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CORNISH LULLABY

Eugene Field

Out on the mountain over the town,

All night long, all night long,

The trolls go up and the trolls go down,

Bearing their packs and crooning a song;

And this is the song the hill-folk croon,

As they trudge in the light of the misty moon,--

This is ever their dolorous tune:

"Gold, gold! ever more gold,--

Bright red gold for dearie!"

 

Deep in the hill the yeoman delves

All night long, all night long;

None but the peering, furtive elves

See his toil and hear his song;

Merrily ever the cavern rings

As merrily ever his pick he swings,

And merrily ever this song he sings:

"Gold, gold! ever more gold,--

Bright red gold for dearie!"

 

Mother is rocking thy lowly bed

All night long, all night long,

Happy to smooth thy curly head

And to hold thy hand and to sing her song;

'T is not of the hill-folk, dwarfed and old,

Nor the song of the yeoman, stanch and bold,

And the burden it beareth is not of gold;

But it's "Love, love!--nothing but love,--

Mother's love for dearie!"

 

 

 

 

UHLAND'S "THREE CAVALIERS"

 

 

There were three cavaliers that went over the Rhine,

And gayly they called to the hostess for wine.

"And where is thy daughter? We would she were here,--

Go fetch us that maiden to gladden our cheer!"

 

"I'll fetch thee thy goblets full foaming," she said,

"But in yon darkened chamber the maiden lies dead."

And lo! as they stood in the doorway, the white

Of a shroud and a dead shrunken face met their sight.

 

Then the first cavalier breathed a pitiful sigh,

And the throb of his heart seemed to melt in his eye,

And he cried, "Hadst thou lived, O my pretty white rose,

I ween I had loved thee and wed thee--who knows?"

 

The next cavalier drew aside a small space,

And stood to the wall with his hands to his face;

And this was the heart-cry that came with his tears:

"I loved her, I loved her these many long years!"

 

But the third cavalier kneeled him down in that place,

And, as it were holy, he kissed that dead face:

"I loved thee long years, and I love thee to-day,

And I'll love thee, dear maiden, forever and aye!"