Page:The Hundred Best Poems (lyrical) in the English language - second series.djvu/133

 "Moreover it is written that my race Hew'd Ammon, hip and thigh, from Aroer On Arnon unto Minneth."Here her face Glow'd, as I look'd at her.

She lock'd her lips: she left me where I stood: "Glory to God," she sang, and past afar, Tridding the sombre boskage of the wood, Toward the morning-star.

Losing her carol I stood pensively, As one that from a casement leans his head, When midnight bells cease ringing suddenly, And the old year is dead.

"Alas! alas!" a low voice, full of care, Murmur'd beside me: "Turn and look on me: I am that Rosamond, whom men call fair, If what I was I be.

"Would I had been some maiden coarse and poor! O me, that I should ever see the light! Those dragon eyes of anger'd Eleanor Do hunt me, day and night."

She ceased in tears, fallen from hope and trust: To whom the Egyptian: "O, you tamely died! You should have clung to Fulvia's waist, and thrust The dagger thro' her side."

With that sharp sound the white dawn's creeping beams, Stol'n to my brain, dissolved the mystery 111