Page:Pleasant Memories.pdf/80

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.
HOLYROOD.
67


And he, who felt the assassin's steel,
    Though erst with sharper anguish tried
From rebel son and traitor chief;—
    Before my sight they seem to glide.

He too, at Flodden-field who died,
    The belt of iron round his breast,
Held his last frantic orgies here,
    And rushed to battle's dreamless rest.

And Margaret's son and Mary's sire,
    Methinks I see him, wrapped in gloom,
Glance coldly on the babe, whose birth
    Just marked the portal of his tomb:

"An heir to Scotia's throne, Oh king!
    A daughter fair!" the herald said;
No smile he gave, no hand he raised,
    They touched his forehead;—he was dead.

He, too, the anointing oil who bore
    Of Albion on his princely head,
Yet basely, near his palace-door,
    Upon the sable scaffold bled,

In youthful days, when skies were bright,
    And nought the coming doom betrayed,
The crown upon his temples placed
    In yonder chapel's sacred shade.