Poems Sigourney 1827/Anna Boleyn
ANNA BOLEYN.
The Axe, with which Anna Boleyn was beheaded, is still preserved in the Tower of London.
Stern minister of Fate severe!
Who, drunk with beauty's blood,
Defying time, dost linger here,
And frown with ruffian visage drear,
Like beacon on destruction's flood:
Say!—when ambition's giddy dream
First lured thy victim's heart aside,
Why like a serpent didst thou hide
Mid clustering flowers, and robes of pride
Thy warning gleam?
Had'st thou but once arisen in vision dread,
From glory's fearful cliff her startled step had fled.
Ah! little she reck'd when St Edward's crown
So heavily press'd her tresses fair,
That with sleepless wrath, its thorns of care
Would rankle within her couch of down!
To the tyrant's bower,
In her beauty's power,
She came,—as a lamb to the lion's lair,
As the light bird cleaves the fields of air,
And carols blithe and sweet, while Treachery weaves its snare.
Think!—what were her pangs as she traced her fate
On that changeful monarch's brow of hate?
What were the thoughts, which in misery's hour
Throng'd o'er her soul, in her dungeon tower?
Regret, with pencil keen,
Retouch'd the deep'ning scene:
Delightful France, whose genial skies
Bade her gay childhood's pleasures rise;
Earl Percy's love,—his youthful grace,
Her gallant brother's fond embrace,
Her stately father's feudal halls,
Where proud heraldic annals deck'd the ancient walls.
Wrapt in the scaffold's gloom,
Brief tenant of that living tomb
She stands!—the life blood chills her heart,
And her tender glance from earth does part;
But her infant daughter's image fair,
In the smile of innocence is there,
It clings to her soul mid its last despair;
And the desolate queen is doom'd to know
How far a mother's grief transcends a martyr's wo.
Say! did prophetic light
Illume her darkening sight,
Painting the future island-queen
Like the fabled bird, all hearts surprising,
Bright from blood-stain'd ashes rising,
Wise, energetic, bold, serene?
Ah no! the scroll of time
Is seal'd;—and hope sublime
Rests, but on those far heights, which mortals may not climb.
The dying prayer, with trembling fervor speeds,
For that false monarch, by whose will she bleeds;
For him, who listening on that fatal morn
Hears her death signal o'er the distant lawn
From the deep cannon speaking,
Then springs to mirth and winds his bugle-horn,
And riots while her blood is reeking;—
For him she prays, in seraph tone,
"Oh!—be his sins forgiven!
Who raised me to an earthly throne,
And sends me now, from prison lone,
To be a saint in heaven."