Page:Bohemian legends and other poems.djvu/103

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
THE DAUGHTER’S CURSE.
85

I will go seek that flower now,
Mother mine;
I will go seek that flower now;
That soon will cool my criminal brow,
And stop my pulses throbbing.”

And when you find the grass you seek,
Daughter mine;
And when you find the grass you seek;
The flax that grows beside the leek
In many a garden round?”

Behind the bridge, upon the hill,
Mother mine;
Behind the bridge, upon the hill,
In tree I’ll drive a nail with will,
And so end all my sinning.”

What last word will you leave the youth,
Daughter mine?
What last word will you leave the youth
Who used to come to us, forsooth,
And loved thee for a season?”

A blessing on his head, I pray,
Mother mine;
A blessing on his head, I pray
Remorse until his dying day,
Because he lightly wooed me.”

What last word do you leave to me,
Daughter mine?
What last word do you leave to me,
Who loved you when a baby wee
And who brought thee up with toil?”

My curse I leave thee, that is all,
Mother mine;
My curse I leave thee, that is all,
That you may know no peace at all,
Because you let me have my way.”