The Lady of the Shroud
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第123章 XXI.

Now wound the path its dizzy ledge Around a precipice's edge, When lo! a wasted female form, Blighted by wrath of sun and storm, In tattered weeds and wild array, Stood on a cliff beside the way, And glancing round her restless eye, Upon the wood, the rock, the sky, Seemed naught to mark, yet all to spy.

Her brow was wreathed with gaudy broom;

With gesture wild she waved a plume Of feathers, which the eagles fling To crag and cliff from dusky wing;Such spoils her desperate step had sought, Where scarce was footing for the goat.

The tartan plaid she first descried, And shrieked till all the rocks replied;As loud she laughed when near they drew, For then the Lowland garb she knew;And then her hands she wildly wrung, And then she wept, and then she sung--She sung!--the voice, in better time, Perchance to harp or lute might chime;And now, though strained and roughened, still Rung wildly sweet to dale and hill.