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Unhappy chief! would nought avail,
No signs impress thy heart with fear,
Thy lady's dark mysterious dream,
Thy warning from the hoary seer?

Three ravens gave the note of death,

As through mid air they winged their way; Then o'er his head, in rapid flight,

They croak,-they scent their destined prey.

Ill omened bird! as legends say,

Who hast the wonderous power to know, While health fills high the throbbing veins, The fated hour when blood must flow.

Blinded by rage alone he passed,

Nor sought his ready vassals' aid: But what his fate lay long unknown, For many an anxious year delayed.

A peasant marked his angry eye,

He saw him reach the lake's dark bourne, He saw him near a blasted oak,

But never from that hour return.

Three days passed o'er, no tidings came ;— Where should the chief his steps delay ? With wild alarm the servants ran,

Yet knew not where to point their way.

His vassals ranged the mountain's height, The covert close, and wide-spread plain; But all in vain their eager search,

They ne'er must see their lord again.

Yet fancy, in a thousand shapes,

Bore to his home the chief once more Some saw him on high Moel's top,

Some saw him on the winding shore.

With wonder fraught the tale went round,
Amazement chained the hearer's tongue;
Each peasant felt his own sad loss,

Yet fondly o'er the story hung.
Oft by the moon's pale shadowy light,
His aged nurse, and steward grey,
Would lean to catch the storied sounds,
Or mark the flittering spirit stray.
Pale lights on Cader's rocks were seen,
And midnight voices heard to moan;
'Twas even said the blasted oak,

Convulsive, heaved a hollow groan:
And, to this day, the peasant still,
With cautious fear, avoids the ground;
In cach wild branch a spectre sees,
And trembles at each rising sound.
Ten annual suns had held their course,
In summer's smile, or winter's storm;
The lady shed the widowed tear,

As oft she traced his manly form.
Yet still to hope her heart would cling
As o'er the mind illusions play,-
Of travel fond, perhaps her ford

To distant lands had steered his way.

"Twas now November's cheerless hour, Which drenching rain and clouds deface, Dreary bleak Robell's tract appeared,

And dull and dank each valley's space.

Loud o'er the wier the hoarse flood fell,
And dashed the foamy spray on high;
The west wind bent the forest tops,

And angry frowned the evening sky.

A stranger passed Llanelltid's bourne,

His dark-grey steed with sweat besprent,
Which, wearied with the lengthened way,
Could scarcely gain the hill's ascent.
The portal reached, the iron bell
Loud sounded round the outward wall
Quick sprang the warder to the gate,

To know what meant the clamorous call. "O! lead me to your lady soon;

Say, it is my sad lot to tell,
To clear the fate of that brave knight,
She long has proved she loved so well."
Then, as he crossed the spacious hall,

The menials look surprise and fear:
Still o'er his harp old Modred hung,
And touched the notes for grief's worn ear.
The lady sat amidst her train ;

A mellowed sorrow marked her look:
Then, asking what his mission meant,
The graceful stranger sighed and spoke :-
"O could I spread one ray of hope,

One moment raise thy soul from woe,
Gladly my tongue would tell its tale,
My words at ease unfettered flow!
"Now, lady, give attention due,

The story claims thy full belief:
E'en in the worst events of life,

Suspense removed is some relief. "Though worn by care, see Madoc here, Great Glyndwr's friend, thy kindred's foe; Ah, let his name no anger raise,

For now that mighty chief lies low.

"E'en from the day, when, chained by fate, By wizard's dream or potent spell, Lingering from sad Salopia's field,

'Reft of his aid the Percy fell ;"E'en from that day misfortune still, As if for violated faith, Pursued him with unwearied step

Vindictive still for Hotspur's death.
"Vanquished at length, the Glyndwr fled
Where winds the Wye her devious flood;
To find a casual shelter there,

In some lone cot, or desert wood.
"Clothed in a shepherd's humble guise,
He gained by toil his scanty bread;
He who had Cambria's sceptre borne,
And her brave sons to glory led!

"To penury extreme, and grief,

The chieftain fell a lingering prey; I heard his last few faultering words,

Such as with pain I now convey.

"To Sele's sad widow bear the tale Nor let our horrid secret rest; Give but his corse to sacred earth,

Then may my parting soul be blest.'

"Dim waxed the eye that fiercely shone, And faint the tongue that proudly spoke And weak that arm, still raised to me,

Which oft had dealt the mortal stroke.

"How could I then his mandate bear
Or how his last behest obey?
A rebel deemed, with him I fled;
With him I shunned the light of day.
"Proscribed by Henry's hostile rage,

My country lost, despoiled my land,
Desperate, I fled my native soil,
And fought on Syria's distant strand.

"O, had thy long lamented lord

The holy cross and banner viewed, Died in the sacred cause! who fell Sad victim of a private feud!

"Led, by the ardour of the chace,

Far distant from his own domain;

From where Garthmaelan spreads her shades, The Glyndwr sought the opening plain.

"With head aloft, and antlers wide,

A red buck roused, then crossed in view, Stung with the sight, and wild with rage,

Swift from the wood fierce Howel flew.

"With bitter taunt, and keen reproach,
He, all impetuous, poured his rage,
Reviled the chief as weak in arms,

And bade him loud the battle wage.
"Glyndwr for once restrained his sword,
And, still averse, the fight delays;
But softened words, like oil to fire,
Made anger more intensely blaze.

They fought; and doubtful long the fray!
The Glyndwr gave the fatal wound!
Still mournful must my tale proceed,

And its last act all dreadful sound. "How could we hope for wished retreat His eager vassals ranging wide? His bloodhounds' keen sagacious scent, O'er many a trackless mountain tried? "I marked a broad and blasted oak,

Scorched by the lightning's livid glare Hollow its stem from branch to root,

And all its shrivelled arms were bare. "Be this, I cried, his proper grave!— (The thought in me was deadly sin.) Aloft we raised the hapless chief,

And dropped his bleeding corpse within."

A shriek from all the damsels burst,

That pierced the vaulted roofs below; While horror-struck the lady stood,

A living form of sculptured woe.

With stupid stare, and vacant gaze,
Full on his face her eyes were cast,
Absorbed!-she lost her present grief,
And faintly thought of things long past.
Like wild-fire o'er the mossy heath,

The rumour through the hamlet ran:
The peasants crowd at morning dawn,
To hear the tale,-behold the man.
He led them near the blasted oak,

Then, conscious, from the scene withdrew: The peasant's work with trembling haste, And lay the whitened bones to view !Back they recoiled!-the right hand still, Contracted, grasped a rusty sword; Which erst in many a battle gleamed,

And proudly decked their slaughtered lord. They bore the corse to Vener's shrine,

With holy rites, and prayers addressed; Nine white-robed monks the last dirge sang, And gave the angry spirit rest.

It must be remembered that the real history of Howel Sele's death is to be

collected from Mr. Pennant's account of their sudden feud already related; though he by no means distinctly states whether Glyndwr caused him to be placed in the oak after he had been slain, or "immured" him alive and left him to perish. It is rather to be inferred that he was condemned by his kinsmen to the latter fate. According to Pennant he perished in the year 1402, and we see that his living burial place survived him, pierced and hallowed by the hand of time, upwards of four centuries.

SIR PHILIP SIDNEY'S OAK.

In an elegant volume called " Sylvan Sketches, a companion to the park and the shrubbery, with illustrations from the works of the poets by the author of the Flora Domestica," there is a delightful assemblage of poetical passages on the oak, with this memorial of a very celebrated one:

"An oak was planted at Penshurst on the day of sir Philip Sidney's birth, of which Martyn speaks as standing in his time, and measuring twenty-two feet round. This tree has since been felled, it is said by mistake; would it be impossible to make a similar mistake with regard to the mistaker?

"Several of our poets have celebrated this tree: Ben Jonson in his lines to Penshurst, says,—

Thou hast thy walks for health as well as sport;

Thy mount to which thy Dryads do resort,
Where Pan and Bacchus their high seats have
made,

Beneath the broad beech and the chesput shade,
That taller tree which of a nut was set,

At his great birth where all the muses met.
There in the writhed bark are cut the names
Of many a sylvan taken with his flames.'

"It is mentioned by Waller :-
Go, boy, and carve this passion on the bark
Of yonder tree, which stands the sacred mark
Of noble Sidney's birth.'

"Southey says, speaking of Penshurst—
- Sidney here was born.
Sidney than whom no greater, braver man,
His own delightful genius ever feigned,
Illustrating the vales of Arcady

With courteous courage, and with loyal loves.
Upou his natal day the acorn here
Was planted; it grew up a stately oak,
And in the beauty of its strength it stood
And flourished, when its perishable part
Had mouldered dust to dust. That stately oak
Itself hath mouldered now, but Sidney's name
Endureth in his own immortal works.'

"This tree was frequently called the 'bare oak,' by the people of the neighbourhood, from a resemblance it was supposed to bear to the oak which gave name to the county of Berkshire. Tradition says, that when the tenants went to the park gates as it was their custom to do to meet the earl of Leicester, when they visited that castle, they used to adorn their hats with boughs from this tree. Within the hollow of its trunk was a seat which contained five or six persons with

ease and convenience."

THE OAK OF MAMRE.

We are told that this oak was standing in the fourth century. Isidore affirms that when he was a child in the reign of the emperor Constantius, he was shown a turpentine tree very old, which declared its age by its bulk, as the tree under which Abraham dwelt; that the heathens had a surprising veneration for it, and distinguished it by an honourable appellation.* Some affirm that it existed within the last four centuries.

Bayle, art. Abraham.

66

Adrian, about the year 134, At the dispersion of the Jews under an incredible number of all ages and sexes were sold at the same price as horses, in a very famous fair called the fair of the turpentine tree: whereupon the Jews had an abhorrence for that fair." St. Jerome mentions the place at which the Jews were sold under the name of " Abraham's tent;" where, he says, "is kept an annual fair very much frequented." This place 66 on Mamre's fertile plains," is alleged to have been the spot where Abraham entertained the angels.*

NATURALISTS' CALENDAR.
Mean Temperature... 63. 50.

July 28.

ST. DECLAN.

The festival of this saint, who was the first bishop of Ardmore, in the county of Waterford, is held on the twenty-fourth of the month. The brief memoir of St. Declan, by Alban Butler, did not seem to require notice of him on that day; but the manner wherein the feast was celelarized in an Irish paper, as to claim brated in 1826, is so remarkably particu

attention.

Ardmore and its Patron.

St. Declan is represented to have been the friend and companion of St. Patrick, and, according to tradition, Ardmore was century by St. Declan, who was born in an episcopal see, established in the fifth Desii. this county, and was of the family of the Rome, resided there for some years, was He travelled for education to afterwards ordained by the pope, returned to his own country about the year 402, and about that time founded the abbey lived to a great age; and his successor, and was made bishop of Ardmore. He St. Ulthan, was alive in the year 550. A stone, a holy well, and a dormitory, in the churchyard, still bear the name of St. Declan. "St. Declan's stone" is on the beach; it is a large rock, resting on two others, which elevate it a little above the ground. On the twenty-fourth of July, the festival of the saint, numbers of the lowest class do penance on their bare knees around the stone, and some, with

Bayle, art. Barcochebas.

great pain and difficulty, creep under it, in expectation thereby of curing or preventing, what it is much more likely to create, rheumatic affections of the back. In the churchyard is the "dormitory of St. Declan," a small low building, held in great veneration by the people in the neighbourhood, who frequently visit it in order to procure some of the earth, which is supposed to cover the relics of the saint.

On the twenty-fourth of July, 1826, several thousand persons of all ages and both sexes assembled at Ardmore. The greater part of the extensive strand, which forms the western side of the bay, was literally covered by a dense mass of people. Tents and stands for the sale of whiskey, &c. were placed in parallel rows along the shore; the whole at a distance bore the appearance of a vast encampment. Each tent had its green ensign waving upon high, bearing some patriotic motto. One of large dimensions, which floated in the breeze far above the others, exhibited the words "Villiers Stuart for ever."

At an early hour, those whom a religious feeling had drawn to the spot, commenced their devotional exercises by passing under the holy rock of St. Declan. The male part of the assemblage were clad in trowsers and shirts, or in shirts alone; the females, in petticoats pinned above the knees, and some of the more devout in chemises only. Two hundred and ninety persons of both sexes thus prepared, knelt at one time indiscriminately around the stone, and passed separately under it to the other side. This was not effected without considerable pain and difficulty, owing to the narrowness of the passage, and the sharpness of the rocks. Stretched at full length on the ground on the face and stomach, each devotee moved forward, as if in the act of swimming, and thus squeezed or dragged themselves through. Upwards of eleven hundred persons of both sexes, in a state of half nudity, were observed to undergo the ceremony in the course of the day. A reverend gentleman, who stood by part of the time, was heard to exclaim, "O, great is their faith." Several of their reverences passed and re-passed to and from the chapel close by the " holy rock," during the day. The "holy rock," of so great veneration, is believed to be endued with

Ryland's History of Waterford.

miraculous powers. It is said to have been wafted from Rome upon the surface of the ocean, at the period of St. Declan's founding his church at Ardmore, and to. have borne on its top a large bell for the church tower, and vestments for the saint. At a short distance from this sacred memorial, on a cliff overhanging the sea, is the well of the saint. Thither the crowds repair after the devotions at the rock are ended. Having drank plentifully of its water, they wash their legs and feet in the stream which issues from it, and, telling their beads, sprinkle themselves and their neighbours with the fluid. These performances over, the grave of the patron saint is then resorted to. Hundreds at a time crowded around it, and crush each other in their eagerness to obtain a handful of the earth which is believed to cover the mortal remains of Declan. A woman stood breast high in the grave, and served out a small portion of its clay to each person requiring it, from whom in return she received a penny or halfpenny for the love of the saint. The abode of the saint's earthly remains has sunk to the depth of nearly four feet, its clay having been scooped away by the finger nails of the pious. A human skull of large dimensions was placed at the head of the tomb, before which the people bowed, believing it to be the identical skull of the tutelar saint.

This visit to St. Declan's grave completed the devotional exercises of a day, held in greater honour than the sabbath, by those who venerate the saint's name, and worship at his shrine. The tents which throughout the day, from the duties paid to the "patron," had been thronged with the devotionalists of the morning, resounded from evening till daybreak, with sounds inspired by potations of whiskey; and the scene is so characterised by its reporter as to seem exaggerated.*

NATURALISTS' CALENDAR. Mean Temperature... 63 35.

July 29.

ST. MARTHA.

On the festival of this saint of the Romish church, a great fair is held at Beaucaire, in Languedoe, to which merchants

Wate: ford Mail.

and company resort from a great distance round. It is a great mart for smugglers and contraband traders, and is the harvest of the year both to Beaucaire and Tarascon; for, as the former is not large enough to accommodate the influx of people, Tarascon, in Provence, which is separated from it by the Rhone, is generally equally full.

Tarascon, according to a popular tradition, has its name from a terrible beast, a sort of dragon, known by the name of the tarasque, which, in ancient days, infested the neighbourhood, ravaging the country, and killing every thing that came in its way, both man and beast, and eluding every endeavour made to take and destroy it, till St. Martha arrived in the town, and taking compassion on the general distress, went out against the monster, and brought him into the town in chains, when the people fell upon him

and slew him.

St. Martha, according to the chronicles of Provence, had fled from her own country in company with her sister Mary Magdalen, her brother Lazarus, and several other saints both male and female. They landed at Marseilles, and immediately spread themselves about the country to preach to the people. It fell to the lot of St. Martha to bend her steps towards Tarascon, where she arrived at the fortunate moment above mentioned. She continued to her dying day particularly to patronise the place, and was at her own request interred there. Her tomb is shown in a subterranean chapel belonging to the principal church. It bears her figure in white marble, as large as life, in a recumbent posture, and is a good piece of sculpture, uninjured by the revolution. In the church a series of paintings represent the escape of St. Martha and her companions from their persecutors, their landing in Provence, and some of their subsequent adventures. She is the patron

saint of Tarascon,

It is presumed that the story of a beast ravaging the neighbouring country had its origin in fact; but that instead of a dreadful dragon it was a hyena. Bouche, however, in his Essai sur l'Histoire de Provence, while he mentions the popular tradition of the dragon, makes no mention of the supposed hyena, which he probably

would have done had there been any good ground for believing in its existence.

Be this as it may, the fabulous story of the dragon was the occasion of establishing an annual festival at Tarascon, the reputed origin of which seems no less fabulous than the story itself. According to the tradition, the queen, consort to the reigning sovereign of the country, unaccountably fell into a deep and settled melancholy, from which she could not be roused. She kept herself shut up in her chamber, and would not see or be seen by any one; medicines and amusements were in vain, till the ladies of Tarascon thought of celebrating a festival, which they hoped, from its novelty might impress the mind of their afflicted sovereign.

A figure was made to represent the "tarasque," with a terrible head, a terrible mouth, with two terrible rows of teeth, wings on its back, and a terrible long tail. At the festival of St. Martha, by whom the "tarasque" was chained, this figure was led about for eight days successively, by eight of the principal ladies in the town, elegantly dressed, and accompanied by a band of music. The procession was followed by an immense concourse of people, in their holyday clothes; and during the progress, alms were collected for the poor. All sorts of gaieties were exhibited; balls, concerts, and shows of every kind-nothing, in short, was omitted to accomplish the purpose for which the festival was instituted.

And her majesty condescended to be amused: that hour her melancholy ceased, and never after returned. Whether the honour of this happy change was wholly due to the procession, or whether the saint might not assist the efforts of the patriotic ladies of Tarascon, by working

a miracle in favour of the restoration of

the queen's health, is not on record; but her malady never returned; and the people of Tarascon were so much delighted by the processsion of the "tarasque," that it was determined to make the

festival an annual one.

This festival was observed till the revolution; but in "the reign of terror," the people of Arles, between whom and those of Tarascon a great jealousy and rivalship had for many years subsisted, came in a body to the latter place, and, seizing the "tarasque," burnt it in the market-place.

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