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Home  »  The Book of Restoration Verse  »  Anonymous

William Stanley Braithwaite, ed. The Book of Restoration Verse. 1910.

The Daemon Lover

Anonymous

O WHERE have you been, my long, long love,

This long seven years and mair?’

‘O I’m come back 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 turned him right and round about,

And the tear blinded his e’e:

‘I wad never hae trodden on Irish ground,

If it had not been for thee.

‘I might hae had a king’s daughter,

Far, far beyond the sea;

I might have had a king’s daughter,

Had it not been for love o’ thee.’

‘If ye might have had a king’s daughter,

Yer sel ye had to blame;

Ye might have taken the king’s daughter,

For ye kend that I was nane.

‘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 hae 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 baith cheek and chin:

‘O fair ye weel, my ain 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 o’ the taffetie,

And the masts o’ 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 e’e.

The masts that were like the beaten gold,

Bent not on the heaving seas;

The sails that were o’ the taffetie

Fill’d not in the east land breeze.

They had not sailed a league, a league,

A league but barely three,

Until she espied his cloven foot,

And she wept right bitterlie.

‘O hold your tongue of your weeping,’ says he,

‘Of your weeping now let me be;

I will shew 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 win.’

‘O whaten a mountain is yon,’ she said,

‘All so dreary wi’ 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 seemed for to be;

Until that the tops o’ that gallant ship

Nae taller were than he.

The clouds grew dark, and the wind grew loud,

And the levin fill’d her e’e;

And waesome wail’d the snaw-white sprites

Upon the gurlie sea.

He strack the tapmast wi’ his hand,

The foremast wi’ his knee;

And he brak that gallant ship in twain,

And sank her in the sea.