Karin she sprang to her feet wi’
speed,
And clapped her hands abune her head:—
“I pray to the saints and spirits
all
That never a child may me mither call!”
The crone drew near, and the crone she
spake:—
“Nine times flesh and banes shall
ache.
“Laidly and awsome ye shall wane
Wi’ toil, and care, and travail-pain.”
“Better,” said Karin, “lay
me low,
And sink for aye in the water’s
flow!”
The crone raised her withered hand on
high,
And showed her a tree that stood hard
by.
“And take of the bonny fruit,”
she said,
“And eat till the seeds are dark
and red.
“Count them less, or count them
more,
Nine times you shall number o’er;—
“And when each number you shall
speak,
Cast seed by seed into the lake.”
Karin she ate of the fruit sae fine;
’Twas mellow as sand, and sweet
as brine.
Seed by seed she let them fall;
The waters rippled over all.
But ilka seed as Karin threw,
Uprose a bubble to her view,—
Uprose a sigh from out the lake,
As though a baby’s heart did break.
* * * * *
Twice nine years are come and gone;
Karin the fair she walks her lone.
She sees around, on ilka side,
Maiden and mither, wife and bride.
Wan and pale her bonny brow,
Sunken and sad her eyelids now.
Slow her step, and heavy her breast,
And never an arm whereon to rest.
The old kirk-porch when Karin spied,
The postern-door was open wide.
“Wae’s me!” she said,
“I’ll enter in
And shrive me from my every sin.”
’Twas silence all within the kirk;
The aisle was empty, chill, and mirk.
The chancel-rails were black and bare;
Nae priest, nae penitent was there.
Karin knelt, and her prayer she said;
But her heart within her was heavy and
dead.
Her prayer fell back on the cold gray
stone;
It would not rise to heaven alone.
Darker grew the darksome aisle,
Colder felt her heart the while.
“Wae’s me!” she cried,
“what is my sin?
Never I wronged kith nor kin.
“But why do I start and quake wi’
fear
Lest I a dreadful doom should hear?
“And what is this light that seems
to fall
On the sixth command upon the wall?
“And who are these I see arise
And look on me wi’ stony eyes?
“A shadowy troop, they flock sae
fast
The kirk-yard may not hold the last.
“Young and old of ilk degree,
Bairns, and bairnies’ bairns, I
see.
“All I look on either way,
‘Mother, mother!’ seem to
say.
“’We are souls that might
have been,
But for your vanity and sin.
“’We, in numbers multiplied,
Might have lived, and loved, and died,—