Page:Translations (1834).djvu/99

Rh Oh! that such a sordid elf Should possess her to himself! Old—too old for mirth and joys, All delight the churl destroys! Cuckoo, nightingale, he mocks, Hates the linnet as the fox; Never honours with his love Rhymes and nuts and glimm’ring grove; May’s dwarf warblers’ notes to hear, Would his very bosom sear, And the thrush’s conversation Is his very detestation! Wretch—decrepid—harp or hound, Love from Eithig never found! Eithig, with the livid face, Like a man of Irish race. Him I will remember well, Hate him more than I can tell; Never will I pay my vows But to her he calls his spouse. When she dies—upon the maid Earth and stones and withes be laid; Sods—eight oxen load I’ll pour (Borrowed oxen) on the boor; In my own paternal field, Him his length of earth I’d yield. ‘Beauty’ then shall be my mate, While Siluria’s churl in state, In his ditch and hempen clothes, On his steed of alder goes.