| |
| MORNING and evening | |
| Maids heard the goblins cry: | |
| Come buy our orchard fruits, | |
| Come buy, come buy: | |
| Apples and quinces, | 5 |
| Lemons and oranges, | |
| Plump unpecked cherries, | |
| Melons and raspberries, | |
| Bloom-down-cheeked peaches, | |
| Swart-headed mulberries, | 10 |
| Wild free-born cranberries, | |
| Crab-apples, dewberries, | |
| Pine-apples, blackberries, | |
| Apricots, strawberries; | |
| All ripe together | 15 |
| In summer weather, | |
| Morns that pass by, | |
| Fair eves that fly; | |
| Come buy, come buy: | |
| Our grapes fresh from the vine, | 20 |
| Pomegranates full and fine, | |
| Dates and sharp bullaces, | |
| Rare pears and greengages, | |
| Damsons and bilberries, | |
| Taste them and try: | 25 |
| Currants and gooseberries, | |
| Bright-fire-like barberries, | |
| Figs to fill your mouth, | |
| Citrons from the South, | |
| Sweet to tongue and sound to eye; | 30 |
| Come buy, come buy. | |
| |
| Evening by evening | |
| Among the brookside rushes, | |
| Laura bowed her head to hear, | |
| Lizzie veiled her blushes: | 35 |
| Crouching close together | |
| In the cooling weather, | |
| With clasping arms and cautioning lips, | |
| With tingling cheeks and finger tips. | |
| Lie close, Laura said, | 40 |
| Pricking up her golden head: | |
| We must not look at goblin men, | |
| We must not buy their fruits: | |
| Who knows upon what soil they fed | |
| Their hungry, thirsty roots? | 45 |
| Come buy, call the goblins, | |
| Hobbling down the glen. | |
| Oh, cried Lizzie, Laura, Laura, | |
| You should not peep at goblin men. | |
| Lizzie covered up her eyes, | 50 |
| Covered close, lest they should look; | |
| Laura reared her glossy head, | |
| And whispered like the restless brook: | |
| Look, Lizzie, look, Lizzie, | |
| Down the glen tramp little men. | 55 |
| One hauls a basket, | |
| One bears a plate, | |
| One lugs a golden dish | |
| Of many pounds weight. | |
| How fair the vine must grow | 60 |
| Whose grapes are so luscious; | |
| How warm the wind must blow | |
| Through those fruit bushes. | |
| No, said Lizzie: No, no, no; | |
| Their offers should not charm us, | 65 |
| Their evil gifts would harm us. | |
| She thrust a dimpled finger | |
| In each ear, shut eyes, and ran: | |
| Curious Laura chose to linger, | |
| Wondering at each merchant man. | 70 |
| One had a cats face, | |
| One whisked a tail, | |
| One tramped at a rats pace, | |
| One crawled like a snail, | |
| One like a wombat prowled obtuse and furry, | 75 |
| One like a ratel tumbled hurry skurry. | |
| She heard a voice like voice of doves | |
| Cooing all together: | |
| They sounded kind and full of loves | |
| In the pleasant weather. | 80 |
| |
| Laura stretched her gleaming neck | |
| Like a rush-imbedded swan, | |
| Like a lily from the beck, | |
| Like a moonlit poplar branch, | |
| Like a vessel at the launch | 85 |
| When its last restraint is gone. | |
| |
| Backwards up the mossy glen | |
| Turned and trooped the goblin men, | |
| With their shrill repeated cry, | |
| Come buy, come buy. | 90 |
| When they reached where Laura was | |
| They stood stock still upon the moss, | |
| Leering at each other, | |
| Brother with queer brother; | |
| Signalling each other, | 95 |
| Brother with sly brother. | |
| One set his basket down, | |
| One reared his plate; | |
| One began to weave a crown | |
| Of tendrils, leaves, and rough nuts brown | 100 |
| (Men sell not such in any town); | |
| One heaved the golden weight | |
| Of dish and fruit to offer her: | |
| Come buy, come buy, was still their cry. | |
| Laura stared but did not stir, | 105 |
| Longed, but had no money: | |
| The whisk-tailed merchant bade her taste | |
| In tones as smooth as honey, | |
| The cat-faced purrd, | |
| The rat-paced spoke a word | 110 |
| Of welcome, and the snail-paced even was heard; | |
| One parrot-voiced and jolly | |
| Cried Pretty Goblin still for Pretty Polly: | |
| One whistled like a bird. | |
| |
| But sweet-tooth Laura spoke in haste: | 115 |
| Good folk, I have no coin; | |
| To take were to purloin: | |
| I have no copper in my purse, | |
| I have no silver either, | |
| And all my gold is on the furze | 120 |
| That shakes in windy weather | |
| Above the rusty heather. | |
| You have much gold upon your head, | |
| They answered all together: | |
| Buy from us with a golden curl. | 125 |
| She clipped a precious golden lock, | |
| She dropped a tear more rare than pearl, | |
| Then sucked their fruit globes fair or red: | |
| Sweeter than honey from the rock, | |
| Stronger than man-rejoicing wine, | 130 |
| Clearer than water flowed that juice; | |
| She never tasted such before, | |
| How should it cloy with length of use? | |
| She sucked and sucked and sucked the more | |
| Fruits which that unknown orchard bore; | 135 |
| She sucked until her lips were sore; | |
| Then flung the emptied rinds away, | |
| But gathered up one kernel-stone, | |
| And knew not was it night or day | |
| As she turned home alone. | 140 |
| |
| Lizzie met her at the gate, | |
| Full of wise upbraidings: | |
| Dear, you should not stay so late, | |
| Twilight is not good for maidens; | |
| Should not loiter in the glen, | 145 |
| In the haunts of goblin men. | |
| Do you not remember Jeanie, | |
| How she met them in the moonlight, | |
| Took their gifts both choice and many, | |
| Ate their fruits and wore their flowers, | 150 |
| Plucked from bowers | |
| Where summer ripens at all hours? | |
| But ever in the noonlight | |
| She pined and pined away; | |
| Sought them by night and day, | 155 |
| Found them no more, but dwindled and grew grey; | |
| Then fell with the first snow, | |
| While to this day no grass will grow | |
| Where she lies low: | |
| I planted daisies there a year ago | 160 |
| That never blow. | |
| You should not loiter so. | |
| Nay, hush, said Laura: | |
| Nay, hush, my sister: | |
| I ate and ate my fill, | 165 |
| Yet my mouth waters still; | |
| To-morrow night I will | |
| Buy more: and kissed her: | |
| Have done with sorrow; | |
| Ill bring you plums to-morrow | 170 |
| Fresh on their mother twigs, | |
| Cherries worth getting; | |
| You cannot think what figs | |
| My teeth have met in, | |
| What melons icy-cold | 175 |
| Piled on a dish of gold | |
| Too huge for me to hold, | |
| What peaches with a velvet nap, | |
| Pellucid grapes without one seed: | |
| Odorous indeed must be the mead | 180 |
| Whereon they grow, and pure the wave they drink | |
| With lilies at the brink, | |
| And sugar-sweet their sap. | |
| |
| Golden head by golden head, | |
| Like two pigeons in one nest | 185 |
| Folded in each others wings, | |
| They lay down in their curtained bed: | |
| Like two blossoms on one stem, | |
| Like two flakes of new-falln snow, | |
| Like two wands of ivory | 190 |
| Tipped with gold for awful kings. | |
| Moon and stars gazed in at them, | |
| Wind sang to them lullaby, | |
| Lumbering owls forbore to fly, | |
| Not a bat flapped to and fro | 195 |
| Round their rest: | |
| Cheek to cheek and breast to breast | |
| Locked together in one nest. | |
| |
| Early in the morning, | |
| When the first cock crowed his warning, | 200 |
| Neat like bees, as sweet and busy, | |
| Laura rose with Lizzie: | |
| Fetched in honey, milked the cows, | |
| Aired and set to rights the house, | |
| Kneaded cakes of whitest wheat, | 205 |
| Cakes for dainty mouths to eat, | |
| Next churned butter, whipped up cream, | |
| Fed their poultry, sat and sewed; | |
| Talked as modest maidens should: | |
| Lizzie with an open heart, | 210 |
| Laura in an absent dream, | |
| One content, one sick in part; | |
| One warbling for the mere bright days delight, | |
| One longing for the night. | |
| |
| At length slow evening came: | 215 |
| They went with pitchers to the reedy brook; | |
| Lizzie most placid in her look, | |
| Laura most like a leaping flame. | |
| They drew the gurgling water from its deep; | |
| Lizzie plucked purple and rich golden flags, | 220 |
| Then turning homewards, said: The sunset flushes | |
| Those furthest loftiest crags; | |
| Come, Laura, not another maiden lags, | |
| No wilful squirrel wags, | |
| The beasts and birds are fast asleep. | 225 |
| But Laura loitered still among the rushes | |
| And said the bank was steep. | |
| |
| And said the hour was early still, | |
| The dew not falln, the wind not chill: | |
| Listening ever, but not catching | 230 |
| The customary cry, | |
| Come buy, come buy, | |
| With its iterated jingle | |
| Of sugar-baited words: | |
| Not for all her watching | 235 |
| Once discerning even one goblin | |
| Racing, whisking, tumbling, hobbling; | |
| Let alone the herds | |
| That used to tramp along the glen, | |
| In groups or single, | 240 |
| Of brisk fruit-merchant men. | |
| |
| Till Lizzie urged, O Laura, come; | |
| I hear the fruit-call, but I dare not look; | |
| You should not loiter longer at this brook; | |
| Come with me home. | 245 |
| The stars rise, the moon bends her arc, | |
| Each glowworm winks her spark, | |
| Let us get home before the night grows dark: | |
| For clouds may gather | |
| Though this is summer weather, | 250 |
| Put out the lights, and drench us through; | |
| Then if we lost our way what should we do? | |
| |
| Laura turned cold as stone | |
| To find her sister heard that cry alone, | |
| That goblin cry, | 255 |
| Come buy our fruits, come buy. | |
| Must she, then, buy no more such dainty fruit? | |
| Must she no more that succous pasture find, | |
| Gone deaf and blind? | |
| Her tree of life drooped from the root: | 260 |
| She said not one word in her hearts sore ache; | |
| But peering thro the dimness, nought discerning, | |
| Trudged home, her pitcher dripping all the way; | |
| So crept to bed, and lay | |
| Silent till Lizzie slept; | 265 |
| Then sat up in a passionate yearning, | |
| And gnashed her teeth for baulked desire, and wept | |
| As if her heart would break. | |
| |
| Day after day, night after night, | |
| Laura kept watch in vain | 270 |
| In sullen silence of exceeding pain. | |
| She never caught again the goblin cry: | |
| Come buy, come buy; | |
| She never spied the goblin men | |
| Hawking their fruits along the glen: | 275 |
| But when the noon waxed bright, | |
| Her hair grew thin and grey; | |
| She dwindled, as the fair full moon doth turn | |
| To swift decay and burn | |
| Her fire away. | 280 |
| |
| One day remembering her kernel-stone, | |
| She set it by a wall that faced the south; | |
| Dewed it with tears, hoped for a root, | |
| Watched for a waxing shoot, | |
| But there came none; | 285 |
| It never saw the sun, | |
| It never felt the trickling moisture run: | |
| While with sunk eyes and faded mouth | |
| She dreamed of melons, as a traveller sees | |
| False waves in desert drouth | 290 |
| With shade of leaf-crowned trees, | |
| And burns the thirstier in the sandful breeze. | |
| |
| She no more swept the house, | |
| Tended the fowls or cows, | |
| Fetched honey, kneaded cakes of wheat, | 295 |
| Brought water from the brook: | |
| But sat down listless in the chimney-nook, | |
| And would not eat. | |
| |
| Tender Lizzie could not bear | |
| To watch her sisters cankerous care, | 300 |
| Yet not to share. | |
| She night and morning | |
| Caught the goblins cry: | |
| Come buy our orchard fruits, | |
| Come buy, come buy: | 305 |
| Beside the brook, along the glen, | |
| She heard the tramp of goblin men, | |
| The voice and stir | |
| Poor Laura could not hear; | |
| Longed to buy fruit to comfort her, | 310 |
| But feared to pay too dear. | |
| She thought of Jeanie in her grave, | |
| Who should have been a bride; | |
| But who for joys brides hope to have | |
| Fell sick and died | 315 |
| In her gay prime, | |
| In earliest Winter time, | |
| With the first glazing rime, | |
| With the first snow-fall of crisp Winter time. | |
| |
| Till Laura dwindling | 320 |
| Seemed knocking at Deaths door: | |
| Then Lizzie weighed no more | |
| Better and worse; | |
| But put a silver penny in her purse, | |
| Kissed Laura, crossed the heath with clumps of furze | 325 |
| At twilight, halted by the brook: | |
| And for the first time in her life | |
| Began to listen and look. | |
| |
| Laughed every goblin | |
| When they spied her peeping: | 330 |
| Came towards her hobbling, | |
| Flying, running, leaping, | |
| Puffing and blowing, | |
| Chuckling, clapping, crowing, | |
| Clucking and gobbling, | 335 |
| Mopping and mowing, | |
| Full of airs and graces, | |
| Pulling wry faces, | |
| Demure grimaces, | |
| Cat-like and rat-like, | 340 |
| Ratel and wombat-like, | |
| Snail-paced in a hurry, | |
| Parrot-voiced and whistler, | |
| Helter skelter, hurry skurry, | |
| Chattering like magpies, | 345 |
| Fluttering like pigeons, | |
| Gliding like fishes, | |
| Hugged her and kissed her, | |
| Squeezed and caressed her: | |
| Stretched up their dishes, | 350 |
| Panniers, and plates: | |
| Look at our apples | |
| Russet and dun, | |
| Bob at our cherries, | |
| Bite at our peaches, | 355 |
| Citrons and dates, | |
| Grapes for the asking, | |
| Pears red with basking | |
| Out in the sun, | |
| Plums on their twigs; | 360 |
| Pluck them and suck them, | |
| Pomegranates, figs. | |
| |
| Good folk, said Lizzie, | |
| Mindful of Jeanie: | |
| Give me much and many: | 365 |
| |
| Held out her apron, | |
| Tossed them her penny. | |
| Nay, take a seat with us, | |
| Honour and eat with us, | |
| They answered grinning: | 370 |
| Our feast is but beginning. | |
| Night yet is early, | |
| Warm and dewpearly, | |
| Wakeful and starry: | |
| Such fruits as these | 375 |
| No man can carry; | |
| Half their bloom would fly, | |
| Half their dew would dry, | |
| Half their flavour would pass by. | |
| Sit down and feast with us, | 380 |
| Be welcome guest with us, | |
| Cheer you and rest with us. | |
| Thank you, said Lizzie; but one waits | |
| At home alone for me: | |
| So without further parleying, | 385 |
| If you will not sell me any | |
| Of your fruits, though much and many, | |
| Give me back my silver penny | |
| I tossed you for a fee. | |
| They began to scratch their pates, | 390 |
| No longer wagging, purring, | |
| But visibly demurring, | |
| Grunting and snarling. | |
| One called her proud, | |
| Cross-grained, uncivil; | 395 |
| Their tones waxed loud, | |
| Their looks were evil. | |
| Lashing their tails | |
| They trod and hustled her, | |
| Elbowed and jostled her, | 400 |
| Clawed with their nails, | |
| Barking, mewing, hissing, mocking, | |
| Tore her gown and soiled her stocking, | |
| Twitched her hair out by the roots, | |
| Stamped upon her tender feet, | 405 |
| Held her hands and squeezed their fruits | |
| Against her mouth to make her eat. | |
| |
| White and golden Lizzie stood, | |
| Like a lily in a flood, | |
| Like a rock of blue-veined stone | 410 |
| Lashed by tides obstreperously, | |
| Like a beacon left alone | |
| In a hoary, roaring sea, | |
| Sending up a golden fire, | |
| Like a fruit-crowned orange-tree | 415 |
| White with blossoms honey-sweet | |
| Sore beset by wasp and bee, | |
| Like a royal virgin town | |
| Topped with gilded dome and spire | |
| Close beleaguered by a fleet | 420 |
| Mad to tug her standard down. | |
| |
| One may lead a horse to water, | |
| Twenty cannot make him drink. | |
| Though the goblins cuffed and caught her, | |
| Coaxed and fought her, | 425 |
| Bullied and besought her, | |
| Scratched her, pinched her black as ink, | |
| Kicked and knocked her, | |
| Mauled and mocked her, | |
| Lizzie uttered not a word; | 430 |
| Would not open lip from lip | |
| Lest they should cram a mouthful in: | |
| But laughed in heart to feel the drip | |
| Of juice that syrupped all her face, | |
| And lodged in dimples of her chin, | 435 |
| And streaked her neck, which quaked like curd. | |
| At last the evil people, | |
| Worn out by her resistance | |
| Flung back her penny, kicked their fruit | |
| Along whichever road they took, | 440 |
| Not leaving root or stone or shoot; | |
| Some writhed into the ground, | |
| Some dived into the brook | |
| With ring and ripple, | |
| Some scudded on the gale without a sound, | 445 |
| Some vanished in the distance. | |
| |
| In a smart, ache, tingle, | |
| Lizzie went her way; | |
| Knew not was it night or day; | |
| Sprang up the bank, tore through the furze, | 450 |
| Threaded copse and dingle, | |
| And heard her penny jingle | |
| Bouncing in her purse, | |
| Its bounce was music to her ear. | |
| She ran and ran | 455 |
| As if she feared some goblin man | |
| Dogged her with gibe or curse | |
| Or something worse: | |
| But not one goblin skurried after, | |
| Nor was she pricked by fear; | 460 |
| The kind heart made her windy-paced | |
| That urged her home quite out of breath with haste | |
| And inward laughter. | |
| |
| She cried, Laura, up the garden, | |
| Did you miss me? | 465 |
| Come and kiss me. | |
| Never mind my bruises, | |
| Hug me, kiss me, suck my juices | |
| Squeezed from goblin fruits for you, | |
| Goblin pulp and goblin dew, | 470 |
| Eat me, drink me, love me; | |
| Laura, make much of me: | |
| For your sake I have braved the glen | |
| And had to do with goblin merchantmen. | |
| |
| Laura started from her chair, | 475 |
| Flung her arms up in the air, | |
| Clutched her hair: | |
| Lizzie, Lizzie, have you tasted | |
| For my sake the fruit forbidden? | |
| Must your light like mine be hidden, | 480 |
| Your young life like mine be wasted, | |
| Undone in mine undoing, | |
| And ruined in my ruin, | |
| Thirsty, cankered, goblin-ridden? | |
| She clung about her sister, | 485 |
| Kissed and kissed and kissed her: | |
| Tears once again | |
| Refreshed her shrunken eyes, | |
| Dropping like rain | |
| After long sultry drouth; | 490 |
| Shaking with aguish fear and pain, | |
| She kissed and kissed her with a hungry mouth. | |
| |
| Her lips began to scorch, | |
| That juice was wormwood to her tongue, | |
| She loathed the feast: | 495 |
| Writhing as one possessed, she leaped and sung, | |
| Rent all her robe, and wrung | |
| Her hands in lamentable haste, | |
| And beat her breast. | |
| Her locks streamed like the torch | 500 |
| Borne by a racer at full speed, | |
| Or like the mane of horses in their flight, | |
| Or like an eagle when she stems the light | |
| Straight toward the sun, | |
| Or like a caged thing freed, | 505 |
| Or like a flying flag when armies run. | |
| |
| Swift fire spread through her veins, knocked at her heart, | |
| Met the fire smouldering there | |
| And overbore its lesser flame; | |
| She gorged on bitterness without a name: | 510 |
| Ah! fool, to choose such part | |
| Of soul-consuming care! | |
| Sense failed in the mortal strife: | |
| Like the watch-tower of a town | |
| Which an earthquake shatters down, | 515 |
| Like a lightning-stricken mast, | |
| Like a wind-uprooted tree | |
| Spun about, | |
| Like a foam-topped waterspout | |
| Cast down headlong in the sea. | 520 |
| She fell at last; | |
| Pleasure past and anguish past, | |
| Is it death or is it life? | |
| |
| Life out of death. | |
| That night long Lizzie watched by her, | 525 |
| Counted her pulses flagging stir, | |
| Felt for her breath, | |
| Held water to her lips, and cooled her face | |
| With tears and fanning leaves; | |
| But when the first birds chirped about their eaves, | 530 |
| And early reapers plodded to the place | |
| Of golden sheaves, | |
| And dew-wet grass | |
| Bowed in the morning winds so brisk to pass, | |
| And new buds with new day | 535 |
| Opened of cup-like lilies on the stream, | |
| Laura awoke as from a dream, | |
| Laughed in the innocent old way, | |
| Hugged Lizzie, but not twice or thrice; | |
| Her gleaming locks showed not one thread of gray, | 540 |
| Her breath was sweet as May | |
| And light danced in her eyes. | |
| |
| Days, weeks, months, years, | |
| Afterwards, when both were wives | |
| With children of their own; | 545 |
| Their mother-hearts beset with fears, | |
| Their lives bound up in tender lives; | |
| Laura would call the little ones | |
| And tell them of her early prime, | |
| Those pleasant days long gone | 550 |
| Of not-returning time: | |
| Would talk about the haunted glen, | |
| The wicked, quaint fruit-merchant men, | |
| Their fruits like honey to the throat, | |
| But poison in the blood; | 555 |
| (Men sell not such in any town): | |
| Would tell them how her sister stood | |
| In deadly peril to do her good, | |
| And win the fiery antidote: | |
| Then joining hands to little hands | 560 |
| Would bid them cling together, | |
| For there is no friend like a sister | |
| In calm or stormy weather; | |
| To cheer one on the tedious way, | |
| To fetch one if one goes astray, | 565 |
| To lift one if one totters down, | |
| To strengthen whilst one stands. | |
| |