Scotland is full of the wee folk, and this was painted from an old musty poetry book of Scottish poetry I found in Leaky's bookshop.
“On lonely heights,
Which a faint moon lights,
I fly with the wind and dance o’ nights,
Laughing I leap, where the grey clouds sleep,
Over the face of the stars asleep.
I have no home, I go and I come,
Heave with rain and wet with foam,
When Autumn calls and the ripe fruit falls,
I bask in the hot red garden walls…..
If you would know, which way I go,
Light, light, light on my pointed toe,
You must keep watch at noon and catch,
A ray of sun from the wild rose patch.
You must set snares of gossamer hairs,
To trip my dancing feet unawares,
And then! Oh! Then,
Like the the sun and the rain,
You must let me go again.”
Lady Margaret Sackville 1798.