Recent comments
- Völundarkviða (The Lay of Völund)
39 weeks 2 days ago - Crotta Cliach (The hills of Cliach)
39 weeks 4 days ago - A Bé Fhind (O Be Find)
39 weeks 4 days ago - Etain andiu sund amné (This is Etain here today)
39 weeks 4 days ago - Good site
40 weeks 1 day ago - Sir Gawayn and the Grene Knyght
40 weeks 4 days ago - Uchan, ad-rochair Aillen (Ochone, Aillen is fallen)
41 weeks 4 days ago - He as a kyng is crownid in Fairie
42 weeks 2 days ago - Clauso Cronos et serato (From the closed and barred Cronos...)
42 weeks 2 days ago - Estornel, cueill ta volada (Starling, take your flight)
42 weeks 2 days ago



A FAERY SPEAKS
by Sir Walter Scott (1771-1832)
What I am I must not show,
What I am thou couldst now know,
Something betwixt heaven and hell,
Something that neither stood nor fell,
Something that through thy wit or will
May work thee good - may work thee ill.
Neither substance quite, nor shadow,
Haunting lonely moor and meadow,
Dancing by the haunted spring,
Riding on the whirlwind's wing;
Aping in fantastic fashion
Every change of human passion,
While o'er our frozen minds they pass,
Like shadows from the mirror'd glass.
Wayward, fickle, is our mood,
Hovering betwixt bad and good,
Happier than brief-dated man,
Living ten times o'er his span;
Far less happy, for we have
Help nor hope beyond the brave!