Yeats' FAIRY AND FOLK
TALES OF THE IRISH PEASANTRY
THE FAIRY WELL OF LAGNANAY
Samuel Ferguson
Mournfully, sing mournfully- "O listen, Ellen, sister
dear: Is there no help at all for me, But only ceaseless sigh
and tear? Why did not he who left me here, With stolen hope steal
memory? O listen, Ellen, sister dear, (Mournfully, sing
mournfully)-- I'll go away to Sleamish hill, I'll pluck the
fairy hawthorn-tree, And let the spirits work their will; I
care not if for good or ill, So they but lay the memory Which
all my heart is haunting still! (Mournfully, sing
mournfully)-- The Fairies are a silent race, And pale as lily
flowers to see; I care not for a blanched face, For wandering
in a dreaming place, So I but banish memory:-- I wish I were
with Anna Grace! Mournfully, sing mournfully!
Hearken to my tale of woe-- 'Twas thus to weeping Ellen
Con, Her sister said in accents low, Her only sister, Una
bawn: 'Twas in their bed before the dawn, And Ellen answered
sad and slow,-- "Oh Una, Una, be not drawn (Hearken to my tale
of woe)-- To this unholy grief I pray, Which makes me sick at
heart to know, And I will help you if I may: --The Fairy Well
of Lagnanay-- Lie nearer me, I tremble so,-- Una, I've heard
wise women say (Hearken to my tale of woe)-- That if before
the dews arise, True maiden in its icy flow With pure hand
bathe her bosom thrice, Three lady-brackens pluck likewise, And three times round
the fountain go, She straight forgets her tears and
sighs." Hearken to my tale of woe!
All, alas! and well-away! "Oh, sister Ellen, sister
sweet, Come with me to the hill I pray, And I will prove that
blessed freet!" They rose with soft and silent feet, They left
their mother where she lay, Their mother and her care
discreet, (All, alas and well-away!) And soon they reached the
Fairy Well, The mountain's eye, clear, cold and grey, Wide
open in the dreary fell: How long they stood 'twere vain to
tell, At last upon the point of day, Bawn Una bares her
bosom's swell, (All, alas and well-away!) Thrice o'er her
shrinking breasts she laves The gliding glance that will not
stay Of subtly-streaming fairy waves:-- And now the charm
three brackens craves, She plucks them in their fring'd
array:-- Now round the well her fate she braves, All, alas!
and well-away!
Save us all from Fairy thrall! Ellen sees her face the
rim Twice and thrice, and that is all-- Fount and hill and
maiden swim All together melting dim! "Una! Una!" thou may'st
call, Sister sad! but lith or limb (Save us all from Fairy
thrall! ) Never again of Una bawn, Where now she walks in dreamy
hall, Shall eye of mortal look upon! Oh! can it be
the guard was gone, The better guard than shield or wall? Who
knows on earth save Jurlagh Daune? (Save us all from Fairy thrall!
) Behold the banks are green and bare, No pit is here wherein
to fall: Aye--at the fount you well may stare, But
nought save pebbles smooth is there, And small straws twirling one and
all. Hie thee home, and be thy pray'r, Save us all from Fairy
thrall.
  
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![Aran Islanders, J. Synge [1898] (public domain photograph)](irishwmn.jpg) |