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"The exquisite poem of 'The Culprit Fay,' was composed hastily among the Highlands of the Hudson, in the summer of 1819. The author — says his biography — was walking with some friends on a warm moonlight evening, when one of the party remarked that it would be difficult to write a faery poem, purely imaginative, without the aid of human characters. When the party was reassembled, two or three days afterward, 'The Culprit Fay' was read to them, nearly as it is now printed."
"My visual orbs are purged from film, and lo! |
Tennant's Anster Fair. |
POEM.
I. |
'Tis the middle watch of a summer's night — |
His sides are broken by spots of shade, |
II. |
The stars are on the moving stream, |
III. |
'Tis the hour of fairy ban and spell: |
IV. |
They come from beds of lichen green, |
V. |
They come not now to print the lea, |
VI. |
The throne was reared upon the grass |
VII. |
"Fairy! Fairy! list and mark, |
VIII. |
"Thou shalt seek the beach of sand |
IX. |
"If the spray-bead gem be won, |
X. |
The goblin marked his monarch well; |
XI. |
Soft and pale is the moony beam, |
XII. |
The elfin cast a glance around, |
XIII. |
Up sprung the spirits of the waves, |
XIV. |
Fearlessly he skims along, |
XV. |
He turned him round and fled amain |
XVI. |
Soon he gathered the balsam dew |
XVII. |
Wrapped in musing stands the sprite: |
XVIII. |
He cast a saddened look around, |
XIX. |
The imps of the river yell and rave; |
XX. |
Onward still he held his way, |
XXI. |
With sweeping tail and quivering fin, |
XXII. |
A moment and its lustre fell, |
XXIII. |
He turns, and lo! on either side |
XXIV. |
A moment staied the fairy there; |
XXV. |
He put his acorn helmet on; |
XXVI. |
The moth-fly, as he shot in air, |
XXVII. |
Up to the vaulted firmament |
XXVIII. |
His wings are wet around his breast, |
XXIX. |
Up to the cope careering swift |
XXX. |
Sudden along the snowy tide |
XXXI. |
But oh! how fair the shape that lay |
XXXII. |
She raised her eyes to the wondering sprite, |
XXXIII. |
She was lovely and fair to see |
XXXIV. |
'Lady,' he cried, 'I have sworn to-night, |
XXXV. |
Borne after on the wings of the blast, |
XXXVI. |
The star is yet in the vault of heaven, |
Hail the wanderer again, |
The beetle guards our holy ground, |
But hark! from tower on tree-top high, |