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Over far mountains and deep seas,

Earth hath no fairer fields than these;

And who, in Beauty's gaudiest bowers,
Can love thee with more love than ours?"

The minstrel turned with a moody look
From that sweet scene of guiltless glee;

From the old who talked beside the brook,

And the young who danced beneath the tree : Coldly he shrank from the gentle maid,

From the chiding look and the pleading tone; And he passed from the old elm's hoary shade, And followed the forest path alone.

One little sigh, one pettish glance,

And the girl comes back to her playmates now, And takes her place in the merry dance,

With a slower step and a sadder brow.

"My soul is sick," saith the wayward boy,
"Of the peasant's grief, and the peasant's joy;
I cannot breathe on from day to day,

Like the insects, which our wise men say

In the crevice of the cold rock dwell,

Till their shape is the shape of their dungeon's cell;

In the dull repose of our changeless life,

I long for passion, I long for strife,

As in the calm the mariner sighs

For rushing waves and groaning skies.

Oh for the lists, the lists of fame!
Oh for the herald's glad acclaim;

For floating pennon and prancing steed,
And Beauty's wonder at Manhood's deed!"

Beneath an ancient oak he lay;

More years than man can count, they say,
On the verge of the dim and solemn wood,
Through sunshine and storm, that oak had stood.
Many a loving, laughing sprite,

Tended the branches by day and by night;

And the leaves of its age were as fresh and green

As the leaves of its early youth had been.

Pure of thought should the mortal be

Who sleeps beneath the Haunted Tree;
That night the minstrel laid him down
Ere his brow relaxed its sullen frown;
And Slumber had bound its eyelids fast,
Ere the evil wish from his soul had passed.

And a song on the sleeper's ear descended,

A song it was pain to hear, and pleasure, So strangely wrath and love were blended In every tone of the mystic measure.

"I know thee, child of earth :

The morning of thy birth

In through the lattice did my chariot glide;
I saw thy father weep

Over thy first wild sleep,

I rocked thy cradle when thy mother died.

"And I have seen thee gaze

Upon these birks and braes,

Which are my kingdoms, with irreverent scorn; And heard thee pour reproof

Upon the vine-clad roof,

Beneath whose peaceful shelter thou wert born.

"I bind thee in the snare

Of thine unholy prayer;

I seal thy forehead with a viewless seal:

I give into thine hand

The buckler and the brand,

And clasp the golden spur upon thy heel. "When thou hast made thee wise

In the sad lore of sighs,

When the world's visions fail thee and forsake,

Return, return to me,

And to my Haunted Tree;

The charm hath bound thee now; Sir knight, awake!"

Sir Isumbras, in doubt and dread,

From his feverish sleep awoke,

grassy bed

And started up from his

Under the ancient oak.

And he called the page

who held his spear,

And, "Tell me, boy," quoth he,

"How long have I been slumbering here,

Beneath the greenwood tree?"

"Ere thou didst sleep, I chanced to throw A stone into the rill;

And the ripple that disturbed its flow

Is on its surface still :

Ere thou didst sleep, thou bad'st me sing

King Arthur's favourite lay;

And the first echo of the string

Has hardly died away."

"How strange is sleep!" the young knight said,

As he clasped the helm upon his head,
And, mounting again his courser black,

To his gloomy tower rode slowly back:

"How strange is sleep! when his dark spell lies

On the drowsy lids of human eyes,
The years of a life will float along
In the compass of a page's song.
Methought I lived in a pleasant vale,

The haunt of the lark and the nightingale,
Where the summer rose had a brighter hue,
And the noon-day sky a clearer blue,
And the spirit of man in age and youth
A fonder love, and a firmer truth.
And I lived on, a fair-haired boy,
In that sweet vale of tranquil joy;
Until at last my vain caprice
Grew weary of its bliss and peace.

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