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+The Project Gutenberg eBook of Mollie Charane, Edited by Thomas J. Wise,
+Translated by George Borrow
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Mollie Charane
+ and Other Ballads
+
+
+Editor: Thomas J. Wise
+
+Release Date: December 4, 2008 [eBook #27408]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MOLLIE CHARANE***
+
+
+Transcribed from the 1913 Thomas J. Wise pamphlet by David Price, email
+ccx074@pglaf.org. Many thanks to Norfolk and Norwich Millennium Library,
+UK, for kindly supplying the images from which this transcription was
+made.
+
+
+
+
+
+ MOLLIE CHARANE
+ AND OTHER BALLADS
+
+
+ BY
+ GEORGE BORROW
+
+ LONDON:
+ PRINTED FOR PRIVATE CIRCULATION
+ 1913
+
+ _Copyright in the United States of America_
+ _by Houghton_, _Mifflin & Co. for Clement Shorter_.
+
+
+
+
+MOLLIE CHARANE {5}
+
+
+"O, Mollie Charane, where got you your gold?"
+ Lone, lone you have left me here.
+"O not in the curragh, deep under the mould."
+ Lone, lone, and void of cheer.
+
+"O, Mollie Charane, where got you your stock?"
+ Lone, lone you have left me here.
+"O not in the curragh from under a block."
+ Lone, lone, and void of cheer.
+
+"O, Mollie Charane, where got you your goods?"
+ Lone, lone you have left me here.
+"O not in the curragh from under two sods."
+ Lone, lone, and void of cheer.
+
+Two pair of stockings, and one pair of shoes--
+ Lone, lone you have left me here--
+For twenty-six years old Mollie did use.
+ Lone, lone, and void of cheer.
+
+His stockings were white, but his sandals, alack!--
+ Lone, lone you have left me here--
+Were not of one colour, one white, t'other black.
+ Lone, lone, and void of cheer.
+
+One sandal was white and t'other dark brown--
+ Lone, lone you have left me here;--
+But he'd two of one colour for kirk and for town.
+ Lone, lone, and void of cheer.
+
+"O, father, I really can't walk by your side"--
+ Lone, lone you have left me here--
+"If you go to the church in those sandals of hide."
+ Lone, lone, and void of cheer.
+
+"O, daughter, my dear, if my brogues give you pain"--
+ Lone, lone you have left me here--
+"There's that in the coffer will make you look fain."
+ Lone, lone, and void of cheer.
+
+A million of curses on Mollie Charane--
+ Lone, lone you have left me here--
+The first who gave tocher to daughter in Man.
+ Lone, lone, and void of cheer.
+
+
+
+
+THE DANES OF YORE
+
+
+Well we know from saga
+ And from scaldic lore,
+That heroic warriors
+ Were the Danes of yore.
+That the noble schildings,
+ And the men they led,
+Oft for Danish honour
+ Stoutly fought and bled.
+
+What a time for Athelings,
+ What a time for thanes!
+What a time for yeomen,
+ True devoted Danes!
+But I'll say with pleasure
+ That, in ancient days,
+Death did not annihilate
+ All that noble race.
+
+Frederic see, exalted
+ On his father's throne,
+Sits a splendid monarch,
+ Brighter never shone.
+Long to him be granted
+ That of Grendel's kin
+He may check the cruel
+ Cursed deeds of sin.
+
+And that long may flourish
+ Round about the King,
+They who love gold treasures
+ All around to fling.
+Lords, the first of heroes,
+ With their trenchant swords;
+Counsellors held in honour,
+ For their golden words.
+
+To the Lord of angels
+ Praise devout I'll sing,
+That from out the grave-hill
+ 'Twas my lot to bring
+Golden dishes, goblets,
+ Things of mighty worth,
+Which for thousand winters
+ Lay entombed in earth.
+
+That men in gold smithery
+ Cunning, might from them
+For the grey haired hero
+ Frame a diadem.
+Under which his grey locks
+ Might all glorious shine,
+Whilst the sun, bright flaming,
+ Seeks the western brine.
+
+Until, tired of glory,
+ Such as meets it here,
+Soars the hero's spirit
+ To a higher sphere;
+Where, with souls united
+ Of departed friends,
+'Twill experience glory
+ Such as never ends.
+
+
+
+
+A SURVEY OF DEATH
+
+
+My blood is freezing, my senses reel,
+So horror stricken at heart I feel;
+Thinking how like a fast stream we range
+Nearer and nearer to that dread change,
+When the body becomes so stark and cold,
+And man doth crumble away to mould.
+
+Boast not, proud maid, for the grave doth gape,
+And strangely altered reflects thy shape;
+No dainty charms it doth disclose,
+Death will ravish thy beauty's rose;
+And all the rest will leave to thee
+When dug thy chilly grave shall be.
+
+O, ye who are tripping the floor so light,
+In delicate robes as the lily white,
+Think of the fading funeral wreath,
+The dying struggle, the sweat of death--
+Think on the dismal death array,
+When the pallid corse is consigned to clay!
+
+O, ye who in quest of riches roam,
+Reflect that ashes ye must become;
+And the wealth ye win will brightly shine
+When buried are ye and all your line;
+For your many chests of much loved gold
+You'll nothing obtain but a little mould!
+
+
+
+
+DESIDERABILIA VITAE {13}
+
+
+Give me the haunch of a buck to eat,
+ And to drink Madeira old;
+And a gentle wife to rest with,
+ And in my arms to fold.
+
+An Arabic book to study,
+ A gipsy pony to ride;
+And a house to live in shaded by trees,
+ Near to a river's side.
+
+With such good things around me,
+ And with good health withal,
+Though I should live for a hundred years
+ For death I would not call.
+
+
+
+
+SAINT JACOB
+
+
+Saint Jacob he takes our blest Lord by the hand:
+"I gladly would Christianize Garsia land."
+
+"O how wilt thou bring it within Christian pale?
+No ship hast thou here o'er the salt sea to sail."
+
+"Thy power, O Lord, is so wondrously great,
+Full quickly a ship Thou for me canst create."
+
+"Saint Jacob, hie down to the salt ocean strand,
+There standeth so little a stone by the land."
+
+Saint Jacob he taketh a book in his hand,
+And down he proceeds to the salt ocean strand.
+
+Saint Jacob he made o'er the stone the cross-mark,
+From the land straight it floated, as though 'twere a bark.
+
+It rode o'er the billows so rapid and free,
+Right, right towards Garsia promontoree.
+
+So rapid the stone to glide thither began,
+A hundred miles space in one short hour it ran.
+
+In comes a foot-boy, to the King doffs his bonnet:
+"Here cometh a stone, and a man sits upon it."
+
+A woman rushed in, in her eyes wonder shone:
+"Here cometh a man, and he sits on a stone."
+
+King Garsia taketh his axe in his hand,
+And down he proceeds to the salt ocean strand.
+
+"Now hear thou, Saint Jacob, I say unto thee,
+What hast thou in this land, in this land here with me?"
+
+"Unto thee I am come to this land 'cross the brine,
+Because that my Maker is greater than thine."
+
+"O how can thy Maker be greater than mine?
+Mine drinks every day the brown mead and the wine."
+
+"O then my Creator is greater than thine,
+For mine can the water convert into wine.
+
+"My Maker can turn the black mould into bread,
+Can give life back to them who long, long have been dead."
+
+"If thou canst restore me my dearly loved son,
+I'll trust in thy Maker, and no other one.
+
+"If I again view him, with flesh and hair dight,
+As he fifteen years since disappeared from my sight;
+
+"If I get him again both with hawk and with hound,
+Just, just as he sank in the depths of the sound;
+
+"With hair on his head, and with flesh on his bone,
+As though he the pang of death never had known."
+
+Then the blessed Saint Jacob upon his book pored:
+"'Twill be no easy matter to get him restored."
+
+When he had stood reading a wee little time,
+He raised up the man from hell's sorrowful clime.
+
+"Now again thou hast got him with flesh and hair dight,
+As he fifteen years since disappeared from thy sight.
+
+"Thou hast got him again, both with hawk and with hound,
+Just, just as he sank in the ocean profound.
+
+"With hair on his head, and with flesh on his bone,
+As though he the pang of death never had known."
+
+"Now hear thou, my dear son, so fine and so fair,
+What news from thy journey afar dost thou bear?"
+
+"The news which I bring from the far distant place,
+Is that one little knows of the other's hard case.
+
+"There the woman, who's hated the child of her womb,
+Out of the snake-tower can ne'er hope to come.
+
+"There the cruel step-mother, her child who has slain,
+Goes begirt with a sword fraught with festering bane.
+
+"The merchants who here in heaps money up-rake,
+There hiss in the likeness of serpent and snake.
+
+"The Sysselmen, wretches with hearts hard as stone,
+There in the snake-tower despairingly moan."
+
+
+
+
+THE RENEGADE
+
+
+Now pay ye the heed that is fitting,
+ Whilst I sing ye the Iran adventure;
+The pasha on sofa was sitting,
+ Midst his harem's glorious centre.
+
+Greek sang, and Tcherkass, for his pleasure,
+ And Kergoosian captive is dancing;
+In the eyes of the first heaven's azure,
+ In the others black Eblis is glancing.
+
+But the pasha's attention is failing,
+ O'er his visage his fair turban stealeth;
+From chebouk he sleep is inhaling,
+ Whilst around him sweet vapours he dealeth.
+
+What rumour without is there breeding?
+ Ye fair ranks asunder why wend ye?
+Kyslar Aga, a strange captive leading,
+ Cometh forward, and crieth "Efendy."
+
+"Whose face has the power when present
+ 'Mong the stars round the divan which muster?
+Who amidst the gems of night's crescent
+ Has the blaze of Aldeboran's lustre?
+
+"Glance nearer, bright star! I have tiding,
+ Glad tiding. Behold how in duty
+From far Lehistan the wind, gliding,
+ Has brought this fresh tribute of beauty.
+
+"In the padishaw's garden there bloometh
+ In proud Istambul no such blossom;
+From the wintry regions she cometh,
+ Whose memory so lives in thy bosom."
+
+Then the gauzes removes he which shade her,
+ At her beauty all wonder intensely;
+One moment the pasha surveyed her,
+ Then, dropping his chebouk, without sense lay.
+
+His turban has fallen from his forehead,
+ To assist him the bystanders started.
+His mouth foams, his face blackens horrid,--
+ See, the Renegade's soul has departed!
+
+
+
+
+AN IMPROMPTU
+
+
+And darest thou thyself compare
+ With one who quaffs at Helicon;
+Whose playfellows the Muses are,
+ And whom Apollo calleth son?
+Who, had he lived in olden day,
+ With some fierce host had strode along;
+Like Taillefer to Hasting's fray,
+ Cheering the Normans with his song.
+
+The laurel wreath Apollo gave
+ I would not change for kingly crown;
+A King is but an exalted slave,
+ Rebellion soon may hurl him down.
+But who can force me from the height
+ Whereto I've soared on Eagle's wing?
+I leave to Monarchs ceaseless fright
+ For what the coming day may bring.
+
+Though poor I be, I've Minstrelsy,
+ When fortune frowns I'll strike my lyre;
+Against the world's inclemency
+ 'Twill warm my soul with heavenly fire.
+Then wonder not if proud the air
+ Of one who's high Apollo's son;
+Nor henceforth dare thyself compare
+ With one who quaffs at Helicon.
+
+
+
+
+A HYMN
+
+
+O Jesus, Thou Fountain of solace and gladness
+ Of Heaven's high Three second person divine;
+Forgive, O forgive me my blindness and madness,
+ And guide to Thy kingdom this spirit of mine.
+
+ Dearly, O Jesus,
+ Thou boughtest me,
+ Yon Friday dark
+ Upon the tree.
+
+ Thy foes were numerous,
+ Fierce and fell;
+ Few and weak those
+ Who wished Thee well.
+
+ Nigh stood Thy mother,
+ Full of fears,
+ Wringing her hands
+ And bathed in tears.
+
+ Often, O Jesus,
+ Wilfully
+ With my great sins
+ I've tortured Thee.
+
+ Causing Thy wounds
+ To open again,
+ Waking anew
+ The ancient pain.
+
+ All the kindness
+ Thou hast display'd,
+ With black ingratitude
+ I've repaid.
+
+But Jesus, Creator of earth and of ocean,
+ Who me, a vile sinner, so dearly didst buy;
+My damnable ignorance turn to devotion,
+ And guide my poor soul to Thy courts in the sky.
+
+
+
+
+THE TRANSFORMED DAMSEL. {25}
+
+
+My father up of the country rode,
+ A maiden he would wed;
+And a foul witch he married then,
+ If the whole truth be said.
+
+The first night they together slept,
+ She was a mother kind to me;
+But when the second night arrived,
+ A cruel stepmother was she.
+
+I was seated at my father's board
+ With dogs and whelps amused;
+Towards me striding my stepmother came,
+ And cruelly me she used.
+
+She changed me to a little hind,
+ Bade me into the forest wend;
+My seven maids then she changed to wolves,
+ And ordered them my flesh to rend.
+
+But my seven maids would rend me not,
+ So dearly me they loved;
+Then vexed sore my step-dame was,
+ That no worse my fortune proved.
+
+Sir Orm he serves in the King's palace,
+ A Knight is he so fair;
+He sighs for the maiden day and night,
+ But in secret he keeps his care.
+
+Sir Orm he rode from the King's palace,
+ He could enjoy no peace;
+He rode into the good green wood,
+ The hart and hind to chase.
+
+Sir Orm set his bow his knee before,
+ He rode to the hind so near;
+But the hind would not from the sleuth-hounds flee,
+ For the Knight to her was dear.
+
+But the hounds advanced to the hind so near,
+ That the hind was forced to fly;
+She changed herself to a little bird,
+ And flew high up in the sky.
+
+Anon down flew the little bird,
+ Perched a linden bough upon;
+Sir Orm he stood there down below,
+ And sorely did he moan.
+
+Down flew the lovely little bird,
+ And 'gan on the bait to feast,
+Which out of his bosom Sir Orm had cut,
+ So well it pleased her taste.
+
+And then the lovely little bird
+ Dropped down on the yellow sand,
+And she became the fairest damsel,
+ Was ever seen in the land.
+
+The Damsel stood under the linden bough,
+ Freed was she now from thrall;
+Sir Orm he stood so near thereby,
+ They related their sorrows all.
+
+"Many thanks to thee, Sir Orm the bold
+ Thou'st freed me from my woe;
+Except beside my snow-white side
+ Thou sleep shalt nevermoe."
+
+Thanks be to him, Sir Orm the bold
+ He kept his faith so well;
+The Monday morn thereafter
+ His bridal it befell.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LONDON:
+ Printed for THOMAS J. WISE, Hampstead, N.W
+ _Edition limited to Thirty Copies_
+
+
+
+
+Footnotes:
+
+
+{5} This ballad is founded on a real character--a miser--who by various
+means acquired a considerable property, and was the first person who ever
+left "tocher," that is fortune, to daughter in Man. His name was Mollie
+Charane, which words interpreted are "Praise the Lord." He lived and
+possessed an estate on the curragh, a tract of boggy ground, formerly a
+forest, on the northern side of the island, between the mighty mountains
+of the Snefell range and the sea.
+
+{13} Previously printed, with a slightly different text, and arranged in
+six lines instead of in three four-line stanzas, in _Lavengro_, 1851,
+Vol. i, p. 306.
+
+{25} This Ballad should be compared with _The Cruel Step-dame_, printed
+in _The Serpent Knight and Other Ballads_, 1913, pp. 30-33. Also with
+_The Transformed Damsel_, printed in _The Return of the Dead and Other
+Ballads_, 1913, pp. 13-14.
+
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MOLLIE CHARANE***
+
+
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