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WHERE THE WEARY ARE AT REST.

BY P. G. ELIAS WARE, OF BALTIMORE.

YOUTHFUL friend, o'er carth a wand'rer,

Steer thy course for heaven above,
Turn not rudely from the story

Of a Saviour's dying love.
Ere thy fleeting life shall vanish,
Let that Saviour be confest,
He will guide thee to the haven
"Where the weary are at rest.”

Miser, counting o'er thy treasures—
Source of strife and endless wo,
Think not they can aught avail thee
When returned to dust below.
Art thou now by wealth uplifted,
Ye shall be by want oppress'd,
When thy coffers fail to take thee
"Where the weary are at rest."

Warrior, thou art vainly wreathing
Cherish'd laurels 'round thy brow,
Tho' a bright halo of glory

Fondly shine upon thee now.
Vain were all thy boasted greatness;
Dimm'd thy proud and glitt'ring crest,

If thou art denied the region

"Where the weary are at rest."

Parent, grieving o'er thy children,
Now from earth and sorrow fled,
Call them not from their reposing-
Peaceful slumb'ring with the dead.
Tho' they've left thee sad and lonely,
"Tis to honour that behest

That can take thee to embrace them
"When the weary are at rest."

Christian, thine shall be the glory,
If in faith and hope and love,
Ye pursue your onward journey
To yon better world above.
Endless life thou shalt inherit

When united with the blest,

"Where the wicked cease from troubling,
And the weary are at rest."

ALEMOOR.

A TALE OF THE

FIFTEENTH CENTURY.

Sad is the wail that floats o'er Alemoor's lake,
And nightly bids her gulfs unbottomed quake,
While moonbeams, sailing o'er her waters blue,
Reveal the frequent tinge of blood-red hue.
The water-birds, with shrill discordant scream,
Oft rouse the peasant from his tranquil dream;
He dreads to raise his slow unclosing eye,

And thinks he hears an infant's feeble cry.-DR. LEYDEN.

IN one of those frequent incursions which the Scotch Borderers used to make into the sister territory it was the misfortune of Sir John Douglas, a gallant and distinguished warrior, to be taken prisoner by Richard de Mowbray, who, to a naturally proud and vindictive temper, added a bitter and irreconcilable hatred to that branch of the house of Douglas to which the prisoner belonged. Instead of treating the brave and noble youth with that courtesy which the law of arms and the manners of the times authorised, he loaded his limbs with fetters, and threw him into one of the deepest dungeons of his baronial castle of Holme Coltrum. Earl De Mowbray, his father, was then at the English court, in attendance on his sovereign-so that he had none to gainsay his authority, but yielded, without hesitation or restraint, to every impulse of his passions. To what lengths the savage cruelty of his temper might have led him in practising against the youthful prisoner, is not known, for he was also summoned to London to assist in the stormy councils of that distracted period. Meanwhile, Douglas, lay on the floor of his dungeon, loaded with fetters, and expecting every hour to be led out to die. No murmur escaped his lips. He waited patiently till the fatal message arrived, only regretting that it had not pleased heaven to suffer him to die sword in hand like his brave ancestors. "Yes," he exclaimed, as he raised his stately and warlike form from the ground, and clashing his fettered hands together, while his dark eyes flashed fire; "yes; let false tyrannical Mowbray come with all his ruffian band-let them give me death by sword or by cord-my cheek shall not blanch, nor my look quail before them. As a Douglas I have lived, as a Douglas I shall die." But the expected summons came not. Day after day passed on in sullen monotony, more trying to a brave mind than even the prospect of suffering. No sound broke in on the silence around him but the daily visit of a veteran man-at-arms, who brought him his scanty meal. No entreaties could induce this man to speak, so that the unfortunate prisoner could only guess at his probable fate. Sometimes despondency, in spite of his better reason, would steal over his mind.— "Shall I never again see my noble, my widowed mother?-my innocent playful sister?-never again wander through the green woods of Drumlanrig, or hunt the deer on its lordly domain? Shall my sight never be again greeted by the green earth or cheerful sun? Will these hateful walls enclose me till damp and famine destroy me, and my withered limbs be left in this charnel-house a monument of the cruelty and unceasing hatred of De Mowbray?" Seven long weeks had rolled tedious along when the

prisoner was surprised by his allowance being brought by a stranger in the dress of a Cumbrian peasant. Eagerly, rapidly he questioned the man respecting Mowbray, his intentions, and why he had been so long left without being allowed to name a ransom. The peasant told him of De Mowbray's absence, and added, as there was to be a general invasion of Scotland, all the men-at-arms had been marched away that morning to join their companions, except the warders, by whom he had been ordered to bring food to the prisoner. Joy now thrilled through the heart and frame of the youthful warrior, but he had still enough of caution left to make no further inquiries, but allow his new jailer to depart without exciting his suspicions too early.

It is well known to those who are conversant with the history of that period, that, however bitter the animosities of the two nations were while engaged in actual warfare, yet, in times of peace, or even truce, the commons lived on friendly terms, and carried on even a sort of trade in cattle. All this was known to Sir John, who hoped, through the means of his new attendant, to open a communication with his retainers, if he could not engage to let him free, and become a follower of the Douglas, whose name was alike dreaded in both nations. But events over which he had no control were even then working for him, and his deliverance was to come from a quarter he thought not of. At the date of this tale, the ladies of rank had few amusements when compared to those of more modern times. Books, even if they could have been procured, would sometimes not have been valued or understood, from the very limited education which, in those days, was allowed to females. Guarded in their inaccessible towers or castles, their only amusement was listening to the tales of pilgrims, or the songs of the wandering minstrels, both of whom were always made welcome to the halls of nobles, and whose persons, like those of heralds, were deemed sacred even among contending parties. To be present at a tournament was considered as an event of the first importance, and looked forward to with the highest expectation, and afterwards formed an era in their lives. When such amusements were not to be had, a walk on the ramparts, attended by their trusty maid, was the next resource against the tedium of time. It was during such a walk as this, that Emma, only daughter of Earl Mowbray, addressed her attendant as follows:-" Do you think it possible, Edith, that the prisoner whom my brother is so solicitous to conceal can be that noble Douglas of whom we have heard so much, and about whom Graham, the old blind minstrel, sung such gallant verses."

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Indeed, my sweet lady," replied her attendant "the prisoner in yonder dungeon is certainly of the house of Douglas, and, as I think, that very Sir John of whom we have heard so much."

"How knowest thou that?" inquired her lady eagerly.

"I had always my own thoughts of it," whispered Edith, cautiously, and drawing nearer her lady; "but since Ralph of Teesdale succeeded grim old Norman as his keeper, I am almost certain of it; he knows every Douglas of them, and from his account, though the dungeon was dark, he believes it was Sir John, who performed such prodigies of valour at the taking of Alnwick."

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May Heaven, then, preserve and succour him!" sighed the Lady Emma, as she clasped her hands together. Emma De Mowbray, the only

daughter of the most powerful and warlike of the northern earls, was dazzling fair, and her very beautiful features were only relieved from the charge of insipidity on the first look, by the lustre of her dark blue eyes, which were shaded by long and beautiful eyelashes; her stature was scarcely above the middle size, but so finely proportioned that the eye of the beholder never tired gazing on it. She was only seventeen, and had not been allowed to grace a tournament, her ambitious father having determined to seclude his northern flower till he could dazzle the court of England with her charms, and secure for her such an advantageous settlement as would increase his own power and resources. Thus had Emma grown up the very child of nature and tenderness. Shut out from society of every kind, her imagination had run riot, and her most pleasing hours, when not occupied by devotional duties, were spent in musing over the romantic legends, which she heard either from minstrels, or those adventurers who oft-times found a home in the castles of a powerful chief, and which were circulated among the domestics till they reached the ear of their youthful lady. These feelings had been unconsciously fostered by her spiritual director, Father Anselm, who, of noble birth himself, had once been a soldier, and delighted, in the long winter evenings, to recount the prowess of his youth; and, in the tale of other years, often and often was the noble name of Douglas introduced and dwelt upon with enthusiastic rapture, as he narrated the chief's bravery in the Holy Land. In short, every circumstance combined to feed and excite the feverish exalted imagination of this untutored child. Had her mother lived, the sensibilities of her nature had been cherished and refined, and taught to keep within the bounds of their proper channel. As it was, they were allowed to run riot, and almost led her to overstep the limits of that retiring modesty which is so beautiful in the sex. No sooner, then, had she learnt that Douglas was the captive of her haughty brother, and perhaps doomed to a lingering or ignominious death, than she resolved to attempt his escape, be the consequences what they would. A wild tumultuary feeling took possession of her mind as she came to this resolution-what would the liberated object say to her, or how look his thanks? and oh, if he indeed proved to be the hero of her day-dreams, how blessed would she be to have had.it in her power to be his guardian angel! The tear of delight trembled in her eye as she turned from the bartisan of the castle, and sought the solitude of her chamber.

It was midnight-the last stroke of the deep-toned castle bell had been answered by the echoes from the neighbouring hills, when two shrouded figures stood by the couch of the prisoner. The glare of a small lantern, carried by one of them, awoke Douglas. He sprung to his feet as lightly as if the heavy fetters he was loaded with had been of silk, and in a stern voice told them he was ready. "Be silent, and follow us," was the reply of one of the muffled visitors. He bowed in silence, and prepared to leave his dungeon; not an easy undertaking, when it is remembered he was so heavily ironed; but the care and ingenuity of his conductors obviated as much as possible even this difficulty; one came on each side, and prevented as much as possible the fetters from clashing on each other. In this manner they hurried him on through a long subterraneous passage, then crossed some courts which seemed overgrown with weeds, and then entered a chapel, where Douglas could perceive a noble tomb surrounded

by burning tapers. "You must suffer yourself to be blindfolded," said one of them in a sweet musical, but suppressed voice; he did so, and no sooner was the bandage made fast, than he heard a snap as of a spring, and was immediately led forward. In a few minutes more he felt he had left the rough stones of the church, and its chill sepulchral air, for a matted floor and a warmer atmosphere; the bandage dropped from his eyes, and he found himself in a small square room, comfortably furnished with a fire blazing in the chimney; a second look convinced him he was in the private chamber of an ecclesiastic, and that he was free.

It need not be told the sagacious reader that this escape was the work of Lady Emma, aided by Father Anselm, and Ralph Teesdale, who was her foster-brother, and thereby bound to serve her almost at the risk of his own life-so very strong were such ties then considered. No sooner did Douglas learn from the venerable ecclesiastic to whom he owed his life and liberty, than he pleaded for an interview with all the warmth of gratitude which such a boon could inspire. Recruited by a night of comfort. able repose, and refreshed by wholesome food, our youthful warrior looked more like those of his name than when stretched on the floor of the dungeon. It was the evening of the second day after his liberation, while Douglas was listening to his kind and venerable host's account of the daring deeds by which his ancestor, the good Lord James, had been distinguished, when the door opened, and Lady Emma and her attendant entered. Instantly sinking on one knee, Sir John poured forth his thanks in language so courtly, so refined, yet so earnest and heartfelt, that Lady Emma's heart beat tumultuously, and her eyes became suffused with tears. "Suffer me," continued Douglas, to behold the features of her who has indeed been a guardian angel to the descendant of that house who never forgave an injury, nor ever, while breath animated them, forgot a favour." Lady Emma slowly raised her veil, and the eyes of the youthful pair met, and dwelt on each other with mutual admiration. Again the knight knelt, and, pressing her hand to his lips, vowed that he would ever approve himself her faithful and devoted champion. The conversation then took a less agitating turn, and in another hour, Lady Emma took her leave of the good father and his youthful companion, in whose favour she could not conceal that she was already inspired with the most fervent feelings. Nor did she chide Edith, who, whilst she braided the beautiful locks of her mistress, expatiated on the fine form and manly features of Douglas, and rejoiced in his escape.

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It was now time for Sir John to make some inquiries of Father Anselm about the state of the country, and if the Scotch had beat back their assailants in the attack made upon them, and learnt, to his pleasure and surprise, that the enemy were then too much divided among themselves to think of making reprisals, the whole force of the kingdom being then gathered together to decide the claims of York and Lancaster to the crown of England; that Earl Mowbray and his son, adherents of the queen, were then lying at York with their retainers, ready to close in battle with the adverse party. It might be supposed that this intelligence would inspire the captive with the wish to complete his escape, and return to Scotland. But no. A secret influence, a sort of charm, bound him to the spot; he was fascinated; he had no power to fly, even if the massy gates of the castle had unfolded themselves before him. Bred up in the camp, Douglas

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