
Lesson:
- The night was dark, the sun was hid
Beneath the mountain gray,
And not a single star appeared
To shoot a silver ray.
- Across the heath the owlet flew,
And screamed along the blast;
And onward, with a quickened step,
Benighted Harry passed.
- Now, in thickest darkness plunged,
He groped his way to find;
And now, he thought he saw beyond,
A form of horrid kind.
- In deadly white it upward rose,
Of cloak and mantle bare,
And held its naked arms across,
To catch him by the hair.
- Poor Harry felt his blood run cold,
At what before him stood;
But then, thought he, no harm, I’m sure,
Can happen to the good.
- So, calling all his courage up,
He to the monster went;
And eager through the dismal gloom
His piercing eyes he bent.
- And when he came well-nigh the ghost
That gave him such affright,
He clapped his hands upon his side,
And loudly laughed outright.
- For ‘t was a friendly guidepost stood,
His wandering steps to guide;
And thus he found that to the good,
No evil could betide.
- Ah well, thought he, one thing I’ve learned,
Nor shall I soon forget;
Whatever frightens me again,
I’ll march straight up to it.
- And when I hear an idle tale,
Of monster or of ghost,
I’ll tell of this, my lonely walk,
And one tall, white guidepost.
DEFINITIONS
- Heath: A place overgrown with shrubs.
- Benighted: Overtaken by the night.
- Groped: Felt his way in the dark.
- Horrid: Hideous, frightful.
- Monster: A thing of unnatural size and shape.
- Dismal: Dark, cheerless.
- Piercing: Sharp, penetrating.
- Ghost: A frightful object in white, an apparition.
- Guidepost: A post and sign set up at the forks of a road to direct travelers.
- Betide: Befall, happen.
- Idle: Of no account, foolish.

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