“GET up, our Anna dear, from the weary spinning-wheel; | |
For your father’s on the hill, and your mother is asleep; | |
Come up above the crags, and we’ll dance a Highland reel | |
Around the Fairy Thorn on the steep.” | |
At Anna Grace’s door ’twas thus the maidens cried, | 5 |
Three merry maidens fair in kirtles of the green; | |
And Anna laid the rock and the weary wheel aside, | |
The fairest of the four, I ween. | |
They’re glancing through the glimmer of the quiet eve, | |
Away in milky wavings of neck and ankle bare; | 10 |
The heavy-sliding stream in its sleepy song they leave, | |
And the crags in the ghostly air. | |
And linking hand-in-hand, and singing as they go, | |
The maids along the hillside have ta’en their fearless way, | |
Till they come to where the rowan trees in lonely beauty grow | 15 |
Beside the Fairy Hawthorn grey. | |
The Hawthorn stands between the ashes tall and slim, | |
Like matron with her twin grand-daughters at her knee; | |
The rowan berries cluster o’er her low head grey and dim | |
In ruddy kisses sweet to see. | 20 |
The merry maidens four have ranged them in a row, | |
Between each lovely couple a stately rowan stem, | |
And away in mazes wavy, like skimming birds they go, | |
Oh, never carolled bird like them! | |
But solemn is the silence on the silvery haze | 25 |
That drinks away their voices in echoless repose, | |
And dreamily the evening has stilled the haunted braes, | |
And dreamier the gloaming grows. | |
And sinking one by one, like lark-notes from the sky, | |
When the falcon’s shadow saileth across the open shaw, | 30 |
Are hushed the maidens’ voices, as cowering down they lie | |
In the flutter of their sudden awe. | |
For, from the air above and the grassy ground beneath, | |
And from the mountain-ashes and the old white-thorn between, | |
A power of faint enchantment doth through their beings breathe, | 35 |
And they sink down together on the green. | |
They sink together silent, and stealing side to side, | |
They fling their lovely arms o’er their drooping necks so fair, | |
Then vainly strive again their naked arms to hide, | |
For their shrinking necks again are bare. | 40 |
Thus clasped and prostrate all, with their heads together bowed, | |
Soft o’er their bosoms beating—the only human sound— | |
They hear the silky footsteps of the silent fairy crowd, | |
Like a river in the air gliding round. | |
Nor scream can any raise, nor prayer can any say, | 45 |
But wild, wild the terror of the speechless three— | |
For they feel fair Anna Grace drawn silently away, | |
By whom they dare not look to see. | |
They feel their tresses twine with her parting locks of gold, | |
And the curls elastic falling, as her head withdraws. | 50 |
They feel her sliding arms from their trancèd arms unfold, | |
But they dare not look to see the cause; | |
For heavy on their senses the faint enchantment lies | |
Through all that night of anguish and perilous amaze | |
And neither fear nor wonder can ope their quivering eyes, | 55 |
Or their limbs from the cold ground raise; | |
Till out of night the earth has rolled her dewy side, | |
With every haunted mountain and streamy vale below; | |
When, as the mist dissolves in the yellow morningtide, | |
The maiden’s trance dissolveth so. | 60 |
Then fly the ghastly three as swiftly as they may, | |
And tell their tale of sorrow to anxious friends in vain— | |
They pined away and died within the year and day, | |
And ne’er was Anna Grace seen again. |
Wednesday, June 15, 2016
The Fairy Thorn by Sir Samuel Ferguson
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment