160. The Pilgrim Queen
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{281} (A Song.) |
THERE sat a Lady |
all on the ground, |
Rays of the morning |
circled her round, |
Save thee, and hail to thee, |
Gracious and Fair, |
In the chill twilight |
what wouldst thou there? |
"Here I sit desolate," |
sweetly said she, |
"Though I'm a queen, |
and my name is Marie: |
Robbers have rifled |
my garden and store, |
Foes they have stolen |
my heir from my bower. {282} |
"They said they could keep Him |
far better than I, |
In a palace all His, |
planted deep and raised high. |
'Twas a palace of ice, |
hard and cold as were they, |
And when summer came, |
it all melted away. |
"Next would they barter Him, |
Him the Supreme, |
For the spice of the desert, |
and gold of the stream; |
And me they bid wander |
in weeds and alone, |
In this green merry land |
which once was my own." |
I look'd on that Lady, |
and out from her eyes |
Came the deep glowing blue |
of Italy's skies; {283} |
And she raised up her head |
and she smiled, as a Queen |
On the day of her crowning, |
so bland and serene. |
"A moment," she said, |
"and the dead shall revive; |
The giants are failing, |
the Saints are alive; |
I am coming to rescue |
my home and my reign, |
And Peter and Philip |
are close in my train." |
The Oratory.
1849. |
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