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CXXXVII

THE DÆMON LOVER

'O where have you been, my long, long, love, This long seven years and more?'

'O I'm come to seek my former vows Ye granted me before.'

"O hold your tongue of your former vows,
For they will breed sad strife;

O hold your tongue of your former vows,
For I am become a wife.'

He turn'd him right and round about,
And the tear blinded his ee;

'I would never have trodden on Irish ground, If it had not been for thee.

'I might have had a king's daughter,
Far, far beyond the sea;

I might have had a king's daughter,
Had it not been for love of thee.'

'If ye might have had a king's daughter,
Yourself you had to blame;

Ye might have taken the king's daughter,
For ye knew that I was nane.'

'O false are the vows of womankind, But fair is their false bodie;

I never would have trodden on Irish ground Had it not been for love of thee.'

T

'If I was to leave my husband dear,
And my two babes also,

O what have you to take me to,
If with you I should go?'

'I have seven ships upon the sea,
The eighth brought me to land;
With four and twenty bold mariners,
And music on every hand.'

She has taken up her two little babes,
Kiss'd them both cheek and chin;
'O fare ye well, my own two babes,
For I'll never see you again.'

She set her foot upon the ship,

No mariners could she behold; But the sails were of the taffetie, And the masts of the beaten gold.

She had not sail'd a league, a league,
A league but barely three,
When dismal grew his countenance,
And drumlie grew his ee.

The masts that were like the beaten gold
Bent not on the heaving seas;

And the sails that were of the taffetie
Fill'd not in the east land breeze.

They had not sail'd a league, a league,
A league but barely three,
Until she espied his cloven foot,

And she wept right bitterly.

'O hold your tongue of your weeping,' says he,

'Of your weeping now let me be;

I will show you how the lilies grow
On the banks of Italy.'

'O what hills are yon, yon pleasant hills,
That the sun shines sweetly on?'
"O yon are the hills of heaven,' he said,
'Where you will never won.'

O what a mountain is yon,' she said, 'All so dreary with frost and snow?' 'O yon is the mountain of hell,' he cried, 'Where you and I will go.'

And aye when she turn'd her round about
Aye taller he seem'd for to be;

Until that the tops of that gallant ship
No taller were than he.

The clouds grew dark and the wind grew loud,
And the levin filled her ee;

And waesome wail'd the snow-white sprites
Upon the gurlie sea.

He struck the topmast with his hand,

The foremast with his knee;

And he brake that gallant ship in twain,

And sank her in the sea.

Old Ballad

CXXXVIII

THE NIGHTINGALE AND THE GLOW

WORM

A Nightingale that all day long
Had cheer'd the village with his song,
Nor yet at eve his note suspended,
Nor yet when eventide was ended,
Began to feel, as well he might,
The keen demands of appetite;
When looking eagerly around,
He spied far off, upon the ground,
A something shining in the dark,
And knew the Glowworm by his spark
So, stooping down from hawthorn top,
He thought to put him in his crop.
The worm, aware of his intent,
Harangued him thus, right eloquent :
‘Did you admire my lamp,' quoth he,
'As much as I your minstrelsy,
You would abhor to do me wrong,
As much as I to spoil your song:
For 'twas the self-same Power Divine
Taught you to sing, and me to shine;
That you with music, I with light,
Might beautify and cheer the night.’
The songster heard this short oration,
And warbling out his approbation,
Released him, as my story tells,
And found a supper somewhere else.

W. Cowper

CXXXIX

THE LADY TURNED SERVING-MAN

You beauteous ladies great and small,
I write unto you, one and all,

Whereby that you may understand

What I have suffer'd in this land.

I was by birth a lady fair,

My father's chief and only heir,
But when my good old father died,
Then I was made a young knight's bride.

And then my love built me a bower,
Bedeck'd with many a fragrant flower;
A braver bower you ne'er did see
Than my true love did build for me.

But there came thieves late in the night, They robb'd my bower, and slew my knight, And after that my knight was slain

I could no longer there remain.

My servants all from me did fly
In the midst of my extremity,
And left me by myself alone

With a heart more cold than any stone.

Yet, though my heart was full of care,
Heaven would not suffer me to despair;
Wherefore in haste I changed my name
From fair Elise to Sweet William.

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