her low replies. No ear their import can discern afar; But from the lustre of the shaking helm. View of the lifted head, unquiet hands, 'Tis seen some discourse pends of weighty things.

Ah! who shall number all my tears and sighs? Have I so long wept through these weary years? Was such great bitterness in heart and eyes, That all this grate is rusty with my tears? Where falls the tear it penetrates the stone, As in a good man's heart 'twere sinking down.

A fire eternal burns in Swentorog's halls; Its pious priests for ever feed the fire: From Mendog's hill a fount eternal falls; The snows and storm-clouds swell it ever higher. None feed the torrent of my sighs and tears, Yet pain for ever heart and eyeballs sears.