The Downing legends : Stories in Rhyme The witch of Shiloh, the last of the Wampanoags, the gentle earl, the enchanted voyage |
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The Downing legends : Stories in Rhyme | ||
XXIII
The battle scarce had gotten end
Ere Downing saw a thicket bend
A dozen rods away, and saw
Emerge therefrom a youthful squaw,
A gliding, crouching shape, with meek
And timid gaze and wasted cheek,
And garments travelworn, as though
She came in vigil, stint and woe
Through many days of rain or sun
To find and warn a well-loved one.
Ere Downing saw a thicket bend
A dozen rods away, and saw
Emerge therefrom a youthful squaw,
A gliding, crouching shape, with meek
And timid gaze and wasted cheek,
And garments travelworn, as though
She came in vigil, stint and woe
Through many days of rain or sun
To find and warn a well-loved one.
This haggard daughter of the wild
Bore on her weary back a child,
And ever, while she stooped along,
She chanted low a forest song,
Nor knew that bloody death was here,
Nor spied the foeman lurking near,
But hasted on to hinder fate,
Unwitting that she came too late.
Bore on her weary back a child,
And ever, while she stooped along,
She chanted low a forest song,
Nor knew that bloody death was here,
Nor spied the foeman lurking near,
But hasted on to hinder fate,
Unwitting that she came too late.
The Downing legends : Stories in Rhyme | ||