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Poem by William Harrison Ainsworth Ephialtes I ride alone – I ride by night Through the moonless air on a courser white! Over the dreaming earth I fly, Here and there – at my fantasy! My frame is withered, my visage old, My locks are froze, and my bones ice cold. The wolf will howl as I pass his lair, The ban-dog moan, and the screech-owl stare. For breath, at my coming, the sleeper strains, And the freezing current forsakes his veins! Vainly for pity the wretch may sue – Merciless Mara no prayers subdue! To his couch I flit – On his breast I sit! Astride! astride! astride! And one charm alone – – A hollow stone!1 – Can scare me from his side! A thousand antic shapes I take; The stoutest heart at my touch will quake. The miser dreams of a bug of gold, Or a ponderous chest on his bosom rolled. The drunkard groans ’neath a cask of wine; The reveller swelts ’neath a weighty chine. The recreant turns, by his foes assailed, To flee! – but his feet to the ground are nailed. The goatherd dreams of his mountain-tops, And, dizzily reeling, downward drops. The murderer feels at his throat a knife. And gasps, as his victim gasped, for life! The thief recoils from the scorching brand; The mariner drowns in sight of land! Thus sinful man have I power to fray, Torture, and rack, but not to slay! But ever the couch of purity, With shuddering glance, I hurry by. Then mount! away! To horse! I say, To horse! astride! astride! The fire-drake shoots – The screech-owl hoots – As through the air I glide!1. In reference to this imaginary charm, Sir Thomas Browne observes, in his “Vulgar Errors.” “What natural effects can reasonably be expected, when, to prevent the Ephialtes, or Nightmare, we hang a hollow stone in our stables?” Grose also states, “that a stone with a hole in it, hung at the bed’s head, will prevent the nightmare, and is therefore called a hag-stone.” The belief in this charm still lingers in some districts, and maintains, like the horseshoe affixed to the barn-door, a feeble stand against the superstition-destroying “march of intellect.” – Ainsworth. William Harrison Ainsworth William Harrison Ainsworth's other poems:
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