Page:Tragedy of Sir James the Rose (3).pdf/6

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Till thro' his enemy's heart the steel,
Had forced a mortal wound.

Graeme, like a tree by wind o'erthrown,
Fell breathless on the clay;
And down beside him sunk the Rose,
And faint and dying lay.

Matilda saw and fast she ran,
O spare his life, she cried,
Lord Buchan's daughter begs his life,
Let her not be deny'd

Her well-known voice the hero heard,
He rais'd his death-clos'd eyes,
He fixed them on the weeping maid,
And weakly thus replies--

In vain Matilda begs a life,
By death's arrest denyd;
My race is run-adieu my love,
Then clos'd his eyes and dy'd.

The sword yet warm from his left side,
With frantic hand she drew,
I come, Sir James the Rose, she cry'd,
I come to follow you.

The hilt she lean'd against the ground,
And bar'd her snowy breast;
Then fell upon her lover's face,
And sunk to endless rest.

FINIS.