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Poem 25: THE LITTLE GIRL FOUND
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| | All the night in woe | |
| | Lyca's parents go | |
| | Over valleys deep, | |
| | While the deserts weep. | |
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| | Tired and woe-begone, | |
| | Hoarse with making moan, | |
| | Arm in arm, seven days | |
| | They traced the desert ways. | |
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| | Seven nights they sleep | |
| | Among shadows deep, | |
| | And dream they see their child | |
| | Starved in desert wild. | |
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| | Pale through pathless ways | |
| | The fancied image strays, | |
| | Famished, weeping, weak, | |
| | With hollow piteous shriek. | |
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| | Rising from unrest, | |
| | The trembling woman pressed | |
| | With feet of weary woe; | |
| | She could no further go. | |
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| | In his arms he bore | |
| | Her, armed with sorrow sore; | |
| | Till before their way | |
| | A couching lion lay. | |
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| | Turning back was vain: | |
| | Soon his heavy mane | |
| | Bore them to the ground, | |
| | Then he stalked around, | |
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| | Smelling to his prey; | |
| | But their fears allay | |
| | When he licks their hands, | |
| | And silent by them stands. | |
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| | They look upon his eyes, | |
| | Filled with deep surprise; | |
| | And wondering behold | |
| | A spirit armed in gold. | |
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| | On his head a crown, | |
| | On his shoulders down | |
| | Flowed his golden hair. | |
| | Gone was all their care. | |
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| | 'Follow me,' he said; | |
| | 'Weep not for the maid; | |
| | In my palace deep, | |
| | Lyca lies asleep.' | |
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| | Then they followed | |
| | Where the vision led, | |
| | And saw their sleeping child | |
| | Among tigers wild. | |
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| | To this day they dwell | |
| | In a lonely dell, | |
| | Nor fear the wolvish howl | |
| | Nor the lion's growl. | |
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