The Lover's Walk Poem by John F. McCullagh

The Lover's Walk



They briefly loved who sheltered here; the beautiful Sarah and her cousin Will.
They fled the City to this place in England's north wild rolling hills.
Her husband had neglected her, visiting stables and not her bed.
By that wild summer of Sixty- eight their estrangement had come to a head.
To this old country house she fled; to linger in her Lover's arms.
Their close sanguinity proved no bar; she gladly yielded to his charms.
They summered here and oft were seen, together, on the Lover's walk.
A place where blackthorn trees entwine; but you know how people love to talk.
He left her then, alone, with child, as coloured leaves began to fall.
Divorced, disgraced, abandoned thus; She sheltered in another's home.
This famous beauty with Stuart blood there would raise her child alone.

Such is the history of this place; their romance played out in these halls.
Their scandalous adultery was consummated within these walls.
Modern beauties visit still and stroll with beaus the Lover's walk-
A place where blackthorn trees entwine and old ghosts whisper in the dark.

Thursday, September 8, 2016
Topic(s) of this poem: love and life
POET'S NOTES ABOUT THE POEM
A tale of Lady Sarah Lennox, her first Cousin William Gordon and their scandalous adulterous affair in the summer of 1768
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