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Dream tapestries

Chapter 16: THE SONG OF THE WILLOW WAND
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About This Book

A collection of lyrical poems that weave dreamlike imagery with everyday and mythic scenes. The poems move between enchanted woods, haunted gardens, village interiors and symbolic tableaux, using vivid sensory language—moonlight, apples, flowers, purple pall—to examine longing, loss, desire, and memory. Some pieces adopt songlike forms and short lyric units; others are narrative sketches evoking funerary rites, domestic rituals, and moments of feminine reflection. Recurrent motifs of time, mourning, and the uncanny create a tapestry of mood shifts from playful to elegiac, inviting readers to linger in symbolic moments rather than in continuous narrative.

THE SONG OF THE WILLOW WAND

SING hey the green willow
That grows in my valley!
Oh who would climb hill-tops
To see what’s beyond!
There came a gipsy vagabond
A-strolling down my valley,
With honey mouth for kissing
And a gown of dusky red.
“So this is how ye spend the days
Wi’ never a wind to freshen ye—
Climb up the hill wi’ me, my lad,
An’ look—see what’s beyond!”
She laughed wi’ me, and shared sweet bread,
And waved a willow wand.
By green moonlight we climbed the hill
And reached the top at morn,
And then she stood on tip-toe there
And blew a silver horn.
Oh at the other side the hill
Her gipsy lord was waiting there ...
I saw a joyous mating there
That left me all forlorn.
I watched her gown of dusky red
Against the blue horizon ...
Oh that was how I climbed the hill
And saw the world beyond.
I wonder why God let her come
And share sweet bread a-laughing,
And leave a-lying at my feet
Her broken willow wand.
Sing hey the green willow
That grows in my valley!
Oh who would climb hill-tops
To see what’s beyond?