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to die ... But as the blade Swept bright, young Alvin, keen for vengeance, swayed, And slipped upon the sward ... And his fierce blow That Garry slew, the Fian chief laid low-- A grievous wound was gaping on his thigh, And poured his life-blood forth ... A low, weird cry The great Finn gave, as he fell back and swooned-- In vain they strove to stanch the fearsome wound-- His life ebbed slowly with the sun's last ray In gathering gloom ... And when in death he lay, The glory of the Fians passed away. HER EVIL EYE. O Mairi Dhu, the weaver's wife, Will have the evil eye; The fear will come about my heart When she'll be passing by; She'll have the piercing look to wound The very birds that fly. I would not have her evil wish, I would not have her praise, For like the shadow would her curse, Me follow all my days-- When she my churning will speak well, No butter can I raise. O Mairi Dhu will have the eye To wound the very deer-- Ah! would she scowl upon my bairns When her they would come near? They'll have the red cords round their necks, So they'll have naught to fear. It's Murdo Ban, the luckless man, Against her would prevail; And first her eye was on his churn, Then on the milking pail; When she would praise the brindled cow, The cow began to ail. The trout that gambol in the pool She'll wound when she goes past; Then weariness will come upon The fins that flicked so fast; And one by one the lifeless things Will on the stones be cast. O Mairi Dhu, you gave yon sprain To poor Dun Para's arm; It is myself would have the work Undoing of the harm-- I'd twist around the three-ply cord Well-knotted o'er the charm. Your eye you'd put on yon sweet babe O' Lachlan o' Loch-Glass; He'd fill the wooden ladle where The dead and living pass-- And with the water, silver-charmed, He'd save his little lass. I'll lock my cheese within the chest, My butter I will hide; I'll bar the byre at milking time, Although you'll wait outside-- You'll maybe go another way-- Who'll care for you to bide? A CURSING So you're coming, ye reivers and rogues, When the men will be fighting afar-- Oh! all the Mac Quithens[1] are bold When it's only with women they'll war Weasels that creep in the dark! Foxes that prowl in the night! Rats that are hated and vile!-- O hasten you out of my sight! Oh! my cow you would take from my byre
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