page: [add]
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Note: This text is WMR's later transcription of the now illegible pencil note that DGR added at the top of page 9 of the proof.
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This is the first form in which this ballad was printed.
The pages are from the Dusseldorf Annual printed in
Germany about 1853 or /54 and edited by Mary
Howitt who asked me to contribute. She altered
âseethedâ to âmeltedâ. I think the ballad had
been written in /51 or the beginning of /52
[3]. The
initials as above were taken from a hard
[lead]
pencil because people used to say my style was hard. D. G. R.
page: 9
Â
Note: DGR's pencil note at the top of the page, extending below the title, is now illegible. It is recovered in the transcript
made by WMR.
By
H. H. H.
- âAnd if ye have melted your wax aright,
- Sister Helen,
- Ye'll let me play, for ye said I might!â
- âBe very still in your play to night,
- Little Brother!â
- (O Mother
, Mary
, Mother,
- Dark night and loud between Hell and Heaven.)
- âYe said, it must melt ere vesper-bell
- Sister Helen,
-
10If now it be molten, all is well!â
- âEven so, nay peace! ye cannot tell,
- Little Brother!â
- (O Mother Mary, Mother,
- Oh what is this, between Hell and Heaven!)
- âOh the waxen knave was plump to-day,
- Sister Helen,
- How like dead folk he has dropt away!â
- âNay now of the dead what can ye say
- Little Brother?â
-
20 (O Mother Mary, Mother,
- Why looks she thus between Hell and Heaven?)
- âSee, see the pile of burning wood,
- Sister Helen,
- Shines through the thin wax red as bloodâ,
- Nay now, when looked ye yet on blood,
- Little Brother?
- (O Mother Mary, Mother,
- How pale she is between Hell and Heaven!)
- âNow close your eyes for they 're sick and sore
-
30 Sister Helen,
- And I'll play without and keep the door.â
- âAye keep it wellâI'll lie on the floor,
- Little Brother.â
- (O Mother Mary, Mother,
- What ails her heart between Hell and Heaven?)
- âAnd here it's merry in the wind's wake,
- Sister Helen,
- In the shaking trees the chill stars shake.â
- âHush, heard ye
a horse-tread while ye spake,
-
40 Little Brother?â
- (O Mother Mary, Mother,
- What would she between Hell and Heaven?)
- âI hear a horse-tread and I see,
- Sister Helen,
- Three horsemen that ride terribly.â
- âLittle Brother, whence come the three,
- Little Brother?â
- (O Mother Mary, Mother,
- What hope is her's between Hell and Heaven.)
-
50âThey come by the hill-verge by Boyne Bar,
- Sister Helen,
- And one draws nigh, but two are afar.â
- âLook, look do ye know them, who they are,
- Little Brother?â
- (O Mother Mary, Mother,
- Who should they be, between Hell and Heaven?)
- âOh its Keith of Eastholm rides so fast,
- Sister Helen,
- For I know the white mane on the blast.â
-
60âThe hour has come, has come at last,
- Little Brother!â
- (O Mother Mary, Mother,
- Is this like joy between Hell and Heaven?)
- âHe has made a sign and calls Halloo!
- Sister Helen,
- âAnd he says that he would speak with you.â
- âOh tell him I fear the frozen dew,
- Little Brother!â
- (O Mother Mary, Mother,
-
70Why smiles she thus between Hell and Heaven.)
page: 10
Â
Editorial Note (page ornament): single rule border with decorated corners
Note: Typo: on page 10, line 144 of the poem reads What here should
the migthy Baron seek, rather than What here should
the mighty Baron seek,
- âThe wind is loud, but I hear him cry,
- Sister Helen,
- That Keith of Ew
an i
ern'>s like to die.â
- âAnd he and thou, and thou and I
- Little Brother!â
- (O Mother Mary, Mother,
- She mocks at death, between Hell and Heaven!)
- âSince yesterday, he lies sick a-bed,
- Sister Helen,
-
80And he prays in torment, to be dead.â
- âThe thing may chance, if he have prayed,
- Little Brother!â
- (O Mother Mary, Mother,
- She scoffs at prayer between Hell and Heaven!)
- âBut he has not ceased to cry all day,
- Sister Helen,
- That you should take your curse away.â
- âGod heard; God grants; shall I gainsay,
- Little Brother!â
-
90 (O Mother Mary, Mother,
- She speaks of God between Hell and Heaven.)
- âHe says, till you take back your ban,
- Sister Helen,
- His soul would pass, but never can.â
- âNay then,âshall I slay a living man,
- Little Brother?â
- (O Mother Mary, Mother,
- A wicked word between Hell and Heaven!)
- âHere's Keith of Westholm riding fast
-
100 Sister Helen,
- For I know the white plume on the blast.â
- âThe hour, the sweet hour I forecast,
- Little Brother.â
- (O Mother Mary, Mother,
- What mirth is her's between Hell and Heaven?)
- âHe stops to speak and he stills his horse,
- Sister Helen,
- But his talk sounds like the talking gorse.â
- âNay hear, nay hear, ye must hear perforce,
-
110 Little Brother.â
- (O Mother Mary, Mother,
- Are such words sweet between Hell and Heaven!)
- âOh he says that Keith of Ewan's cry,
- Sister Helen,
- Is ever to see you ere he die.â
- âHe sees me in earth, in moon and sky
- Little Brother!â
- (O Mother Mary, Mother,
- Alas for sin between Hell and Heaven!)
-
120âHe sends a
broken ring and a
broken coin,
- Sister Helen,
- And bids you mind the banks of Boyne.â
- âWhat else he broke can he ever join,
- Little Brother?â
- (O Mother Mary, Mother,
- What wrong is her's between Hell and Heaven!)
- âHe yields you these and craves full fain,
- Sister Helen,
- You pardon him in his mortal pain.â
-
130âWhat else he took will he give again,
- Little Brother?â
- (O Mother Mary, Mother,
- O shame and love between Hell and Heaven.)
- âOh it's Keith of Keith now that rides fast,
- Sister Helen,
- For I know the white hair on the blast.â
- âThe short, short hour will soon be past,
- Little Brother!â
- (O Mother Mary, Mother,
-
140Thou heard'st her laugh between Hell and Heaven!)
- âHe looks at me and he tries to speak,
- Sister Helen,
- But oh, his voice is sad and weak.â
- âWhat here should the migthy Baron seek,
- Little Brother?â
- (O Mother Mary, Mother,
- Alas, alas between Hell and Heaven.)
- âO his son is lost, the priest has said,
- Sister Helen,
-
150If he die ere he and you be wed.â
- âI'll be his bride in a warmer bed,
- Little Brother.â
- (O Mother Mary, Mother,
- Has she no fear between Hell and Heaven?)
page: 11
Â
Editorial Note (page ornament): single rule border with decorated corners
- âAh he prays you, as his heart would rive,
- Sister Helen,
- To save his dear son's soul alive.â
- âNay, flame cannot slay it, it shall thrive,
- Little Brother!â
-
160 (O Mother Mary, Mother,
- Her soul blasphemes between Hell and Heaven!)
- âHe cries to you, kneeling on the road,
- Sister Helen,
- O go with him for the love of God!â
- âThe way is long to his son's abode,
- Little Brother!â
- (O Mother Mary, Mother,
- Has the end come between Hell and Heaven?)
- âO Sister Helen, ye heard the bell,
-
170 Sister Helen,
- More loud than the vesper chime it fell.â
- âNo vesper chime, but a dying knell,
- Little Brother.â
- (O Mother Mary, Mother,
- Our doom is sealed between Hell and Heaven.)
- âAlas, but I fear the heavy sound,
- Sister Helen;
- Is it in the sky, or in the ground?â
- âSay have they turned their horses round,
-
180 Little Brother?â
- (O Mother Mary, Mother,
- What would she more between Hell and Heaven?)
- âThey have raised the old man from his knee
- Sister Helen,
- And they ride in silence hastily.â
- âNow fast the naked
one
soul doth flee,
- Little Brother.â
- (O Mother Mary, Mother,
- And is all o'er between Hell and Heaven?)
-
190âO the wind is sad in the iron chill
- Sister Helen,
- And weary sad they look by the hill.â
- âBut he they mourn is sadder still,
- Little Brother.â
- (O Mother Mary, Mother,
- No hope at all between Hell and Heaven!)
- âLook, look, the wax has dropt down from its place
- Sister Helen,
- And the flames are winning up apace.â
-
200âYet here they burn but for a space,
- Little Brother.â
- (O Mother Mary, Mother,
- Are such deeds known between Hell and Heaven?)
- âAh what white thing at the door has crossed,
- Sister Helen?â
- Ah what is this that sighs in the frost?â
- âA soul that is lost as mine is lost,
- Little Brother.ââ
- (O Mother Mary, Mother,
-
210O purge their souls
As theirs are lost between Hell and Heaven!)