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VIII

"But ah! dear lady, thus it sighed  The eve thy sainted mother died; And such the sounds which, while I strove To wake a lay of war or love, Came marring all the festal mirth, Appalling me who gave them birth,  And, disobedient to my call, Wailed loud through Bothwell's bannered hall, Ere Douglases to ruin driven, Were exiled from their native heaven.
Oh! if yet worse mishap and woe,  My master's house must undergo, Or aught but weal to Ellen fair, Brood in these accents of despair, No future bard, sad Harp! shall fling Triumph or rapture from thy string; 
One short, one final strain shall flow, Fraught with unutterable woe, Then shivered shall thy fragments lie, Thy master cast him down and die!"

IX

Soothing she answered him—"Assuage,  Mine honored friend, the fears of age; All melodies to thee are known, That harp has rung, or pipe has blown, In Lowland vale or Highland glen, From Tweed to Spey—what marvel, then, At times, unbidden notes should rise, Confusedly bound in memory's ties, Entangling, as they rush along, The war-march with the funeral song?
Small ground is now for boding fear;  Obscure, but safe, we rest us here.
My sire, in native virtue great, Resigning lordship, lands, and state, Not then to fortune more resigned, Than yonder oak might give the wind; 
The graceful foliage storms may reave, The noble stem they cannot grieve. For me,"—she stooped, and, looking round, Plucked a blue hare-bell from the ground— "For me, whose memory scarce conveys  An image of more splendid days, This little flower, that loves the lea, May well my simple emblem be; It drinks heaven's dew as blithe as rose That in the king's own garden grows;  And when I place it in my hair, Allan, a bard is bound to swear He ne'er saw coronet so fair."
Then playfully the chaplet wild She wreathed in her dark locks, and smiled.

X

Her smile, her speech, with winning sway, Wiled the old harper's mood away.
With such a look as hermits throw, When angels stoop to soothe their woe, He gazed, till fond regret and pride  Thrilled to a tear, then thus replied: "Loveliest and best! thou little know'st The rank, the honors, thou hast lost!
O might I live to see thee grace, In Scotland's court, thy birth-right place,  To see my favorite's step advance, The lightest in the courtly dance, The cause of every gallant's sigh, And leading star of every eye, And theme of every minstrel's art,  The Lady of the Bleeding Heart!"note

XI

"Fair dreams are these," the maiden cried — Light was her accent, yet she sighed— "Yet is this mossy rock to me Worth splendid chair and canopy; 
Nor would my footsteps spring more gay In courtly dance than blithe strathspey, Nor half so pleased mine ear incline To royal minstrel's lay as thine.
And then for suitors proud and high,  To bend before my conquering eye— Thou, flattering bard! thyself wilt say, That grim Sir Roderick owns its sway.
The Saxon scourge, Clan-Alpine's pride, The terror of Loch-Lomond's side,  Would, at my suit, thou know'st, delay A Lennox foray—for a day."note

XII

The ancient bard his glee repressed: "Ill hast thou chosen theme for jest! For who, through all this western wild,  Named Black Sir Roderick e'er, and smiled!
In Holy-Rood a knight he slew; I saw, when back the dirk he drew, Courtiers give place before the stride Of the undaunted homicide; 
And since, though outlawed, hath his hand Full sternly kept his mountain land. Who else dared give—ah! woe the day, That I such hated truth should say—
The Douglas, like a stricken deer,  Disowned by every noble peer, Even the rude refuge we have here? Alas, this wild marauding Chief Alone might hazard our relief, And now thy maiden charms expand,  Looks for his guerdon in thy hand;
Full soon may dispensation sought, To back his suit, from Rome he brought.
Then, though an exile on the hill, Thy father, as the Douglas, still  Be held in reverence and fear; And though to Roderick thou'rt so dear, That thou might'st guide with silken thread, Slave of thy will, this chieftain dread; Yet, O loved maid, thy mirth refrain!  Thy hand is on a lion's mane."

XIII

"Minstrel," the maid replied, and high Her father's soul glanced from her eye, "My debts to Roderick's house I know: All that a mother could bestow, To Lady Margaret's care I owe, Since first an orphan in the wild She sorrowed o'er her sister's child;
To her brave chieftain son, from ire Of Scotland's king who shrouds my sire. 
A deeper, holier debt is owed; And, could I pay it with my blood, Allan! Sir Roderick should command My blood, my life—but not my hand.
Rather will Ellen Douglas dwell  A votaress in Maronnan's cell; Rather through realms beyond the sea, Seeking the world's cold charity, Where ne'er was spoke a Scottish word, And ne'er the name of Douglas heard,  An outcast pilgrim will she rove, Than wed the man she cannot love.