SMITH, Sheila
    
      
    
      
    Willow’s forge
  
    
      
    I’VE crossed the fields from Lattenden
    
      
    And haunted Honey Mill,
    
      
    My feet and all my clothes are torn.
    
      
    Yet on I stumble still
    
      
    I must not stay to speak to you
    
      
    Or falter with my pain,
    
      
    But hasten on to Willow’s Forge,
    
      
    At the bottom of the lane.
  
    
      
    Folk call me mad perhaps ‘tis true
    
      
    My life is full of fears,
    
      
    At whiles I bite my arms, and then
    
      
    I wash the blood with tears.
    
      
    I scream, I talk to owls and crows,
    
      
    Hear voices from the sky,
    
      
    I see the spooks that ride o’ nights
    
      
    Men shudder when I’m nigh.
  
    
      
    My love was hanged for stealing sheep,
    
      
    ‘Twas that which sent me mad
    
      
    He was a liar and a thief,
    
      
    But O I loved my lad !
    
      
    I’ve wandered wildly ever since,
    
      
    And last night, ‘neath the Wain,
    
      
    I saw my love at Willow’s Forge,
    
      
    At the bottom of the lane.
  
    
      
    His face was wan, his burning eye
    
      
    Was like a coal from hell
    
      
    (He’s with the damned souls, all folk say,
    
      
    But O I love him well !)
    
      
    His hands were misty as the moon
    
      
    That bathed his awful brow,
    
      
    His lips and breast were smeared with blood,
    
      
    His cheeks were white as snow.
  
    
      
    O tell me, love, where have you been
    
      
    This weary sleepless while ?
    
      
    I’ve screamed and wept to kiss your lips,
    
      
    I’ve hungered for your smile.
    
      
    Have you been down among the damned,
    
      
    Where, like the sheep in fold,
    
      
    The dead men lie, and bleat and cry
  
And shiver in the cold ?
    
      
    Have you been up to where the clouds
    
      
    Are sailing in the blue,
    
      
    And have they thrown you down, and said
    
      
    ‘Twas no fit place for you ?
    
      
    Or have you roamed all Sussex through
    
      
    In weariness and pain,
    
      
    To meet me here at Willow’s Forge,
    
      
    At the bottom of the lane ? ’
  
    
      
    He nothing said at all, but stared
    
      
    With glazed and dreadful eye,
    
      
    His red lips shook, as if he strove
    
      
    To part them with a cry.
    
      
    He could not speak, and O I thought
    
      
    He’d shiver from my sight,
    
      
    And leave me lone at Willow’s Forge,
    
      
    In the terror of the night.
  
    
      
    ‘ O kiss me lad, before you go ! ‘
    
      
    I cried, and raised my head.
    
      
    He stooped his scarlet lips to me,
    
      
    The living kissed the dead.
    
      
    But O his mouth was all on fire,
    
      
    And burned my cheek and hair,
    
      
    I screamed aloud, and he had gone,
    
      
    And left me waiting there.
  
    
      
    I told my mother what had passed,
    
      
    She shuddered at my tale
    
      
    ‘You’ve seen the moonlight through the trees
    
      
    That shiver in the gale ;
    
      
    And as for your burnt cheek, my girl,
    
      
    Which makes you sob with pain,
    
      
    You’ve kissed the fire at Willow’s Forge,
    
      
    At the bottom of the lane.’
  
    
      
    But though she speak, and though I hear,
    
      
    I will not aught believe
    
      
    But that at last I’ve met and kissed
    
      
    The lad for whom I grieve.
    
      
    And if I haunt the meeting spot,
    
      
    I’ll see him there again
    
      
    That’s why I haste to Willow’s Forge,
    
      
    At the bottom of the lane.