Fairy Magic & Frigid Love Poems

Fairies in the English forest
Wove my hair in golden braids,

Spun me round in their earthen waltz,
Spooned me cider from apple-kegs.

Nimbly they placed me in a spell—
It was the magic of my dreams.

And now, all flushed with ruddy cheeks,
I’m happy, or so it seems.

The time for tea was growing stale
…..While the shipmen left the quay.
But then a wind puffed out the sail—
…..Shaking the cargo with a wail—
As chamomile stained the Pacific Sea.

Life has made a fool of her.
Who has she become?
What is this she’s grown to see?
Her face is blank as a cotton sheet.
Her arms are thin and old.
There is something sad
And terribly cold
In the act of becoming a woman
One does not wish to be.

Did you already
forget how much I loved you?
You should have been there
when I remembered
how perfectly you could make me cry.

Fragile memory:
Handle with the utmost care.
Keep the right side up—
Else be prepared to wonder
“Who am I?” forevermore.

They told me some things:
Like how good you’ve been looking,
How thin you’ve become,
How fast your heart has turned to gold.
Or is my hearing failing me?
Perhaps they said:
How fast it’s turning cold.

These poems are very rotten
But what more can I say?
My mind’s all stuffed with cotton,
My mouth’s all full of clay.

Image credit: The Meeting of Oberon and Titania by Arthur Rackham.

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