The Witch-Bride

Summary

A young man is beguiled by a beautiful witch who, after he embraces her, is revealed at night by a luminous Shape to be a monstrous, terrifying thing; he flees and pursues that Shape through daybreak and sunset, but the foul Witch-Bride doggedly clings to him, mocking and thwarting his attempts to escape. The poem thus compresses a gothic scene and a chase into a compact allegory of deceptive attraction and the inescapability of the consequences of sin or ill-fated desire—the fair surface giving way to a horrifying truth that haunts the lover despite his efforts to follow or outrun it.

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A fair witch crept to a young man’s side,
And he kiss’d her and took her for his bride.

But a Shape came in at the dead of night,
And fill’d the room with snowy light.

And he saw how in his arms there lay
A thing more frightful than mouth may say.

And he rose in haste, and follow’d the Shape
Till morning crown’d an eastern cape.

And he girded himself, and follow’d still
When sunset sainted the western hill.

But, mocking and thwarting, clung to his side,
Weary day!—the foul Witch-Bride.