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E FAIRIES' FAREWELL: OR GOD-A-MERCY WILL (To be sung or whistled to the Tune of the _Meadow Brow_ by the learned; by the unlearned, to the Tune of _Fortune_.) Farewell rewards and Fairies! Good housewives, now you may say; For now foul sluts in dairies Do fare as well as they; And though they sweep their hearths no less Than maids were wont to do, Yet who of late for cleanliness Finds sixpence in her shoe? Lament, lament old abbeys, The fairies' lost command; They did but change priests' babies; But some have changed your land; And all your children sprung from thence Are now grown Puritans, Who live as changelings ever since For love of your demesnes. At morning and at evening both You merry were and glad, So little care of sleep or sloth These pretty ladies had. When Tom came home from labour, Or Ciss to milking rose, Then merrily, merrily went their tabour, And nimbly went their toes. Witness those rings and roundelays Of theirs, which yet remain, Were footed in Queen Mary's days On many a grassy plain. But since of late Elizabeth And later James came in, They never danced on any heath, As when the time hath bin. By which we note the fairies Were of the old profession; Their songs were _Ave Maries_, Their dances were procession. But now, alas! they all are dead, Or gone beyond the seas, Or farther for religion fled, Or else they take their ease. A tell-tale in their company They never could endure; And whoso kept not secretly Their mirth, was punished sure: It was a just and Christian deed To pinch such black and blue: O how the common-wealth doth [need][1] Such justices as you! Now they have left our quarters; A Register they have Who looketh to their charters, A man both wise and grave. An hundred of their merry pranks By one that I could name Are kept in store; con twenty thanks To William for the same. * * * * * To William Churne of Staffordshire Give laud and praises due, Who every meal can mend your cheer With tales both old and true: To William all give audience, And pray ye for his noddle: For all the fairies evidence Were lost, if it were addle. RICHARD CORBET (1582-1625), from _Poetica Stromata_ (1648) *
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