Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
England: Vols. I–IV. 1876–79.
Annot of Benallay
By Robert Stephen Hawker (18031875)A
To summon Annot’s clay:
For common eyes must not behold
The griefs of Benallay.
Was Lady Annot born:
That light which was not long to shine,
The sun that set at morn.
They buried her in pall;
And the ring he gave her faith to plight
Shines on her finger small.
The silent leech stands by:
The sob of voiceless love is there,
And sorrow’s vacant eye.
The churchyard’s homeward way:
Farewell! farewell! thou lovely dead:
Thou Flower of Benallay.
Along the chancel floor:
He waits, that old man gray and grim,
To close the narrow door.
The ghastly caitiff said;
“Better that living hands should hold,
Than glisten on the dead.”
The pall is rent away:
And lo! beneath the shattered lid,
The Flower of Benallay.
Blood thrills that lifted hand:
And awful words are in her cries,
Which none may understand.
Of the city calléd Nain:—
Lo! glad feet throng the sculptured floor,
To hail their dead again.
A stately feast is spread:
Lord Harold is the bridegroom gay,
The bride the arisen dead.