V.
Of Brian’s birth strange tales were told.
His mother watch’d a midnight fold,[173]
Built deep within a dreary glen,
Where scatter’d lay the bones of men,
In some forgotten battle slain,
And bleach’d by drifting wind and rain.
It might have tamed a warrior’s heart,
To view such mockery of his art!
The knot-grass fetter’d there the hand,
Which once could burst an iron band;
Beneath the broad and ample bone,
That buckler’d heart to fear unknown,
A feeble and a timorous guest,
The field-fare[174] framed her lowly nest;
There the slow blind-worm left his slime
On the fleet limbs that mock’d at time;
And there, too, lay the leader’s skull,
Still wreathed with chaplet, flush’d and full,
For heath-bell, with her purple bloom,
Supplied the bonnet and the plume.
All night, in this sad glen, the maid
Sate, shrouded in her mantle’s shade:
—She said, no shepherd sought her side,
No hunter’s hand her snood untied,
Yet ne’er again, to braid her hair,
The virgin snood did Alice wear;
Gone was her maiden glee and sport,
Her maiden girdle all too short;
Nor sought she, from that fatal night,
Or holy church, or blessed rite,
But lock’d her secret in her breast,
And died in travail, unconfess’d.