The Poetry Corner

Song of the Troubadour.

By George Pope Morris

In Imitation of the Lays of the Olden Time. "Come, list to the lay of the olden time," A troubadour sang on a moonlit stream: "The scene is laid in a foreign clime, "A century back--and love is the theme." Love was the theme of the troubadour's rhyme, Of lady and lord of the olden time "At an iron-barred turret, a lady fair "Knelt at the close of the vesper-chime: "Her beads she numbered in silent prayer "For one far away, whom to love was her crime. "Love," sang the troubadour, "love was a crime, "When fathers were stern, in the olden time. "The warder had spurned from the castle gate "The minstrel who wooed her in flowing rhyme-- "He came back from battle in regal estate-- "The bard was a prince of the olden time. "Love," sand the troubadour, "listened to rhyme, "And welcomed the bard of the olden time. "The prince in disguise had the lady sought; "To chapel they hied in their rosy prime: "Thus worth won a jewel that wealth never bought, "A fair lady's heart of the olden time. "The moral," the troubadour sang, "of my rhyme, "Was well understood in the olden time."