Weird Tales/Volume 36/Issue 4/The Wood-Wife

4216139Weird Tales (vol. 36, no. 4) — The Wood-Wife1942Leah Bodine Drake

The Wood-Wife By Leah Bodine Drake

In a hollow oak-tree
I live by the wood,
A bit more than human
And much less than good.

I've queer spells, potent spells,
That I went to learn
To the goat-hooved and shaggy ones
Who hide in the fern.

The good-wives, the house-wives,
They shudder at my sin:
But much they'd give to learn to weave
Cloth of spiders'-spin!

My pet fox, my russet fox,
He ravishes their geese:
Yet none dare call out the hounds
If they would know peace!

On a day of falling leaves
I met the young Squire.
I gave him a sidelong look
That set his face afire.

The bonny young Squire,
He dreams in a spell;
But not of golden curlylocks
Of Parson Jones' Nell—
But of red hair, and green eyes
That have looked on Hell!

Dream, pretty Squire-kin!
It's small use to bum!
For when the moon is up
The wood-wife will turn

Three times widdershins,
And greet where you stood
The shagged-men, the satyr-men
Who creep from the wood!