Argosy Junction (38 page)

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Authors: Chautona Havig

Tags: #Christian, #Fiction, #General

BOOK: Argosy Junction
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The Ballad of Exmoor

 

Driven from the moors of Scotland

From ancestral lands they fled.

Wicked deeds had finally cost them

Title and the lives they’d led.

‘Tis a tragic tale I carol;

Aye, this melancholy tune

O’er ages tells the story

O’ the ancient clan of Doone.

 

In a hamlet deep in Exmoor,

Their conduct was most vile.

Though they terrified Devon

Their crimes ne’er brought a trial.

Sir Ensor their great chieftain

And his family’s brigand band

Soon schemed to leave old Britain

And reclaim their “stolen” land.

 

The horses stopped abruptly

At Ensor’s orders stood.

A scream ripped through the night air

As men streamed from the wood.

The coach door was flung open,

A gun aimed at her breast.

The Countess Lady Dougal

Entered eternal rest.

 

A uniquely crafted necklace

Sir Ensor snatched with glee.

Knowing the jewels would one day

Prove a pedigree.

A small child, now crying

Was taken to their home;

Rechristened there as Lorna

The Doones claimed her as their own.

 

A few short years thereafter

Carver’s men rode through the town.

They frightened young children

In cold blood shot Jack Ridd down.

Finding little Lorna

Ne’er stopped marauding deeds.

The murder went unpunished

Despite the family’s pleas.

 

Wand’ring through verdant hillocks,

And along a winding stream,

Young John, the son of Jack Ridd,

Found a place where light did gleam.

A waterfall it thundered

And dragged him ‘neath the pool;

He thought his life would vanish

In water clear as jewels.

 

Rescued by a dark-eyed beauty

A mere girl of twelve years old,

She dragged John from the water

Shivering from the cold.

She asked what he was doing

How he’d fallen in the brook,

John showed her how he fished and

The patience that it took.

 

They laughed and played for awhile

Until urgent calls drew near.

While Carver searched for Lorna

Her face grew white with fear.

“You must leave and ne’er return;

“Don’t come around again.

“My family will surely kill you

“If they find you in our glen.”

 

She disappeared up the hillside

And vanished in the trees.

The calls were coming closer

As though carried by the breeze.

He slipped beneath the water

Hidden from Carver’s sight.

He held his breath and waited

Prepared to take his flight.

 

The years passed and John Ridd

Grew into a fine young man.

He did an honest day’s work

As he worked his fam’ly’s land.

The Doones attacked an uncle,

And the local Baron failed

To render any justice

Or have the outlaws jailed.

 

They rode over the hillsides

And climbed down by the rill.

John left his uncle panting

With orders to keep still.

He slipped between the rocks that

He’d found so long ago;

His eyes caught Lorna fishing

In the clear pool down below.

 

Alarmed to see a man there,

Lorna scampered to evade

The advances of a stranger

On an unprotected maid.

John called out, “Wait, Lorna!

“Don’t you remember how

“You saved a half drowned boy once?

“Do you recognize me now?”

 

She reminded of her warning

Of the dangers of her home,

Demanded that he leave her,

Find another place to roam.

But John purposed to linger;

He held fast to her hand

Until she gave her promise

To give in to his demand.

 

But when John returned to her,

Lorna sent him back again.

“You’ll not want to know me;

“I’ll only bring you pain.

“You know my name is Lorna,

“But I also am a Doone

“I’m heir to this realm of violence;

“I’ll become their queen too soon.”

 

Carver badgered Sir Ensor,

Claimed Lorna as his bride.

While John at home, tormented,

Wrestled with his hurt and pride.

How could such a beauty

For other’s crimes be accused?

He resolved to get to know her;

His heart wouldn’t be refused.

 

Meanwhile the old Lord Doone

Told Carver he must wait.

He must woo dear Lorna

Before she’d become his mate.

John Ridd won the heart of

His long forbidden prize,

While Carver tried to pressure

And fill her ears with lies.

 

Over the months Sir Ensor

Grew weak through ill and age.

He hoped before he died

To see his grandchildren engaged.

Many years of planning

Relied upon that dream.

It meant somehow his grandson

Might earn Lorna’s esteem.

 

But, carelessness and ardor

Exposed the lover’s hearts.

The ailing man sent for John

And railed against upstarts

Who dared to hope that somehow

The Doones would let her go,

Would not hold her captive,

Away from John her beau.

 

As he left, his Lorna

Bade him watch close the trees.

Said, “When there are but two nests

“‘Tis time to come for me.

“You’ll know then that Ensor

“Will have passed from this life.

And Carver’ll come to claim me

As his rightful wife.

 

Not much time had passed ‘fore

John saw the nestless tree.

He crept just like a shadow;

His Lorna he must free

Before the others noticed

Their queen was gone from home,

Stolen by the farmer

To become John Ridd’s own.

 

But back home at the farmhouse,

The fam’ly was distraught

To wed their father’s killer

Seemed but to come to naught.

“How could you!” cried Lizzy,

Join to such a one

“She’ll now ne’er be punished

“For the evils they have done.”

 

Before the matter settled,

The news came of a raid;

Carver’s men were thund’ring

O’er hills to claim the maid.

Guns were loaded quickly;

Each man took careful aim

At the men on horseback

As in the yard they came.

 

They drove back would-be captors

And sent them home alone.

The barn was burned to cinders,

Revenge for what he’d done.

But Lorna saved dear Lizzie

From certain death that day

And proved her loyalty there

In a most convincing way.

 

The necklace at Lorna’s throat

Annie’s Tom noticed with delight,

Marveled at the workmanship

And how it glistened in the light.

A sketch drawn there by Lizzie

He brought to London town

And learned the tale that it told,

A sad story of much renown.

 

Tom arrived and told John

Of Lorna’s noble birth.

“She’s the ward of King Charles,

“Has a title and great worth.

“A wealthier young woman

“You’ll not find in the land;

“She must come back to London

“And take her station grand.”

 

O’er weeks and months, John wrote her,

His pen oft’ at his page;

He poured his heart on paper

To the woman he’d engaged.

While Lorna at the Palace

Wrote of her new found home,

Of her loss and how she missed him,

Each letter near a tome.

 

All too soon, King Charles

Took ill and quickly died.

Monmouth’s troops were waiting

In hopes he could divide

His countrymen from loyalty

To King James, and then he’d win

The crown for himself and

A new country to begin.

 

Tom rashly joined the forces

Of rebellion and of greed.

He rode away at sunrise

On a black and glossy steed.

But John, pleasing sister Annie,

Rode to the battle ground

To save the foolish husband,

And wounded Tom was found.

 

He sent the man home weary

And tried to sneak away,

But the soldiers of King James they

Heard him and demanded that he stay

Just as they tried to hang him,

The king’s servant came,

Declared Johns fealty and love

To the crown and to King James.

 

In London he was tried and

Found guilty of dissent;

He begged for mercy and of Doones

His voice found full vent.

He promised to clear them

From Exmoor’s hidden glens;

He needed but good horses

And about a hundred men.

 

He watched the royal fam’ly

Enter church that Sunday morn.

And later there that evening

He waited to his scorn

For Lorna to come running

To see her beloved John,

But when she came, his anger

Near’ found her there alone.

 

They quarreled over letters

And accused of unfaithful hearts;

Both claimed they’d written daily

Through the time they’d been apart;

John thrust the pack returned him

Into Lorna’s trembling hands;

She called for her maid Gwenny

Learned ‘bout the maiden’s plans.

 

Lorna’s noble title

Meant no marriage to her John;

But his plans came to fruition—

The Doones were finally gone.

And though that wily Carver

Escaped with but his life,

Knighted by King Charles’ brother,

John now took Lorna as his wife.

 

But at the marriage chapel

At conclusion of their troth,

The heavy doors flung open

By Carver with an oath.

He pulled a gun on John who

Stepped in front of his new wife;

But as they’d done years prior

A Doone stole a Dougal’s life.

 

Wild with grief and anger,

John rode in quick pursuit;

He gained ground quite quickly

Following the madman’s route.

He flung himself at Carver,

And knocked him from the steed;

Another would die that day—

Justice for the murd’rous deed.

 

But as they fought in the forest,

They fell into the mire;

John struggled soon to safety,

And against his deep desire,

He tried to save the one who

Had stolen his love’s last breath;

But Carver refused all help

And died a gruesome death.

 

Forlorn, the bridegroom

Rode sadly to his farm,

Found her pale in death on his bed,

But her hand it still lay warm!

Dear Ruth assured if Lorna

Could make it through the night,

She’d make a full recovery

If for her life, she’d fight.

 

As with all romances,

This tale has a joyous end.

The man won his lover, and

The villain did apprehend.

And through the years the legend

Of Exmoor and the Doones

Will ne’er cease to delight

Those who sing this plaintive tune.

 

Ready or Not

Fresh out of college, Aggie Milliken thinks she’s prepared for anything life can throw her way. Think again, Aggie!

After the abrupt loss of her sister and brother-in-law, Aggie is stunned to find herself the sole guardian of their eight lively children. If learning basic parenting skills wasn’t complicated enough, she must also battle the children’s half-crazed grandmother, survive a massive remodeling project, and navigate the waters of new friendships—alone.

She has little experience with children and none with housekeeping, and it shows. What she has going for her is grit, a double dose of determination, and the confidence that this is exactly where the Lord wants her to be. With an unlimited P-mail account and enough hymns to keep her spirits bolstered, she tackles one catastrophe after another.

It seems like nothing Aggie does is right, but ready or not, here she comes!

 

193

 

Table of Contents

Copyright

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