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air, with golden hair, The sunny-bright Gunild." "Welcome!" exclaims the blind old man, From the rock high o'er the wave; "Now my old age is blest again; Honored shall be my grave. Thou, son, shalt lay the sword I wore Beside the blind old king. And thou, Gunilda, free once more, My funeral song shalt sing." * * * * * THE MINSTREL'S CURSE[32] (1814) Once in olden times was standing A castle, high and grand, Broad glancing in the sunlight, Far over sea and land. And round were fragrant gardens, A rich and blooming crown; And fountains, playing in them, In rainbow brilliance shone. There a haughty king was seated, In lands and conquests great; Pale and awful was his countenance, As on his throne he sate; For what he thinks, is terror, And what he looks, is wrath, And what he speaks, is torture, And what he writes, is death. And 'gainst a marble pillar He shiver'd it in twain; And thus his curse he shouted, Till the castle rang again: "Woe, woe, thou haughty castle, With all thy gorgeous halls! Sweet string or song be sounded No more within thy walls. No, sighs alone, and wailing, And the coward steps of slaves! Already round thy towers The avenging spirit raves! "Woe, woe, ye fragrant gardens, With all your fair May light! Look on this ghastly countenance, And wither at the sight! Let all your flowers perish! Be all your fountains dry! Henceforth a horrid wilderness, Deserted, wasted, lie! "Woe, woe, thou wretched murderer, Thou curse of minstrelsy! Thy struggles for a bloody fame, All fruitless shall they be. Thy name shall be forgotten, Lost in eternal death, Dissolving into empty air Like a dying man's last breath!" The old man's curse is utter'd, And Heaven above hath heard. Those walls have fallen prostrate At the minstrel's mighty word. Of all that vanish'd splendor Stands but one column tall; And that, already shatter'd, Ere another night may fall. Around, instead of gardens, In a desert heathen land, No tree its shade dispenses, No fountains cool the sand. The king's name, it has vanish'd; His deeds no songs rehearse; Departed and forgotten-- This is the minstrel's curse. * * * * * TH
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