Alfred H. Miles, ed. Women Poets of the Nineteenth Century. 1907.
By Miscellaneous Poems. V. The Moorish Maidens VigilLætitia Elizabeth Maclean (18021838)
D
Does the maiden watch in vain?
Do her dark eyes strain to catch him
Riding o’er the moonlit plain,
Stately, beautiful, and tall?
Those long eyelashes are gleaming
With the tears she will not shed;
Still her patient hope is dreaming
That it is his courser’s tread,
If an olive leaf but fall.
Woe for thee, my poor Zorayda,
By the fountain’s side;
Better, than this weary watching,
Better thou hadst died.
Round the long black plaits of hair;
And the pliant gold is moulded
Round her arms that are as fair
As the moonlight which they meet.
Little of their former splendour
Lingereth in her large dark eyes;
Ever sorrow maketh tender,
And the heart’s deep passion lies
In their look so sad and sweet.
Woe for thee, my poor Zorayda,
By the fountain’s side;
Better, than this weary watching,
Better thou hadst died.
Paled beside her cheek’s warm dye,
Now ’tis like the last sad planet
Waning in the morning sky—
She has wept away its red.
Can this be the Zegri maiden,
Whom Granada named its flower,
Drooping like a rose rain-laden?—
Heavy must have been the shower,
Bowing down its fragrant head.
Woe for thee, my poor Zorayda,
By the fountain’s side;
Better, than this weary watching,
Better thou hadst died.
There he dwells, her Spanish knight;
’Tis a dreadful thing to ponder,
Whether true love heard aright.
Did he say those gentle things
Over which fond memories linger,
And with which she cannot part?
Still his ring is on her finger,
Still his name is in her heart—
All around his image brings.
Woe for thee, my poor Zorayda,
By the fountain’s side;
Better, than this weary watching,
Better thou hadst died.
By the one who sought that heart?
Can there be who will awaken
All of life’s diviner part,
For some vanity’s cold reign.
Heavy is the lot of woman—
Heavy is her loving lot—
If it thus must share in common
Love with those who know it not—
With the careless and the vain.
Woe for thee, my poor Zorayda,
By the fountain’s side;
Better, than this weary watching,
Better thou hadst died.
Hanging on the myrtle bough,
Float on the clear fountain’s bosom,
She who listened to thy vow—
She will watch for thee no more!
’Tis a tale of frequent sorrow
Love seems fated to renew;
It will be again to-morrow
Just as bitter and as true,
As it aye has been of yore.
Woe to thee, my poor Zorayda,
By the fountain’s wave;
But the shade of rest is round thee—
And it is the grave!