Lord Dunsany / Iain McCaig

Date December 17, 2007

Here’s the first selection for the Literature category here. Poetry is good.

Lord Dunsany (1878-1957), is one of the most acclaimed names in the field of fantasy fiction. In the field of writing alone, The 18th Lord Dunsany’s work ranged from popular plays to poetry, essays, reviews and autobiography; he and his work featured on radio and early television. He was also a champion chess player, a hunter, and a patron of other writers.

I believe several people are mixing up the name, Lord ‘Dunsany’, with Lord ‘Dunsnaday’. Therefore, please check your spelling and typing at all times…

faery sketch

Fairy, by Iain McCaig

The Fairy Child

From the low white walls and the church’s steeple
From our little fields under grass or grain,
I’m gone away to the fairy people
I shall not come to the town again.

You may see a girl with my face and tresses,
You may see one come to my mother’s door
Who may speak my words and may wear my dresses.
She will not be I, for I come no more.

I am gone, gone far, with the fairies roaming,
You may ask of me where the herons are
In the open marsh when the snipe are homing,
Or when no moon lights nor a single star.
On stormy nights when the streams are foaming
And a hint may come of my haunts afar,
With the reeds my floor and my roof the gloaming,
But I come no more to Ballynar.

Ask Father Ryan to read no verses
To call me back, for I am this day
From blessings far, and beyond curses.
No heaven shines where we ride away.

At speed unthought of in all your stables,
With the gods of old and the sons of Finn,
With the queens that reigned in the olden fables
And kings that won what a sword can win.
You may hear us streaming above your gables
On nights as still as a planet’s spin;
But never stir from your chairs and tables
To call my name. I shall not come in.

For I am gone to the fairy people.
Make the most of that other child
Who prays with you by the village steeple
I am gone away to the woods and wild.

I am gone away to the open spaces,
And whither riding no man may tell;
But I shall look upon all your faces
No more in Heaven or Earth or Hell.

~ Lord Dunsany (1878-1957)

3 Responses to “Lord Dunsany / Iain McCaig”

  1. Darker Blue said:

    Hi Jess.
    J.R.R Tolkien also wrote fantasy fiction about the same time and had lots of difficulties with his audience who were a little closed minded I guess. I wonder if Lord Dunsany had the same problem, maybe that is why he wanted to leave the town in his poem :)
    Cute fairy!
    DB

  2. Jess. said:

    hello DB,

    you know, i think that’s highly likely. i personally have to read more about Lord Dunsany’s life and etc.

    i would have placed a drawing of a male faery instead (would’ve been something different), if the faery in the poem wasn’t female :P

  3. Darker Blue said:

    ;)

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