The lyrics were first published in Hughes'
Irish Country Songs, published by
Boosey & Hawkes in 1909. A common version goes as follows: ''My young love said to me, "My mother won’t mind". "And my father won’t slight you, for your lack of kine." And she stepped away from me, and this, she did say: "It will not be long, love, 'til our wedding day."''
She stepped away from me, and she moved through the fair. And, fondly, I watched her move here and move there. And then she moved onward, with one star awake. Like the swan in the evening moves over the lake. ''Last night, she came to me; she came softly in. So softly she came, that her feet made no din. And she stepped closer to me, and this, she did say: "It will not be long, love, 'til our wedding day."'' In a letter published in
The Irish Times in 1970, Padraic Colum stated that he was the author of all but the final verse. He also described how Herbert Hughes collected the tune and then he, Colum, had kept the last verse of a traditional song and written a couple of verses to fit the music. One verse was not included in the first publication: Colum soon realised that he had not put in the poem the fact that the woman had died before the marriage, and so he wrote the verse that begins: "The people were saying, that no two were e'er wed, but one had a sorrow that never was said ..." and sent it on to Hughes, too late for publication in that particular collection. This extra verse was published in other collections, along with the other three verses. The lyrics were also published in Colum's collection
Wild Earth: And Other Poems (1916), though the traditional origin of the final verse is not mentioned there. In the course of the same
Irish Times correspondence, however, another music collector, Proinsias Ó Conluain, said he had recorded a song called "She Went Through the Fair", with words the same as the other three verses of "She Moved Through the Fair", sung by an old man who told him that "the song was a very old one" and that he had learned it as a young man from a basket-weaver in
Glenavy. == "Our Wedding Day" version ==