GONDOLINE; A BALLAD. THE night it was still, and the moon it shone Serenely on the sea, And the waves at the foot of the rifted rock When Gondoline roam'd along the shore, Though love had made bleak the rose on her cheek, Her thoughts they were drear, and the silent tear It fill'd her faint blue eye, As oft she heard, in Fancy's ear, Her Bertrand was the bravest youth And he was gone to the Holy Land And many a month had pass'd away, But nothing the maid from Palestine Full oft she vainly tried to pierce And every night she placed a light To guide her lover to the land, Should the murky tempest lower. But now despair had seiz'd her breast, She wander'd o'er the lonely shore, She heard the scream with a sickening heart Yet still she kept her lonely way, And this was all her cry, "Oh! tell me but if Bertrand live, " And I in peace shall die." 1 And now she came to a horrible rift, And pendant from its dismal top The hemlock and the aconite Across the mouth were flung. And all within was dark and drear, And, as she enter'd the cavern wide, Her foot it slipped, and she stood aghast, Yet still, upheld by the secret charm, And now upon her frozen ear So, on the mountain's piny top, |