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                 Then to the spot away!                     I never heard of such as dare                     Approach the spot when she is there."       X                     "But wherefore to the mountain-top                     Can this unhappy Woman go?                     Whatever star is in the skies,                     Whatever wind may blow?"                     "Full twenty years are past and gone                     Since she (her name is Martha Ray)                     Gave with a maiden's true good-will                     Her company to Stephen Hill;                     And she was blithe and gay,                     While friends and kindred all approved                     Of him whom tenderly she loved.       XI                     "And they had fixed the wedding day,                     The morning that must wed them both;                     But Stephen to another Maid                     Had sworn another oath;                     And, with this other Maid, to church                     Unthinking Stephen went —                     Poor Martha! on that woeful day                     A pang of pitiless dismay                     Into her soul was sent;                     A fire was kindled in her breast,                     Which might not burn itself to rest.       XII                     "They say, full six months after this,                     While yet the summer leaves were green,                     She to the mountain-top would go,                     And there was often seen.                     What could she seek? — or wish to hide?                     Her state to any eye was plain;                     She was with child, and she was mad;                     Yet often was she sober sad                     From her exceeding pain.                     О guilty Father-would that death                     Had saved him from that breach of faith!       XIII                     "Sad case for such a brain to hold                     Communion with a stirring child!                     Sad case, as you may think, for one                     Who had a brain so wild!                     Last Christmas-eve we talked of this,                     And grey-haired Wilfred of the glen                     Held that the unborn infant wrought                     About its mother's heart, and brought                     Her senses back again:                     And, when at last her time drew near,                     Her looks were calm, her senses clear.       XIV                     "More know I not, I wish I did,                     And it should all be told to you;                     For what became of this poor child                     No mortal ever knew;                     Nay-if a child to her was born                     No earthly tongue could ever tell;                     And if 'twas born alive or dead,                     Far less could this with proof be said;                     But some remember well,                     That Martha Ray about this time                     Would up the mountain often climb.       XV                     "And all that winter, when at night                     The wind blew from the mountain-peak,                     Twas worth your while, though in the dark,                     The churchyard path to seek:                     For many a time and oft were heard                     Cries coming from the mountain head:                     Some plainly living voices were;                     And others, I've heard many swear,                     Were voices of the dead:                     I cannot think, whate'er they say,                     They had to do with Martha Ray.       XVI                     "But that she goes to this old Thorn,                     The Thorn which I described to you,                     And there sits in a scarlet cloak                     I will be sworn is true.                     For one day with my telescope,                     To view the ocean wide and bright,                     When to this country first I came,                     Ere I had heard of Martha's name,                     I climbed the mountain's height: —                     A storm came on, and I could see                     No object higher than my knee.       XVII                     "'Twas mist and rain, and storm and rain:                     No screen, no fence could I discover;                     And then the wind! in sooth, it was                     A wind full ten times over.                     I looked around, I thought I saw                     A jutting crag, — and off I ran,                     Head-foremost, through the driving rain,                     The shelter of the crag to gain;                     And, as I am a man,                     Instead of jutting crag, I found                     A Woman seated on the ground.       XVIII                     "I did not speak — I saw her face;                     Her face! — it was enough for me;                     I turned about and heard her cry,                     'Oh misery! oh misery!'                     And there she sits, until the moon                     Through half the clear blue sky will go;                     And, when the little breezes make                     The waters of the pond to shake,                     As all the country know,                     She shudders, and you hear her cry,                     'Oh misery! oh misery!'"       XIX                     "But what's the Thorn? and what the pond?                     And what the hill of moss to her?                     And what the creeping breeze that comes                     The little pond to stir?"                     "I cannot tell; but some will say                     She hanged her baby on the tree;                     Some say she drowned it in the pond,                     Which is a little step beyond:                     But all and each agree,                     The little Babe was buried there,                     Beneath that hill of moss so fair.       XX                     "I've heard, the moss is spotted red                     With drops of that poor infant's blood;                     But kill a new-born infant thus,                     I do not think she could!                     Some say, if to the pond you go,                     And fix on it a steady view,                     The shadow of a babe you trace,                     A baby and a baby's face,                     And that it looks at you;                     Whene'er you look on it, 'tis plain                     The baby looks at you again.       XXI                     "And some had sworn an oath that she                     Should be to public justice brought;                     And for the little infant's bones                     With spades they would have sought.                     But instantly the hill of moss                     Before their eyes began to stir!                     And, for full fifty yards around,                     The grass — it shook upon the ground!                     Yet all do still aver                     The little Babe lies buried there,                     Beneath that hill of moss so fair.       XXII                     "I cannot tell how this may be,                     But plain it is the Thorn is bound                     With heavy tufts of moss that strive                     To drag it to the ground;                     And this I know, full many a time,                     When she was on the mountain high,                     By day, and in the silent night,                     When all the stars shone clear and bright,                     That I have heard her cry,                     'Oh misery! oh misery!                     Oh woe is me! oh misery!'"