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Agnes And The Hill-Man. Translated From The Danish.

By William Morris

Topics: classic

Agnes went through the meadows a-weeping,     Fowl are a-singing.     There stood the hill-man heed thereof keeping.     Agnes, fair Agnes!     "Come to the hill, fair Agnes, with me,     The reddest of gold will I give unto thee!"     Twice went Agnes the hill round about,     Then wended within, left the fair world without.     In the hillside bode Agnes, three years thrice told o'er,     For the green earth sithence fell she longing full sore.     There she sat, and lullaby sang in her singing,     And she heard how the bells of England were ringing.     Agnes before her true-love did stand:     "May I wend to the church of the English Land?"     "To England's Church well mayst thou be gone,     So that no hand thou lay the red gold upon.     "So that when thou art come the churchyard anear     Thou cast not abroad thy golden hair.     "So that when thou standest the church within     To thy mother on bench thou never win.     "So that when thou hearest the high God's name,     No knee unto earth thou bow to the same."     Hand she laid on all gold that was there,     And cast abroad her golden hair.     And when the church she stood within     To her mother on bench straight did she win.     And when she heard the high God's name,     Knee unto earth she bowed to the same.     When all the mass was sung to its end     Home with her mother dear did she wend.     "Come, Agnes, into the hillside to me,     For thy seven small sons greet sorely for thee!"     "Let them greet, let them greet, as they have will to do;     For never again will I hearken thereto!"     Weird laid he on her, sore sickness he wrought,     Fowl are a-singing.     That self-same hour to death was she brought.     Agnes, fair Agnes!

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"Agnes went through the meadows a-weeping,..." by William Morris

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William Morris

About William Morris

William Morris (1834–1896) was an English poet, artist, and socialist reformer associated with the Pre-Raphaelites and the Arts and Crafts movement. His epic poems "The Earthly Paradise" and "Sigurd the Volsung" draw on medieval legend and Norse mythology.

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