The Witch Alone
Beyond the town, beneath the Moon, Beside the standing stone, There lives a woman, fair of faith, We call the Witch Alone.
She sings to Sun and Moon and Stars And gathers herbs and weeds, with which she fashions ancient charms and other magic deeds.
She worships not by altars built By hands of mortal men, But in the misty, magic glade Beyond the furthest glen.
What need has she of flashing swords, Of crystals glowing bright, Of censers and of colored cords That grace the Wiccan rite? Her tools are fashioned from the earth, And wind and fire and rain: Her rites are dances, wild and free That call the Gods amain.
When spring and summer pass to fall, And twilight fills her eyes, She'll lie upon the browning grass And smile as she dies.
For though she leaves her mortal shell Of flesh and blood and bone, She knows she does not die, but lives on
As The Witch Alone
by Scott Cunningham