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A Ballad Of Marjorie

Topics: classic

What ails you that you look so pale,      O fisher of the sea?      Tis for a mournful tale I own,      Fair maiden Marjorie.      What is the dreary tale to tell,      O toiler of the sea?      I cast my net into the waves,      Sweet maiden Marjorie.      I cast my net into the tide,      Before I made for home;      Too heavy for my hands to raise,      I drew it through the foam.      What saw you that you look so pale,      Sad searcher of the sea?      A dead mans body from the deep      My haul had brought to me!      And was he young, and was he fair?      Oh, cruel to behold!      In his white face the joy of life      Not yet was grown a-cold.      Oh, pale you are, and full of prayer      For one who sails the sea.      Because the dead looked up and spoke,      Poor maiden Marjorie.      What said he, that you seem so sad,      O fisher of the sea?      (Alack! I know it was my love,      Who fain would speak to me!)      He said, Beware a womans mouth-      A rose that bears a thorn.      Ah, me! these lips shall smile no more      That gave my lover scorn.      He said, Beware a womans eyes.      They pierce you with their death.      Then falling tears shall make them blind      That robbed my dear of breath.      He said, Beware a womans hair-      A serpents coil of gold.      Then will I shear the cruel locks      That crushed him in their fold.      He said, Beware a womans heart      As you would shun the reef.      So let it break within my breast,      And perish of my grief.      He raised his hands; a womans name      Thrice bitterly he cried:      My net had parted with the strain;      He vanished in the tide.      A womans name!    What name but mine,      O fisher of the sea?      A womans name, but not your name,      Poor maiden Marjorie.

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"What ails you that you look so pale,..."

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"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

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