“Now rede me, mother,” the merman cried, She made him of water a noble steed, To a young knight chang’d she then her son, To the church’s ring his steed he bound, When in he strode so proud and tall The priest was standing with open book:
He step’d over benches one and two: He stepped over benches three and four: She gave him her hand with an air so free: A bridal train from church they go, And when they came to the salt sea strand, “Now Marsk Stig’s daughter hold my steed, To a little boat he chang’d his steed, And when in the midst of the sound they were,
Now will I caution each maiden bright, Note.—The above Ballad is a later, and greatly improved, version of one which appeared under the title The Merman only, in the Romantic Ballads of 1826. The introduction of the incident of the changing by magic of the horse into a boat, furnishes a reason for the catastrophe which was lacking in the earlier version. |