The Poetry Corner

The Ogre

By Walter De La Mare

'Tis moonlight on Trebarwith Vale, And moonlight on an Ogre keen, Who prowling hungry through the dale A lone cottage hath seen. Small with thin smoke ascending up Three casements and a door: - The Ogre eager is to sup, And here seems dainty store. Sweet as a larder to a mouse, So to him staring down, Seemed the sweet-windowed moonlit house, With jasmine overgrown. He snorted, as the billows snort In darkness of the night, Betwixt his lean locks tawny-swart, He glowered on the sight. Into the garden sweet with peas He put his wooden shoe, And bending back the apple trees Crept covetously through; Then, stooping, with an impious eye Stared through the lattice small, And spied two children which did lie Asleep, against the wall. Into their dreams no shadow fell, Of his disastrous thumb Groping discreet, and gradual, Across the quiet room. But scarce his nail had scraped the cot Wherein these children lay, As if his malice were forgot, It suddenly did stay. For faintly in the ingle-nook He heard a cradlesong, That rose into his thoughts and woke Terror them among. For she who in the kitchen sat Darning by the fire, Guileless of what he would be at, Sang sweet as wind or wire: - 'Lullay, thou little tiny child, By-by, lullay, lullie; Jesu of glory, meek and mild, This night remember ye! 'Fiend, witch, and goblin, foul and wild, He deems 'em smoke to be; Lullay, thou little tiny child, By-by, lullay, lullie!' The Ogre lifted up his eyes Into the moon's pale ray, And gazed upon her leopard-wise, Cruel and clear as day; He snarled in gluttony and fear: 'The wind blows dismally, Jesu in storm my lambs be near, By-by, lullay, lullie!' And like a ravenous beast which sees The hunter's icy eye, So did this wretch in wrath confess Sweet Jesu's mastery. He lightly drew his greedy thumb From out that casement pale, And strode, enormous, swiftly home, Whinnying down the dale.