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Poems (Acton)/The Trysting Tree

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4625055Poems — The Trysting TreeHarriet Acton and Rose Acton

THE TRYSTING TREE. ——
'Neath the trysting tree, on a summer's day,Sat a maiden young and fair;Bright was the glance of her laughing eye,Dark was her braided hair:And her downcast face look'd sweeter still,  When her lover hied him there.
Pale was the youth, and sad his look,And cold grew the maiden's heart,When the dread words fell upon her ear,"Beloved one, we must part!Oh that my sire thy worth would own,All lovely as thou art!"
Long wept the maiden by his side,At her daring love dismayed;For titles, and lands, and wealth had he,And she was a village maid:But her beauty bright his heart had won,As she roved in the greenwood shade.
And now for a year, a weary year,Oh! that its length were o'er!He must hasten forth, at his sire's command,To dwell on a distant shore;And a voice within the maiden's heartSaid, "He will return no more."
Bitter the parting, wild her grief;"Wilt thou be true?" she sighed."I pledge thee my faith by my lofty name,"At her feet the youth replied:"When a year hath fled will I meet thee here,And hail thee as my bride."
"I will keep the tryst 'neath this ancient tree,"The pallid maiden said,As she weeping knelt on the grassy bank,And bowed her lovely head."When the year hath pass'd, 'neath the trysting treeShalt thou see me alive or dead!"
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The year pass'd on, and the trysting treeWas stripp'd of its mantle green,And the autumn shadows dimly fellWhere the summer sun had been;But the maiden fair, with her eyes of light,Was ne'er in the greenwood seen.
For ah! in that year, that weary year,Tidings of falsehood came,That the youth had forgotten the solemn vowHe had sworn by his knightly name,And had plighted his troth, at his sire's command,To a lovely and high-born dame.
Pale grew the drooping maiden's cheek,And paler it seemed each day;Her peace was gone, and the woods no moreWoke to her footsteps gay:As the winter pass'd, and the spring stole on,She wearily pined away.
"And carry me forth," she dying said,"Once more to the trysting tree,Where its green leaves whisper o'er my head,Let my parting moments be;I will keep the tryst that to him I pledged,Though false hath he proved to me!"
They bore her there and her bloom return'd,And her eyes grew wildly bright,As the fitful gleam from a dying lampDoth warn of fading light:And she pass'd away with a sad sweet smile,Worn down by her spirit's blight.
The smile still played upon her cheekAs dews on rosebuds hang,When through the leafy forest gladesA distant bugle ran,And a graceful youth in joyful hasteFrom a panting courser sprang.
One glance upon the maiden pale,Who slept the tree below,And his bounding form seem'd turn'd to stone,And his cheek grew white as snow."Oh God!" he cried, "what direful illHath struck this crushing blow?"
They told him that his broken vowHad paled her youthful face:"'Tis false!" he cried, "what cruel tongueHath forged such slander base?Oh, father, in this evil deedThy vengeful hand I trace."
A yearning look, a long last kiss,And the frenzied youth was gone;They mark'd his pallid cheek with dread,As he madly hurried on,Nor look'd he from that trying hourHis father's face upon.
The old man died, bowed down by griefFor the wrong that he had done,And praying with his parting breathTo gaze upon his son,Who came no more with a smile to blessThe long repentant one.
His castle proud to ruins fell,Doom'd lonely e'er to be,And nought was left of that ancient raceSave a tearful memoryOf the missing youth, and the maid who diedBeneath the trysting tree!H. A.