Page:The poetical works of Matthew Arnold, 1897.djvu/201

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THE NECKAN.
163

He sings how from the chapel
He vanished with his bride,
And bore her down to the sea-halls,
Beneath the salt sea-tide.


He sings how she sits weeping
'Mid shells that round her lie.
"False Neckan shares my bed," she weeps;
"No Christian mate have I."


He sings how through the billows
He rose to earth again,
And sought a priest to sign the cross,
That Neckan heaven might gain.


He sings how, on an evening,
Beneath the birch-trees cool,
He sate and played his harp of gold,
Beside the river-pool.


Beside the pool sate Neckan,
Tears filled his mild blue eye.
On his white mule, across the bridge,
A cassocked priest rode by.


"Why sitt'st thou there, O Neckan,
And play'st thy harp of gold?
Sooner shall this my staff bear leaves,
Than thou shalt heaven behold."


But, lo! the staff, it budded;
It greened, it branched, it waved.
"O ruth of God!" the priest cried out,
"This lost sea-creature saved!"


The cassocked priest rode onwards,
And vanished with his mule;
And Neckan in the twilight gray
Wept by the river-pool.