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<tei.2>
  <teiheader>
    <filedesc>
      <titlestmt>
	<title>Goblin Market: TEI Lite Edition</title>
	<author>Christina Rossetti</author><respstmt><resp>electronic edition edited by</resp><name>Lisa Spagnolo</name></respstmt>
      </titlestmt>
      <publicationstmt>
	
	
        
	
	<distributor>ASCC Labs, University of Washington</distributor>
        <availability>
        <p>Free to the public with this header.</p>
        </availability>     
</publicationstmt>
      <sourcedesc>
	<bibl>
      
      <publisher>Dover Publications, Inc.</publisher>
      <pubplace>New York, NY</pubplace>
      <date>1983</date></bibl>
      
	<bibl>The 1893 Macmillan edition of Christina Rossetti's &ldquo;Goblin Market,&rdquo; illustrated by Laurence Housman.</bibl>
      <p>Names have been highlighted except when occurring in a direct address.  The Dover reprint was scanned using Omnipage and marked up according to TEI Lite conventions.</p>
      </sourcedesc>
    </filedesc>
  </teiheader>

  <text>
    <body>
 <lg>
	<l>MORNING and evening</l>
	<l>Maids heard the goblins cry</l>
	<l><q who=goblins>"Come buy our orchard fruits,</l>
	<l>Come buy, come buy:</l>
	<l>Apples and quinces, </l>
	<l>Lemons and oranges,</l>
	<l>Plump unpecked cherries,</l>
	<l>Melons and raspberries,</l>
	<l>Bloom-down-cheeked peaches,</l>
	<l>Swart-headed mulberries,</l>
        <l>Wild free-born cranberries,</l>
	<l>Crab-apples, dewberries,</l>
	<l>Pine-apples, blackberries,</l>
	<l>Apricots, strawberries;&mdash;</l>
	<l>All ripe together</l>
	<l>In summer weather,&mdash;</l>
	<l>Morns that pass by,</l>
	<l>Fair eves that fly;</l>
	<l>Come buy, come buy:</l>
	<l>Our grapes fresh from the vine,</l>
	<l>Pomegranates full and fine,</l>
	<l>Dates and sharp bullaces,</l>
	<l>Rare pears and greengages,</l>
	<l>Damsons and bilberries,</l>
	<l>Taste them and try:</l>
	<l>Currants and gooseberries,</l>
	<l>Bright-fire-like barberries,</l>
	<l>Figs to fill your mouth,</l>
	<l>Citrons from the South,</l>
        <l>Sweet to tongue and sound to eye;</l>
	<l><q>Come buy, come buy."</q></l></lg>
       <lg>
	<l>Evening by evening</l>
	<l>Among the brookside rushes,</l>
        <l><name>Laura</name> bowed her head to hear,</l>	
        <l><name>Lizzie</name> veiled her blushes:</l>	
        <l>Crouching close together</l>	
        <l>In the cooling weather,</l>	
        <l>With clasping arms and cautioning lips,</l>	
        <l>With tingling cheeks and finger tips.</l>	
        <l><q who=Laura>"Lie close,"</q> <name>Laura</name> said,</l>	
        <l>Pricking up her golden head:</l>	
        <l><q>"We must not look at goblin men,</q></l>	
        <l>We must not buy their fruits:</l>	
	<l>Who knows upon what soil they fed</l>
        <l><q>Their hungry thirsty roots?"</q></l>
	<l><q who=goblins>"Come buy,"</q> call the goblins</l>
	<l>Hobbling down the glen.</l>
	<l><q who=Lizzie>"Oh,"</q> cried <name>Lizzie</name>, <q>"Laura, Laura,</q></l>
	<l><q>You should not peep at goblin men."</q></l>
	<l><name>Lizzie</name> covered up her eyes,</l>
	<l>Covered close lest they should look;</l>
	<l><name>Laura</name> reared her glossy head,</l>
	<l>And whispered like the restless brook:</l>
	<l><q who=Laura>"Look, Lizzie, look, Lizzie,</l>
	<l>Down the glen tramp little men.</l>
	<l>One hauls a basket,</l>
	<l>One bears a plate,</l>
	<l>One lugs a golden dish</l>
	<l>Of many pounds weight.</l>
	<l>How fair the vine must grow</l>
	<l>Whose grapes are so luscious;</l>
	<l>How warm the wind must blow</l>
	<l><q>Through those fruit bushes."</q></l>
	<l><q who=Lizzie>"No,"</q> said <name>Lizzie</name>: <q>"No, no, no;</l>
	<l>Their offers should not charm us,</l>
	<l><q>Their evil gifts would harm us."</q></l>
	<l>She thrust a dimpled finger</l>
	<l>In each ear, shut eyes and ran:</l>
	<l>Curious <name>Laura</name> chose to linger</l>
	<l>Wondering at each merchant man.</l>
	<l>One had a cat's face,</l>
	<l>One whisked a tail,</l>
	<l>One tramped at a rat's pace,</l>
	<l>One crawled like a snail,</l>
	<l>One like a wombat prowled obtuse and furry,</l>
	<l>One like a ratel tumbled hurry skurry.</l>
	<l>She heard a voice like voice of doves</l>
	<l>Cooing all together:</l>
	<l>They sounded kind and full of loves</l>
	<l>In the pleasant weather.</l></lg>
        <lg>
	<l><name>Laura</name> stretched her gleaming neck</l>
	<l>Like a rush-imbedded swan,</l>
	<l>Like a lily from the beck,</l>
	<l>Like a moonlit poplar branch.</l>
	<l>Like a vessel at the launch</l>
	<l>When its last restraint is gone.</l></lg>
        <lg>
        <l>Backwards up the mossy glen</l>
	<l>Turned and trooped the goblin men,</l>
	<l>With their shrill repeated cry,</l>
	<l><q who=goblins>"Come buy, come buy."</q></l>
	<l>When they reached where <name>Laura</name> was</l>
	<l>They stood stock still upon the moss,</l>
	<l>Leering at each other,</l>
	<l>Brother with queer brother;</l>
	<l>Signalling each other,</l>
	<l>Brother with sly brother.</l>
	<l>One set his basket down,</l>
	<l>One reared his plate;</l>
	<l>One began to weave a crown</l>
	<l>Of tendrils, leaves, and rough nuts brown</l>
	<l>(Men sell not such in any town);</l>
	<l>One heaved the golden weight</l>
	<l>Of dish and fruit to offer her:</l>
	<l><q who=goblins>"Come buy, come buy,"</q> was still their cry.</l>
	<l><name>Laura</name> stared but did not stir,</l>
	<l>Longed but had no money:</l>
	<l>The whisk-tailed merchant bade her taste</l>
	<l>In tones as smooth as honey,</l>
	<l>The cat-faced purr'd,</l>
	<l>The rat-paced spoke a word</l>
	<l>Of welcome, and the snail-paced even was heard; </l>
	<l>One parrot-voiced and jolly </l>
	<l>Cried <q>"Pretty Goblin"</q> still for <q>"Pretty Polly;"</q>&mdash;</l>
	<l>One whistled like a bird.</l></lg>
	<lg>
        <l>But sweet-tooth <name>Laura</name> spoke in haste:</l>
	<l><q who=Laura>"Good Folk, I have no coin;</l>
	<l>To take were to purloin:</l>
	<l>I have no copper in my purse,</l>
	<l>I have no silver either,</l>
	<l>And all my gold is on the furze</l>
	<l><q>Above the rusty heather."</q></l>
	<l><q who=goblins>"You have much gold upon your head,"</q></l>
	<l>They answered all together:</l>
	<l><q>"Buy from us with a golden curl."</q></l>
	<l>She clipped a precious golden lock,</l>
	<l>She dropped a tear more rare than pearl,</l>
	<l>Then sucked their fruit globes fair or red:</l>
	<l>Sweeter than honey from the rock,</l>
	<l>Stronger than man-rejoicing wine,</l>
	<l>Clearer than water flowed that juice;</l>
	<l>She never tasted such before,</l>
	<l>How should it cloy with length of use?</l>
	<l>She sucked and sucked and sucked the more</l>
	<l>Fruits which that unknown orchard bore;</l>
	<l>She sucked until her lips were sore;</l>
	<l>Then flung the emptied rinds away</l>
	<l>But gathered up one kernel-stone,</l>
	<l>And knew not was it night or day</l>
	<l>As she turned home alone.</l></lg>
      <lg><l><name>Lizzie</name> met her at the gate</l>
	<l>Full of wise upbraidings:</l>
	<l><q who=Lizzie>"Dear, you should not stay so late,</l>
	<l>Twilight is not good for maidens;</l>
	<l>Should not loiter in the glen</l>
	<l>In the haunts of goblin men.</l>
	<l>Do you not remember <name>Jeanie</name>,</l>
	<l>How she met them in the moonlight,</l>
	<l>Took their gifts both choice and many;</l>
	<l>Ate their fruits and wore their flowers</l>
	<l>Plucked from bowers</l>
	<l>Where summer ripens at all hours?</l>
	<l>But ever in the noonlight</l>
	<l>She pined and pined away;</l>
	<l>Sought them by night and day,</l>
	<l>Found them no more, but dwindled and grew grey;</l>
	<l>Then fell with the first snow,</l>
	<l>While to this day no grass will grow</l>
	<l>Where she lies low:</l>
	<l>I planted daisies there a year ago</l>
	<l>That never blow.</l>
	<l><q>You should not loiter so."</q></l>
	<l><q who=Laura>"Nay, hush,"</q> said <name>Laura</name>:</l>
	<l><q>"Nay, hush, my sister:</l>
	<l>I ate and ate my fill,</l>
	<l>Yet my mouth waters still;</l>
	<l>To-morrow night I will</l>
	<l><q>Buy more;"</q> and kissed her:</l>
	<l><q>"Have done with sorrow;</l>
	<l>I'll bring you plums to-morrow</l>
	<l>Fresh on their mother twigs,</l>
	<l>Cherries worth getting;</l>
	<l>You cannot think what figs</l>
	<l>My teeth have met in,</l>
	<l>What melons icy-cold</l>
	<l>Piled on a dish of gold</l>
	<l>Too huge for me to hold,</l>
	<l>What peaches with a velvet nap,</l>
	<l>Pellucid grapes without one seed:</l>
	<l>Odorous indeed must be the mead</l>
	<l>Whereon they grow, and pure the wave they drink</l>
	<l>With lilies at the brink,</l>
	<l><q>And sugar-sweet their sap."</q></l></lg>
	<lg><l>Golden head by golden head,</l>
	<l>Like two pigeons in one nest </l>
	<l>Folded in each other's wings,</l>
	<l>They lay down in their curtained bed:</l>
	<l>Like two blossoms on one stem,</l>
	<l>Like two flakes of new-fall'n snow,</l>
	<l>Like two wands of ivory</l>
	<l>Tipped with gold for awful kings.</l>
	<l>Moon and stars gazed in at them,</l>
	<l>Wind sang to them lullaby,</l>
	<l>Lumbering owls forbore to fly,</l>
	<l>Not a bat flapped to and fro</l>
	<l>Round their rest:</l>
	<l>Cheek to cheek and breast to breast</l>
	<l>Locked together in one nest.</l></lg>
	<lg><l>Early in the morning</l>
	<l>When the first cock crowed his warning,</l>
	<l>Neat like bees, as sweet and busy,</l>
	<l><name>Laura</name> rose with <name>Lizzie</name>:</l>
	<l>Fetched in honey, milked the cows,</l>
	<l>Aired and set to rights the house,</l>
	<l>Kneaded cakes of whitest wheat,</l>
	<l>Cakes for dainty mouths to eat,</l>
	<l>Next churned butter, whipped up cream,</l>
	<l>Fed their poultry, sat and sewed;</l>
	<l>Talked as modest maidens should:</l>
	<l><name>Lizzie</name> with an open heart,</l>
	<l><name>Laura</name> in an absent dream,</l>
	<l>One content, one sick in part;</l>
	<l>One warbling for the mere bright day's delight,</l>
	<l>One longing for the night.</l></lg>
	<lg><l>At length slow evening came:</l>
	<l>They went with pitchers to the reedy brook;</l>
	<l><name>Lizzie</name> most placid in her look,</l>
	<l><name>Laura</name> most like a leaping flame.</l>
	<l>They drew the gurgling water from its deep;</l>
	<l><name>Lizzie</name> plucked purple and rich golden flags,</l>
	<l>Then turning homeward said: <q who=Lizzie>"The sunset flushes</l>
	<l>Those furthest loftiest crags;</l>
	<l>Come, Laura, not another maiden lags,</l>
	<l>No wilful squirrel wags,</l>
	<l><q>The beasts and birds are fast asleep."</q></l>
	<l>But <name>Laura</name> loitered still among the rushes</l>
	<l>And said the bank was steep.</l></lg>
	<lg><l>And said the hour was early still,</l>
	<l>The dew not fall'n, the wind not chill;</l>
	<l>Listening ever, but not catching</l>
	<l>The customary cry,</l><l><q>"Come buy, come buy,"</q></l>
	<l>With its iterated jingle</l>
	<l>Of sugar-baited words:</l>
	<l>Not for all her watching</l>
	<l>Once discerning even one goblin</l>
	<l>Racing, whisking, tumbling, hobbling;</l>
	<l>Let alone the herds</l>
	<l>That used to tramp along the glen,</l>
	<l>In groups or single,</l>
	<l>Of brisk fruit-merchant men.</l>
        <l>Till <name>Lizzie</name> urged, <q who=Lizzie>"O Laura, come;</l>
	<l>I hear the fruit-call, but I dare not look:</l>
	<l>You should not loiter longer at this brook:</l>
	<l>Come with me home.</l>
	<l>The stars rise, the moon bends her arc,</l>
	<l>Each glowworm winks her spark,</l>
	<l>Let us get home before the night grows dark</l>
	<l>For clouds may gather</l>
	<l>Though this is summer weather,</l>
	<l>Put out the lights and drench us through;</l>
	<l><q>Then if we lost our way what should we do?"</q></l></lg>
	<lg><l><name>Laura</name> turned cold as stone</l>
	<l>To find her sister heard that cry alone,</l>
	<l>That goblin cry,</l>
	<l><q>"Come buy our fruits, come buy."</q></l>
	<l>Must she then buy no more such dainty fruit?</l>
	<l>Must she no more such succous pasture find,</l>
	<l>Gone deaf and blind?</l>
	<l>Her tree of life drooped from the root:</l>
	<l>She said not one word in her heart's sore ache;</l>
	<l>But peering thro' the dimness, nought discerning,</l>
	<l>Trudged home, her pitcher dripping all the way;</l>
	<l>So crept to bed, and lay</l>
	<l>Silent till <name>Lizzie</name> slept;</l>
	<l>Then sat up in a passionate yearning,</l>
	<l>And gnashed her teeth for baulked desire, and wept</l>
	<l>As if her heart would break.</l></lg>
	<lg><l>Day after day, night after night,</l>
	<l><name>Laura</name> kept watch in vain</l>
	<l>In sullen silence of exceeding pain.</l>
	<l>She never caught again the goblin cry:</l>
	<l><q>"Come buy, come buy;"</q>&mdash;</l>
	<l>She never spied the goblin men</l>
	<l>Hawking their fruits along the glen:</l>
	<l>But when the noon waxed bright</l>
	<l>Her hair grew thin and grey;</l>
	<l>She dwindled, as the fair full moon doth turn</l>
	<l>To swift decay and burn</l>
	<l>Her fire away.</l></lg>
	<lg><l>One day remembering her kernel-stone</l>
	<l>She set it by a wall that faced the south;</l>
	<l>Dewed it with tears, hoped for a root.</l>
	<l>Watched for a waxing shoot,</l>
	<l>But there came none;</l>
	<l>It never saw the sun,</l>
	<l>It never felt the trickling moisture run:</l>
	<l>While with sunk eyes and faded mouth</l>
	<l>She dreamed of melons, as a traveller sees</l>
	<l>False waves in desert drouth</l>
	<l>With shade of leaf-crowned trees,</l>
	<l>And burns the thirstier in the sandful breeze.</l></lg>
	<lg><l>She no more swept the house,</l>
	<l>Tended the fowls or cows,</l>
	<l>Fetched honey, kneaded cakes of wheat,</l>
	<l>Brought water from the brook:</l>
	<l>But sat down listless in the chimney-nook</l>
	<l>And would not eat.</l></lg>
	<lg><l>Tender <name>Lizzie</name> could not bear</l>
	<l>To watch her sister's cankerous care</l>
	<l>Yet not to share.</l>
	<l>She night and morning</l>
	<l>Caught the goblins' cry:</l>
	<l><q>"Come buy our orchard fruits,</l>
	<l><q>Come buy, come buy:"</q>&mdash;</l>
	<l>Beside the brook, along the glen,</l>
	<l>She heard the tramp of goblin men,</l>
	<l>The voice and stir</l>
	<l>Poor <name>Laura</name> could not hear;</l>
	<l>Longed to buy fruit to comfort her,</l>
	<l>But feared to pay too dear.</l>
	<l>She thought of <name>Jeanie</name> in her grave,</l>
	<l>Who should have been a bride;</l>
	<l>But who for joys brides hope to have</l>
	<l>Fell sick and died</l>
	<l>In her gay prime,</l>
	<l>In earliest Winter time,</l>
	<l>With the first glazing rime,</l>
	<l>With the first snow-fall of crisp Winter time.</l></lg>
	<lg><l>Till <name>Laura</name> dwindling</l>
	<l>Seemed knocking at Death's door:</l>
	<l>Then <name>Lizzie</name> weighed no more</l>
	<l>Better and worse;</l>
	<l>But put a silver penny in her purse</l>
	<l>Kissed <name>Laura</name>, crossed the heath with clumps of furze</l>
	<l>At twilight, halted by the brook:</l>
	<l>And for the first time in her life</l>
	<l>Began to listen and look.</l></lg>
	<lg><l>Laughed every goblin</l>
	<l>When they spied her peeping:</l>
	<l>Came towards her hobbling,</l>
	<l>Flying, running, leaping,</l>
	<l>Puffing and blowing,</l>
	<l>Chuckling, clapping, crowing,</l>
	<l>Clucking and gobbling,</l>
	<l>Mopping and mowing,</l>
	<l>Full of airs and graces,</l>
	<l>Pulling wry faces,</l>
	<l>Demure grimaces,</l>
	<l>Cat-like and rat-like,</l>
	<l>Ratel- and wombat-like,</l>
	<l>Snail-paced in a hurry,</l>
	<l>Parrot-voiced and whistler,</l>
	<l>Helter skelter, hurry skurry,</l>
	<l>Chattering Iike magpies,</l>
	<l>Fluttering like pigeons,</l>
	<l>Gliding like fishes,mdash></l>
	<l>Hugged her and kissed her:</l>
	<l>Squeezed and caressed her:</l>
	<l>Stretched up their dishes,</l>
	<l>Panniers, and plates:</l>
	<l><q who=goblins>"Look at our apples</l>
	<l>Russet and dun,</l>
	<l>Bob at our cherries,</l>
	<l>Bite at our peaches,</l>
	<l>Citrons and dates,</l>
	<l>Grapes for the asking,</l>
	<l>Pears red with basking</l>
	<l>Out in the sun,</l>
	<l>Plums on their twigs;</l>
	<l>Pluck them and suck them,</l>
	<l><q>Pomegranates, figs."</q>&mdash;</l></lg>
	<lg><l><q who=Lizzie>"Good folk,"</q> said <name>Lizzie</name>,</l>
	<l>Mindful of <name>Jeanie</name>:</l>
	<l><q>"Give me much and many:"</q>&mdash;</l>
	<l>Held out her apron,</l>
	<l>Tossed them her penny.</l>
	<l><q who=goblins>"Nay, take a seat with us,</l>
	<l><q>Honour and eat with us,"</q></l>
	<l>They answered grinning:</l>
	<l><q>"Our feast is but beginning,</l>
	<l>Night yet is early,</l>
	<l>Warm and dew pearly,</l>
	<l>Wakeful and starry:</l>
	<l>Such fruits as these</l>
	<l>No man can carry;</l>
	<l>Half their bloom would fly,</l>
	<l>Half their dew would dry,</l>
	<l>Half their flavour would pass by.</l>
	<l>Sit down and feast with us,</l>
	<l>Be welcome guest with us,</l>
	<l><q>Cheer you and rest with us."</q>&mdash;</l>
	<l><q who=Lizzie>"Thank you,"</q> said <name>Lizzie</name>: <q>"But one waits</l>
	<l>At home alone for me:</l>
	<l>So without further parleying,</l>
	<l>If you will not sell me any</l>
	<l>Of your fruits though much and many,</l>
	<l>Give me back my silver penny</l>
	<l><q>I tossed you for a fee."</q>&mdash;</l>
	<l>They began to scratch their pates,</l>
	<l>No longer wagging, purring,</l>
	<l>But visibly demurring,</l>
	<l>Grunting and snarling.</l>
	<l>One called her proud,</l>
	<l>Cross-grained, uncivil;</l>
	<l>Their tones waxed loud,</l>
	<l>Their looks were evil.</l>
	<l>Lashing their tails</l>
	<l>They trod and hustled her,</l>
	<l>Elbowed and jostled her,</l>
	<l>Clawed with their nails,</l>
	<l>Barking, mewing, hissing, mocking,</l>
	<l>Tore her gown and soiled her stocking,</l>
	<l>Twitched her hair out by the roots,</l>
	<l>Stamped upon her tender feet,</l>
	<l>Held her hands and squeezed their fruits</l>
	<l>Against her mouth to make her eat.</l>
	<l>White and golden <name>Lizzie</name> stood,</l>
	<l>Like a lily in a flood,mdash</l>
	<l>Like a rock of blue-veined stone</l>
	<l>Lashed by tides obstreperously,mdash</l>
	<l>Like a beacon left alone</l>
	<l>In a hoary roaring sea,</l>
	<l>Sending up a golden fire,&mdash;</l>
	<l>Like a fruit-crowned orange-tree</l>
	<l>White with blossoms honey-sweet</l>
	<l>Sore beset by wasp and bee,&mdash;</l>
	<l>Like a royal virgin town</l>
	<l>Topped with gilded dome and spire</l>
	<l>Close beleaguered by a fleet</l>
	<l>Mad to tug her standard down.</l></lg>
	<lg><l>One may lead a horse to water,</l>
	<l>Twenty cannot make him drink.</l>
	<l>Though the goblins cuffed and caught her,</l>
	<l>Coaxed and fought her,</l>
	<l>Bullied and besought her,</l>
	<l>Scratched her, pinched her black as ink,</l>
	<l>Kicked and knocked her,</l>
	<l>Mauled and mocked her,</l>
	<l><name>Lizzie</name> uttered not a word;</l>
	<l>Would not open lip from lip</l>
	<l>Lest they should cram a mouthful in:</l>
	<l>But laughed in heart to feel the drip</l>
	<l>Of juice that syrupped all her face,</l>
	<l>And lodged in dimples of her chin,</l>
	<l>And streaked her neck which quaked like curd.</l>
	<l>At last the evil people,</l>
	<l>Worn out by her resistance,</l>
	<l>Flung back her penny, kicked their fruit</l>
	<l>Along whichever road they took,</l>
	<l>Not leaving root or stone or shoot;</l>
	<l>Some writhed into the ground,</l>
	<l>Some dived into the brook</l>
	<l>With ring and ripple,</l>
	<l>Some scudded on the gale without a sound.</l>
	<l>Some vanished in the distance.</l></lg>
	<lg><l>In a smart, ache, tingle,</l>
	<l><name>Lizzie</name> went her way;</l>
	<l>Knew not was it night or day;</l>
	<l>Sprang up the bank, tore thro' the furze,</l>
	<l>Threaded copse and dingle,</l>
	<l>And heard her penny jingle</l>
	<l>Bouncing in her purse,&mdash;</l>
	<l>Its bounce was music to her ear.</l>
	<l>She ran and ran</l>
	<l>As if she feared some goblin man</l>
	<l>Dogged her with gibe or curse</l>
	<l>Or something worse:</l>
	<l>But not one goblin skurried after,</l>
	<l>Nor was she pricked by fear;</l>
	<l>The kind heart made her windy-paced</l>
	<l>That urged her home quite out of breath with haste</l>
	<l>And inward laughter.</l></lg>
	<lg><l>She cried, <q who=Lizzie>"Laura,"</q> up the garden,</l>
	<l><q>"Did you miss me?</l>
	<l>Come and kiss me.</l>
	<l>Never mind my bruises,</l>
	<l>Hug me, kiss me, suck my juices</l>
	<l>Squeezed from goblin fruits for you,</l>
	<l>Goblin pulp and goblin dew.</l>
	<l>Eat me, drink me, love me;</l>
	<l>Laura, make much of me;</l>
	<l>For your sake I have braved the glen</l>
	<l><q>And had to do with goblin merchant men."</q></l></lg>
	<lg><l><name>Laura</name> started from her chair,</l>
	<l>Flung her arms up in the air,</l>
	<l>Clutched her hair:</l>
	<l><q who=Laura>"Lizzie, Lizzie, have you tasted</l>
	<l>For my sake the fruit forbidden?</l>
	<l>Must your light like mine be hidden,</l>
	<l>Your young life like mine be wasted,</l>
	<l>Undone in mine undoing,</l>
	<l>And ruined in my ruin,</l>
	<l><q>Thirsty, cankered, goblin-ridden?"</q>&mdash;</l>
	<l>She clung about her sister</l>
	<l>Kissed and kissed and kissed her:</l>
	<l>Tears once again</l>
	<l>Refreshed her shrunken eyes,</l>
	<l>Dropping like rain</l>
	<l>After long sultry drouth;</l>
	<l>Shaking with aguish fear, and pain, </l>
	<l>She kissed and kissed her with a hungry mouth.</l></lg>
	<lg><l>Her lips began to scorch,</l>
	<l>That juice was wormwood to her tongue,</l>
	<l>She loathed the feast:</l>
	<l>Writhing as one possessed she leaped and sung,</l>
	<l>Rent all her robe, and wrung</l>
	<l>Her hands in lamentable haste,</l>
	<l>And beat her breast.</l>
	<l>Her locks streamed like the torch</l>
	<l>Borne by a racer at full speed,</l>
	<l>Or like the mane of horses in their flight,</l>
	<l>Or like an eagle when she stems the light</l>
	<l>Straight toward the sun,</l>
	<l>Or like a caged thing freed,</l>
	<l>Or like a flying flag when armies run.</l></lg>
	<lg><l>Swift fire spread through her veins, knocked at her heart,</l>
	<l>Met the fire smouldering there</l>
	<l>And overbore its lesser flame;</l>
	<l>She gorged on bitterness without a name:</l>
	<l>Ah! fool, to choose such part</l>
	<l>Of soul-consuming care!</l>
	<l>Sense failed in the mortal strife:</l>
	<l>Like the watch-tower of a town</l>
	<l>Which an earthquake shatters down,</l>
	<l>Like a lightning-stricken mast,</l>
	<l>Like a wind-uprooted tree</l>
	<l>Spun about,</l>
	<l>Like a foam-topped waterspout</l>
	<l>Cast down headlong in the sea,</l>
	<l>She fell at last;</l>
	<l>Pleasure past and anguish past,</l>
	<l>Is it death or is it life?</l></lg>
	<lg>
	  <l>Life out of death. </l>
	  <l>That night long <name>Lizzie</name> watched by her, </l>
	  <l>Counted her pulse's flagging stir, </l>
	  <l>Felt for her breath, </l>
	  <l>Held water to her lips, and cooled her face </l>
	  <l>With tears and fanning leaves:</l>
	  <l>But when the first birds chirped about their eaves,</l>
	  <l>And early reapers plodded to the place</l>
	  <l>Of golden sheaves,</l>
	  <l>And dew-wet grass</l>
	  <l>Bowed in the morning winds so brisk to pass,</l>
	  <l>And new buds with new day</l>
	  <l>Opened of cup-like lilies on the stream,</l>
	  <l><name>Laura</name> awoke as from a dream,</l>
	  <l>Laughed in the innocent old way,</l>
	  <l>Hugged <name>Lizzie</name> but not twice or thrice;</l>
	  <l>Her gleaming locks showed not one thread of grey</l>
	  <l>Her breath was sweet as May</l>
	  <l>And light danced in her eyes.</l></lg>
	  <lg><l>Days, weeks, months, years</l>
	  <l>Afterwards, when both were wives</l>
	  <l>With children of their own;</l>
	  <l>Their mother-hearts beset with fears,</l>
	  <l>Their lives bound up in tender lives;</l>
	  <l><name>Laura</name> would call the little ones</l>
	  <l>And tell them of her early prime,</l>
	  <l>Those pleasant days long gone</l>
	  <l>Of not-returning time:</l>
	  <l>Would talk about the haunted glen,</l>
	  <l>The wicked, quaint fruit-merchant men,</l>
	  <l>Their fruits like honey to the throat</l>
	  <l>But poison in the blood;</l>
	  <l>(Men sell not such in any town):</l>
	  <l>Would tell them how her sister stood</l>
	  <l>In deadly peril to do her good,</l>
	  <l>And win the fiery antidote:</l>
	  <l>Then joining hands to little hands</l>
	  <l>Would bid them cling together,</l>
	  <l><q>"For there is no friend like a sister</l>
	  <l>In calm or stormy weather;</l>
	  <l>To cheer one on the tedious way,</l>
	  <l>To fetch one if one goes astray,</l>
	  <l>To lift one if one totters down,</l>
	  <l><q>To strengthen whilst one stands."</q></l>
	</lg>
      </body>
  </text>
 </tei.2>

