
The
Fairy
Child
From
the
low
white
walls
and
the
church's
steeple,
From
our
little
fields
under
grass
or
grain,
I'm
gone
away
to
the
fairy
people
I
shall
not
come
to
the
town
again.
You
may
see
a
girl
with
my
face
and
tresses,
You
may
see
one
come
to
my
mother's
door
Who
may
speak
my
words
and
may
wear
my
dresses.
She
will
not
be
I,
for
I
come
no
more.
I
am
gone,
gone
far,
with
the
fairies
roaming,
You
may
ask
of
me
where
the
herons
are
In
the
open
marsh
when
the
snipe
are
homing,
Or
when
no
moon
lights
nor
a
single
star.
On
stormy
nights
when
the
streams
are
foaming
And
a
hint
may
come
of
my
haunts
afar,
With
the
reeds
my
floor
and
my
roof
the
gloaming,
But
I
come
no
more
to
Ballynar.
Ask
Father
Ryan
to
read
no
verses
To
call
me
back,
for
I
am
this
day
From
blessings
far,
and
beyond
curses.
No
heaven
shines
where
we
ride
away.
At
speed
unthought
of
in
all
your
stables,
With
the
gods
of
old
and
the
sons
of
Finn,
With
the
queens
that
reigned
in
the
olden
fables
And
kings
that
won
what
a
sword
can
win.
You
may
hear
us
streaming
above
your
gables
On
nights
as
still
as
a
planet's
spin;
But
never
stir
from
your
chairs
and
tables
To
call
my
name.
I
shall
not
come
in.
For
I
am
gone
to
the
fairy
people.
Make
the
most
of
that
other
child
Who
prays
with
you
by
the
village
steeple
I
am
gone
away
to
the
woods
and
wild.
I
am
gone
away
to
the
open
spaces,
And
whither
riding
no
man
may
tell;
But
I
shall
look
upon
all
your
faces
No
more
in
Heaven
or
Earth
or
Hell.
~Lord
Dunsany~
