In aunciente days, tradition showes,
A base and wicked elfe arose,
The Witch of Wokey hight:
Oft have I heard the fearfull tale,
From Sue and Roger of the vale,
On some long winter’s night.
Deep in the dreary dismall cell,
Which seem’d and was ycleped hell,
This blear-eyed had did hide;
Nine wicked elves, as legends sayne,
She chose to form her guardian-trayne,
And kennel near her side.
Here screeching owls oft made their nest,
While wolves its craggy sides possest,
Night-howling thro’ the rock;
No wholesome herb could here be found:
She blasted every plant around,
And blister’d every flock.
Her haggard face was foull to see;
Her mouth unmeet a mouth to bee;
Her eyne of deadly leer.
She nought devis’d but neighbour’s ill,
She wreak’d on all her wayward will,
And marr’d all goodly chear.
All in her prime, have poets sung,
No gaudy youth, gallant and young,
E’er blest her longing armes;
And hence arose her spight to vex,
And blast the youth of either sex,
By dint of hellish charms.
From Glaston came a lerned wight,
Full bent to marr her fell despight,
And well he did, I ween:
Sich mischief never had been known,
And, since his mickle lerninge shown,
Sich mischief ne’er has been.
He chauntede out his godlie booke,
He crost the water, blest the brooke,
Then, — pater-noster done, —
The ghastly hag he sprinkled o’er,
When lo! where stood a hag before,
Now stood a ghastly stone.
Full well ’tis known adown the dale;
Tho’ passing strange indeed the tale
And doubtfull may appear,
I’m bold to say, there’s never a one,
That has not seen the witch in stone,
With all her household gear.
But tho’ this lernede clerke did well,
With grieved heart, alas! I tell,
She left this curse behind:
That Wokey-nymphs forsaken quite,
Tho’ sense and beauty both unite,
Should find no leman kind.
For lo! even, as the fiend did say,
The sex have found it to this day,
That men are wondrous scant.
Here’s beauty, wit, and sense combin’d,
With all that’s good and virtuous join’d,
Yet hardly one gallant.
Shall then sich maids unpitied moane?
They might as well, like her, be stone,
As thus forsaken dwell.
Since Glaston now can boast no clerks;
Come down from Oxenford, ye sparks,
And oh! revoke the spell!
Yet stay — nor thus despond, ye fair;
Virtue’s the gods’ peculiar care;
I hear the gracious voice:
Your sex shall soon be blest agen,
We only wait to find sich men,
As best deserve your choice.
(Henry Harington)
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Based on Topics: Man Poems, God Poems, Night Poems, Faces Poems, Youth Poems, Fairness Poems, Beauty Poems, Water Poems, Hell Poems, Vice & Virtue Poems, Wit PoemsBased on Keywords: despond, fearfull, moane, blear-eyed, dismall, doubtfull, devis, lerned, clerke, elfe, foull