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The Fairies
by
William Allingham
- Up the airy mountain
- Down the rushy glen,
- We dare n't go a-hunting,
- For fear of little men;
- Wee folk, good folk,
- Trooping all together;
- Green jacket, red cap,
- And white owl's feather.
- Down along the rocky shore
- Some make their home,
- They live on crispy pancakes
- Of yellow tide-foam;
- Some in the reeds
- Of the black mountain-lake,
- With frogs for their watch-dogs,
- All night awake.
- High on the hill-top
- The old King sits;
- He is now so old and gray
- He's nigh lost his wits.
- With a bridge of white mist
- Columbkill he crosses,
- On his stately journeys
- From Slieveleague to Rosses;
- Or going up with music,
- On cold starry nights,
- To sup with the Queen,
- Of the gay Northern Lights.
- They stole little Bridget
- For seven years long;
- When she came down again
- Her friends were all gone.
- They took her lightly back
- Between the night and morrow;
- They thought she was fast asleep,
- But she was dead with sorrow.
- They have kept her ever since
- Deep within the lake,
- On a bed of flag leaves,
- Watching till she wake.
- By the craggy hill-side,
- Through the mosses bare,
- They have planted thorn trees
- For pleasure here and there.
- Is any man so daring
- As dig them up in spite?
- He shall find the thornies set
- In his bed at night.
- Up the airy mountain
- Down the rushy glen,
- We dare n't go a-hunting,
- For fear of little men;
- Wee folk, good folk,
- Trooping all together;
- Green jacket, red cap,
- And white owl's feather.
The Library.
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