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Welland River

By William Morris

Topics: classic

Fair Ellayne she walk'd by Welland river,         Across the lily lee:     O, gentle Sir Robert, ye are not kind         To stay so long at sea.     Over the marshland none can see         Your scarlet pennon fair;     O, leave the Easterlings alone,         Because of my golden hair.     The day when over Stamford bridge         That dear pennon I see     Go up toward the goodly street,         'Twill be a fair day for me.     O, let the bonny pennon bide         At Stamford, the good town,     And let the Easterlings go free,         And their ships go up and down.     For every day that passes by         I wax both pale and green,     From gold to gold of my girdle         There is an inch between.     I sew'd it up with scarlet silk         Last night upon my knee,     And my heart grew sad and sore to think         Thy face I'd never see.     I sew'd it up with scarlet silk,         As I lay upon my bed:     Sorrow! the man I'll never see         That had my maidenhead.     But as Ellayne sat on her window-seat         And comb'd her yellow hair,     She saw come over Stamford bridge         The scarlet pennon fair.     As Ellayne lay and sicken'd sore,         The gold shoes on her feet,     She saw Sir Robert and his men         Ride up the Stamford street.     He had a coat of fine red gold,         And a bascinet of steel;     Take note his goodly Collayne sword         Smote the spur upon his heel.     And by his side, on a grey jennet,         There rode a fair lady,     For every ruby Ellayne wore,         I count she carried three.     Say, was not Ellayne's gold hair fine,         That fell to her middle free?     But that lady's hair down in the street,         Fell lower than her knee.     Fair Ellayne's face, from sorrow and grief,         Was waxen pale and green:     That lady's face was goodly red,         She had but little tene.     But as he pass'd by her window         He grew a little wroth:     O, why does yon pale face look at me         From out the golden cloth?     It is some burd, the fair dame said,         That aye rode him beside,     Has come to see your bonny face         This merry summer-tide.     But Ellayne let a lily-flower         Light on his cap of steel:     O, I have gotten two hounds, fair knight,         The one has served me well;     But the other, just an hour agone,         Has come from over sea,     And all his fell is sleek and fine,         But little he knows of me.     Now, which shall I let go, fair knight,         And which shall bide with me?     O, lady, have no doubt to keep         The one that best loveth thee.     O, Robert, see how sick I am!         Ye do not so by me.     Lie still, fair love, have ye gotten harm         While I was on the sea?     Of one gift, Robert, that ye gave,         I sicken to the death,     I pray you nurse-tend me, my knight,         Whiles that I have my breath.     Six fathoms from the Stamford bridge         He left that dame to stand,     And whiles she wept, and whiles she cursed         That she ever had taken land.     He has kiss'd sweet Ellayne on the mouth,         And fair she fell asleep,     And long and long days after that         Sir Robert's house she did keep.

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"Fair Ellayne she walk'd by Welland river,..."

"Welland River" is a quintessential example of William Morris's signature style... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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Author:William Morris

"Fair Ellayne she walk'd by Welland river,..." by William Morris

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William Morris

About William Morris

William Morris (1834–1896) was an English poet, artist, and socialist reformer associated with the Pre-Raphaelites and the Arts and Crafts movement. His epic poems "The Earthly Paradise" and "Sigurd the Volsung" draw on medieval legend and Norse mythology.

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