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THE TROUBADOUR.



        And night came on:—with what dim fear
    I mark'd the darkling hours appear,—
    I could not gaze on the dear brow,
    And seeing was all left me now.
    I grasp'd the cold hand in mine own,
    Till both alike seem'd turn'd to stone.
    Night, morn, and noontide pass'd away,
    Then came the tokens of decay.

        'Twas the third night that I had kept
    My watch, and, like a child, had wept
    Sorrow to sleep, and in my dream
    I saw her as she once could seem,
    Fair as an angel: there she bent
    As if sprung from the element,
    The bright clear fountain, whose pure wave
    Her soft and shadowy image gave.