Читать книгу Story-Telling Ballads. Selected and Arranged for Story-Telling and Reading Aloud and for the Boys' and Girls' Own Reading онлайн

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And many a weary night went by,

As in the lonely cave he lay;

And many a sun rolled through the sky,

And poured its beams on Colonsay;

And oft, beneath the silver moon,

He heard afar the Mermaid sing,

And oft, to many a melting tune,

The shell-formed lyres of ocean ring:

And when the moon went down the sky,

Still rose, in dreams, his native plain,

And oft he thought his love was by,

And charmed him with some tender strain;

And heart-sick, oft he waked to weep,

When ceased that voice of silver sound,

And thought to plunge him in the deep,

That walled his crystal cavern round.

But still the ring, of ruby red,

Retained its vivid crimson hue,

And each despairing accent fled,

To find his gentle Love so true.

PART III

When seven long lonely months were gone,

The Mermaid to his cavern came,

No more misshapen from the zone,

But like a maid of mortal frame.

“O give to me that ruby ring,

That on thy finger glances gay,

And thou shalt hear the Mermaid sing

The song, thou lovest, of Colonsay.”—

“This ruby ring, of crimson grain,

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