La Lloronafrom the Mexican folktale. :
La Lloronafrom the Mexican folktale. Don’t go down to the river, child,Don’t go there alone;For the sobbing woman, wet and wild,Might claim you for her own.
She weeps when the sun is murky red;She wails when the moon is old;She cries for her babies, still and dead,Who drowned in the water cold.
La Lloronafrom the Mexican folktale. :
La Lloronafrom the Mexican folktale. Abandoned by a faithless love,Filled with fear and hate.She flung them from a cliff aboveAnd left them to their fate.Day and night, she heard their screams,Borne on the current’s crest;Their tortured faces filled her dreams,And gave her heart no rest.
La Lloronafrom the Mexican folktale. :
La Lloronafrom the Mexican folktale. Crazed by guilt and dazed by pain,Weary from loss of sleep,She leaped in the river, lashed by rain,And drowned in the waters deep.She seeks her children day and night,Wandering, lost, and cold;She weeps and moans in dark and light,A tortured, restless soul.
La Lloronafrom the Mexican folktale. :
La Lloronafrom the Mexican folktale. Don’t go down to the river, child,Don’t go there alone;For the sobbing woman, wet and wild,Might claim you for her own.
Source:
http://easiestspanish.blogspot.com/2007/08/legend-of-weeping-woman-la-llorona.html