Classic and Contemporary Poetry
THE SEVEN FIDDLERS, by SEBASTIAN EVANS First Line: A blue robe on their shoulder Last Line: And the winds be all asleep. | ||||||||
A blue robe on their shoulder, And an ivory bow in hand, Seven fiddlers came with their fiddles A-fiddling through the land, And they fiddled a tune on their fiddles That none could understand. For none who heard their fiddling Might keep his ten toes still, E'en the cripple threw down his crutches, And danced against his will: Young and old thy all fell a-dancing, While the fiddlers fiddled their fill. They fiddled down to the ferry -- The ferry by Severn-side, And they stepped aboard the ferry, None else to row or guide, And deftly steered the pilot, And stoutly the oars they plied. Then suddenly in mid-channel These fiddlers ceased to row, And the pilot spake to his fellows In a tongue that none may know: 'Let us home to our fathers and brothers, And the maidens we love below.' Then the fiddlers seized their fiddles, And sang to their fiddles a song: 'We are coming, coming, O brothers, To the home we have left so long, For the world still loves the fiddler, And the fiddler's tune is strong.' Then they stepped from out the ferry Into the Severn-sea, Down into the depths of the waters Where the homes of fiddlers be, And the ferry-boat drifted slowly Forth to the ocean free! But where those jolly fiddlers Walked down into the deep, The ripples are never quiet But for ever dance and leap, Through the Severn-sea be silent, And the winds be all asleep. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE FIFTEEN DAYS OF JUDGEMENT by SEBASTIAN EVANS WHAT THE TRUMPETER SAID by SEBASTIAN EVANS AT THE BRITISH MUSEUM by RICHARD ALDINGTON TWO POEMS FROM THE WAR: 1 by ARCHIBALD MACLEISH JEPHTHA'S DAUGHTER by GEORGE GORDON BYRON STANZAS; HOOD'S LAST POEM by THOMAS HOOD THE LAST ROSE OF SUMMER by THOMAS MOORE THE OLD HOKUM BUNCOMBE by ROBERT EMMET SHERWOOD |
|