Page:The collected works of Henrik Ibsen (Heinemann Volume 1).pdf/256

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208
THE FEAST AT SOLHOUG.
[ACT I.

The priest at the altar was bending;
He chanted and read, and with awe in their soul,
The folk to God's word were attending.
Then a voice rang out o'er the fiord so blue;
And the carven angels, the whole church through,
Turned round, methought, to listen thereto.

Margit.

O Signë, say on! Tell me all, tell me all!

Signë.

'Twas as though a strange, irresistible call
Summoned me forth from the worshipping flock,
Over hill and dale, over mead and rock.
'Mid the silver birches I listening trod,
Moving as though in a dream;
Behind me stood empty the house of God;
Priest and people were lured by the magic, 'twould seem,
Of the tones that still through the air did stream.
No sound they made; they were quiet as death;
To hearken the song-birds held their breath,
The lark dropped earthward, the cuckoo was still,
As the voice re-echoed from hill to hill.

Margit.

Go on.

Signë.

They crossed themselves, women and men;

[Pressing her hands to her breast.

But strange thoughts arose within me then: