The Collected Poems of Dora Sigerson Shorter/The Man Who Trod on Sleeping Grass

The Man Who Trod on Sleeping Grass
by Dora Sigerson Shorter
1721403The Man Who Trod on Sleeping GrassDora Sigerson Shorter

THE MAN WHO TROD ON SLEEPING GRASS

In a field by Cahirconlish
I stood on sleeping grass,
No cry I made to Heaven
Prom my dumb lips would pass.

Three days, three nights I slumbered,
And till I woke again
Those I have loved have sought me,
And sorrowed all in vain.

My neighbours still upbraid me,
And murmur as I pass,
“There goes a man enchanted.
He trod on fairy grass.”

My little ones around me,
They claim my old caress,
I push them roughly from me
With hands that cannot bless.

My wife upon my shoulder
A bitter tear lets fall,
I turn away in anger
And love her not at all.

For like a man surrounded.
In some sun-haunted lane.
By countless wings that follow,
A grey and stinging chain,


Around my head for ever
I hear small voices speak
In tongues I cannot follow,
I know not what they seek.

I raise my hands to find them
When autumn winds go by,
And see between my fingers
A broken smnmer fly.

I raise my hands to hold them
When winter days are near,
And clasp a falling snowflake
That breaks into a tear.

And ever follows laughter
That echoes through my heart.
From some delights forgotten
Where once I had a part

What love comes, half-remembered.
In half-forgotten bliss?
Who lay upon my bosom,
And had no human kiss?

Where is the land I loved in?
What music did I sing
That left my ears enchanted
Inside the fairy ring?

I see my neighbours shudder,
And whisper as I pass:
“Three nights the fairies stole him;
He trod on sleeping grass.”