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The Fair Little Maiden

There is one at the door, Wolfe O’Driscoll,
At the door, who bids you to come!’
‘€œWho is he that wakes me in the darkness,
Calling when all the world is dumb?’
 
‘€œSix horses has he to his carriage,
Six horses blacker than the night,
And their twelve red eyes in the shadows’€”
Twelve lamps he carries for his light;
 
‘€œHis coach is a hearse black and mouldy,
Within a coffin open wide:
He asks for your soul, Wolfe O’Driscoll,
Who doth call at the door outside.’
 
‘€œWho let him thro’ the gates of my gardens,
Where stronger bolts have never been?’
‘€œThe father of the fair little maiden
You drove to her grave deep and green.’
 
‘€œAnd who let him pass through the courtyard,
Loosening the bar and the chain?’
‘€œWho but the brother of the maiden
Who lies in the cold and the rain 1’
 
‘€œThen who drew the bolts at the portal,
And into my house bade him go?’
‘€œThe mother of the poor young maiden
Who lies in her youth all so low.’
 
‘€œWho stands, that he dare not enter,
The door of my chamber, between?’
‘€œO, the ghost of the fair little maiden
Who lies in the churchyard green.’
Other works by Dora Sigerson...



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