Читать книгу The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction. Volume 12, No. 342, November 22, 1828 - Various - Страница 8

COUNCIL OFFICE, &c. WHITEHALL
ST. OLAVE.—A MANX LEGEND

Оглавление

(For the Mirror.)

[Magnus, King of Norway, having committed sacrilege, by opening the grave of St. Olave, he was commanded by the spirit of the offended saint to perform the voluntary penance of quitting the kingdom in thirty days. He obeyed this intimation, and immediately left Norway. Having conquered many of the Western Isles, at length he established himself in the Isle of Man. Afterwards attempting the reduction of Ireland, he was surrounded by the natives and slain, with the whole of his followers.]

Olave, of rocky Norway's saints, the holiest and the best,

Entomb'd in tumulus, enjoys a calm and peerless rest;

By all of heav'ns votaries in saintly rank renown'd,

As high in blessedness, and chief in holy missal crown'd.


The dead—in holy, stilly peace, the sacred dead repose,

Afar from earth's turmoil and grief, and all of sick'ning woes;

From racking pain, and withering pride, and avarice's care,

Secure they rest in solitude, unaw'd by sin or snare.


To sack the gloomy sepulchre of lately living clay,

From cheerful day and life remov'd, by dreaded death away,

Is crime indeed of blackest hue, deserving exile's fate,

From native climes ordain'd to feel an outlaw's dreary state.


Could Norway's priest-despising chief, deem sacrilege a crime

Fitting for absolution,—or dark penance of set time

That daring such all dreaded sin, he gazes on the grave,

And tramples o'er the hallow'd dust of canoniz'd Olave.


Lone sepulchre in holy earth—sure wickedness so dire,

Of holy man, and sacred place, incenses heaven's ire;

Can less than ever banishment from Norway's ice bound land,

Stay sure revenge—pursuing fate—and justice' awful hand?


Away he sails—the foaming seas as Corsair now he laves,

Dauntless—heroic—daring winds, and man-entombing waves,

To visit other lands afar,—to combat chiefs of fame;

In battle-field to spread around the dread of Norway's name.


Lone Mona's sea-girt isle he dares with spear and flashing sword,

Usurping regal rule and right by power of pirate horde;

Yet vengeance drear, and dark desert of direst actions, crave

A bloody death, a justice clear, and dark usurper's grave.


On Erin's lovely land he falls—awarded darksome doom,

When, ruffian-like, he dared profane the saintly Olave's tomb:

He leaves his conquests, kingdoms, crowns, and all of earthly state,

To sleep in loneliness, and fill his dark predicted fate.


Kirk Michael, Isle of Man. A B.C.

The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction. Volume 12, No. 342, November 22, 1828

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