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Home  »  Poems of Places An Anthology in 31 Volumes  »  The Maid of Dunmore

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
Scotland: Vols. VI–VIII. 1876–79.

Dunmore

The Maid of Dunmore

By Anonymous

A CAPTIVE maid pined in the tower of Dunmore.

Full high was its gate, closely barred was the door.

Her sighs unregarded, her prison unknown,

Far from kinsmen and lover she languished alone.

But a little bird sang at this fair captive’s grate,

And seemed, as it chirruped, to soften her fate.

Ah! Flora, fair Flora,—ah! Flora Macdonald!

Ah! Flora, the maid of Dunmore,—

The maid of Dunmore, the maid of Dunmore,

Ah! weep for the maid, the maid of Dunmore!

The maid tied a note to this little bird’s neck,

And pointed to home, like a far distant speck.

O’er land and o’er water away the bird flew,

Sought kinsman and lover;—the courier they knew;

But soon a brave knight burst the prison-house door,

And rescued his bride from the tower of Dunmore.

Ah! Flora, fair Flora,—ah! Flora Macdonald!

Ah! Flora, the maid of Dunmore,—

The maid of Dunmore, the maid of Dunmore,

Ah! joy to the maid, the maid of Dunmore!