The Verner Raven, The Count of Vendel's Daughter, and Other Ballads

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.
by GEORGE BORROW
London: printed for private circulation 1913
Copyright in the United States of America by Houghton Mifflin & Co. for Clement Shorter .
The Raven he flies in the evening tide, He in day dares not intrude; Whoever is born to have evil luck In vain may seek for good.
Lustily flies the Verner Raven, High o’er the wall he’s flown, For he was aware that Irmindlin fair Sate in her bower alone.
He southward flew, and he northward flew, He flew high up in the cloud; And he beheld May Irmindlin Who sorrowing sate and sew’d.
“Now hear me, little Irmindlin, Why weep in this piteous way? For father or mother, or is it for brother, That adown thy cheek tears stray?”
It was Damsel Irmindlin, Swift out of the window looked she: “O who is he that will comfort me, And list to my misery?
“Hear thou, wild Raven, bird of Death, Fly thou hither down to me; And all my trouble and all my care I’ll straight relate to thee.
“My father gave me the son of a king, We were fitted the one for the other, But he was into the Austrian land Dispatched by my cruel step-mother.
“So happily we should together have lived, For he my whole love won; But she wished to give me her sister’s son, Who was liker a fiend than a man.

George Borrow
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Язык

Английский

Год издания

2009-05-15

Темы

Poetry; Ballads

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