Come away O human child to the waters and the wild with a faerie hand in hand for the world's more full of weeping than you can understand.
Bridget, Your pretty face, was all they found in the peat with the hoarfrost over your mouth and your burnt skin curled in ribbons. This, and your black stockings he couldn't bear to remove.
Bridget, Did you see the wildness in his eyes that night he brought the priest for last rites? Did his hands shake as he mixed the herbs with ***** and threw them in your face, telling you to come home?
Bridget, was he jealous of the sixpence in your apron pocket the pieces of you he could never own and the independent streak that ran through your sensuous hair. The hot iron at your throat the only jewel he cared to hold there, the slow smoke rising like a chain 'round your neck.
Bridget, did you stare at the frightening faerie child, his changeling wings beating above you as he called you by his own name. Did you scold him in the name of his aos si mother to watch his strange eyes flare as you choked on the dry bread he'd jammed down your throat. You were never his Bridget you were your own.
Bridget, You were never the last witch. We are still hunted across deserts and into alleys acid and fists destroy the magic of our bewitching eyes. Angry, they reach for the pieces of us they can never own and burn our hearts on hearths across continents. The smoke rising from so many fires, unnoticed.
Italicized verse from W.B.Yeats “The Stolen Child”
Aos Si– Gaelic word for Irish Faries
The Story of Bridget Cleary, the “Last Witch Burned in Ireland” : https://www.irishtimes.com/news/offbeat/the-story-of-the-last-witch-burned-alive-in-ireland-1.2880691