The Penguin Book of Irish Poetry
Page 19
but choose a juicy branch, though poor.
Woe to him who slanders women!
Thomas F. O’Rahilly
Prayer for His Dead Wife
I, who saw a vision
in broken sleep,
have known no rest
since soul was ripped
from body by Christ
the peerless one
who took her and left me
to live on alone.
Cruel it was to sunder
two bedfellows pure
in the love and devotion
His sacrament calls for.
Our parting was unwilling
as the King of Heaven knows;
the author of all that is
is author of our woes.
The Trinity placed earth’s women
in care of the Virgin’s Son;
He had His pick of any
but chose my chosen one.
I beseech Great Mary’s Son
who tore her from my arms
let my dear departed soul
meet no eternal harm.
I would shape her elegy
though passion makes me rave
if it would help her more
than this prayer that she be saved.
PC
GOFRAIDH FIONN Ó DÁLAIGH
(d.1387)
from Praise of Maurice Fitz Maurice, Earl of Desmond
The Earl Compared to Lugh
Just like Maurice, friend to the bard,
was Lugh Longhand:
as great in knowledge, quick with sword,
and as renowned.
When young like Maurice, he gave
battle and won;
Bladhma’s mighty tree, who drove
the Fomorians down.
At Eamhain in the east he spied
Tara’s ramparts,
who’d scoured the world for such a sight:
home at last.
But, champion elect, he fails
to pass: the door is barred.
Striding up to the bare walls
he raps hard,
and the porter, dander up, asks
the bright young warrior:
‘Who are you and your rosy cheeks
to pass this barrier?’
No coward soul, Lugh replies:
‘Poet of swan,
of appletree and yewtree I.
I am of Eamhain.’
‘Then there’s no welcome here for you,’
the shout comes back.
‘We have a poet and don’t need two,
my bright young buck.
‘The house of Miodhchuairt is the fort
of Ethliu’s boys.
Let me tell you a custom honoured
in this fair house.
‘The custom that we keep is, like
our walls, unbroken:
just one man of each craft we take –
no second’s taken.
‘So many skills are practised by
the Tuatha Dé Danann,
the cloak-weavers, you must supply
one yet unknown.’
‘Among my skills, let word go out,
is to leap on a bubble
and perch there. Go broadcast that
around your table.
‘To swim beyond all human power,
to carry a vat
on my elbow. Who has a pair
of skills like that?
‘If my exploits are surpassed
by a man of yours,
I’ll race and best him over grass
on any horse.
‘I trump your men one and all,
and not in their arts only.
I am master of all arts – my tale
I tell you calmly.’
Once the youth had had his say
the porter scurried
off to tell the Tuatha Dé
every word.
‘Matchless is the man at your door,’
he began,
‘Master of every art, the fair
young red-faced one.’
‘If he has come, Ireland’s dearest,’
said Danu’s tribe,
‘Lugh who gives the rivers rest,
the hour is ripe.
‘Who would not know better than
to challenge such beauty?
Neither earth nor water’s ever seen
so brave a body.
‘Choice are his side, face, and hair:
like bronze, blood
and lime in colour are
that triad.
‘Sweeter his tongue than lute-strings
tautened
for the gentle sleep they bring
at a master’s hand.’
‘He is come,’ the host announced,
‘our love’s treasure,
Eithne’s son, noble prince,
never a loser.’
And Danu’s tribe: ‘Let Tara’s porter
make all haste
and bid the fragrant branch enter,
Eamhain’s guest.’
‘If you are Ioldánach of
the sharp blue skean,’
the porter said, ‘greetings, my soft
young man of the plain.
‘Step inside the gates and welcome!’
‘That I won’t,’
answered the youth for whom
all spoils were meant.
‘When Art’s fort at Tara shuts
it is forbidden
that you should open up the gates
til the sun has risen.’
He did not break bloody-weaponed
Tara’s rule,
but stood back, leaped, and hit the ground
inside the wall.
David Wheatley
Under Sorrow’s Sign
A pregnant girl, under sorrow’s sign,
Condemned to a cell of pain,
Bore, by leave of Creation’s Lord,
Her small child in prison.
Swiftly the young lad flourished,
Eager as a bardic novice,
For those first years in prison,
Clear as if we were looking on.
Who would not be moved, alas,
As he darts playful little runs
Within the limit of his walls
While his mother falls into sadness!
For all daylight brought to them –
O sharp plight – was the glimpse
A single augurhole might yield
Of the bright backbone of a field.
Seeing one day on her pale face
A shining tear, the child cried:
‘Unfold to me your sorrow
Since I follow its trace.
Does there exist another world
Brighter than where we are:
A home lovelier than this
Source of your heavy weariness?’
‘Seeing the narrow track we tread
Between the living and the dead
It would be small wonder if I
Were not sad, heedless boy.
But had you shared my life
Before joining this dark tribe
Then on the tender hobbyhorse
Of your soul, sorrow would ride.
The flame of the wide world
Warmed my days at first;
To be closed in a dark cell
Afterwards: that’s the curse.’
Realizing this life’s distress
Beyond all balm or sweetness,
The boy’s brow did not darken
Before his cold and lonely prison.
This image – this poem’s dungeon:
Of those closed in a stern prison
These two stand for the host of living,
Their sentence, life imprisonment.
Against the gaiety of God’s son,
Whose kingdom holds eternal sway
Sad every dungeon where earth’s hosts
Lie hidden from the light of day.
>
John Montague
CEARBHALL Ó DÁLAIGH
(late 14th century?)
Lover and Echo
Tell me, Echo fair!
From the air above
Since thou knowest, why
I to sorrow clove?
Echo: Love.
Love! – O no, of course,
That source ceased to flow;
That I knew of yore
Now no more I know.
Echo: No?
Lo, if Fortune hard
Will thy bard oppress,
Is there – tell me sure
Cure for my distress?
Echo: Yes.
Sage and witty Sprite
Rightly now reply,
Since there’s healing calm
Choose what balm should I?
Echo: Die.
Die! – if so ’tis so,
Death puts woe away;
Since ’twill cure my ail
Then all hail I say.
Echo: Icy.
I say thrice all hail
None will wail my fate;
But tell none my tale,
This I supplicate.
Echo: Like Kate.
Kate! the devil flee
With thee, mocking Sprite!
Kate’s unkind, and care
Beareth no respite.
Echo: Spite!
If Narcissus such
Jealous touch did wake,
’Tis not strange that he
Left thee for a lake.
Echo: Ache!
Aching sobbing sighs
Still I daily hear;
What can cause thy cries,
Is not comfort near.
Echo: Ne’er.
Shall Narcissus hold
Old Love against the new?
Other fate may fall –
Always needst not rue.
Echo: True!
Blessings on thy Voice,
I rejoice anew!
Since thou far wilt fare,
Farewell and adieu.
Echo: Adieu!
George Sigerson
Dánta Grá (Love Poems)
ANONYMOUS
A History of Love
This is Love’s history
And how it all began:
As an authority
I am your foremost man.
Diarmuid the bold and gay,
Chief of the warrior bands,
With Grania one day
Invented holding hands.
While Ulster’s Hound as well,
When a Greek girl went by,
Falling beneath her spell,
Was first with the glad eye.
Naisi, home from the chase,
Weary, inspired with bliss,
Seeing Deirdre don her trews,
Endowed us with the kiss.
The son of Conall met
Their challenges with grace
And left us in his debt
By figuring the long embrace.
Avartach, king of the fairies,
Following in their track,
With his arbutus berries
Put a girl upon her back.
Ceadach, master of trades,
Seeing them still unversed –
Those white-skinned Irish maids –
Made women of them first.
And Angus as they say –
Lord of the Sacred Hill –
First took their clothes away,
And gave them perfect skill.
Learning that hearts can break
Under Love’s miseries
Beside a Munster lake
Glas filled the air with sighs.
Lamenting to soft strings
And moans upon the pipe
Were Mongan’s offerings
To woo some timid wife.
But I, for my own grief,
First opened Jealousy’s door –
This is my tale in brief –
And now it shuts no more.
Frank O’Connor
Women
Every man in Ireland caught
By some girl with eyes of blue
Dolefully laments his lot
Unless her hair be golden too.
What has this to do with me?
No fanaticism I share
For blue or black in someone’s eye
Or the colour of her hair.
Golden mane or rosy grace
Can never be my whole delight.
Dusky be the woman’s face
And her hair as black as night.
Black was the dam of her who brought
Troy into the dust of old,
And the girl for whom they fought,
Helen, was all white and gold.
Beautiful surely were the two
Though one was dark and one was fair.
No one who ever saw them knew
Which was the lovelier of the pair.
In little shells it may befall
The loveliest of pearls is found,
And God created three things small –
The horse, the woman and the hound.
Public confession suits my case,
And all may hear what I would say –
In women, such is my disgrace,
I never found a thing astray.
Though some are small I like them neat
And some are tall of them I sing;
Two long legs to grace the sheet
Are satisfaction for a king.
Foam may be brighter than her skin
Or snow upon the mountain cold,
I’ll take what pack I find her in
And think her sweeter for being old.
Nor should I slight a relative
For someone from outside the state;
Though novelty keep love alive
Kinsmen love at double rate.
Nor do I ask for intellect:
A little scholarship will pass;
All that of women I expect
Is to know water-cress from grass.
I don’t require them cold or warm;
Widows have knowledge and good sense
But there is still a certain charm
In a young girl’s inexperience.
I like them in church, demure and slow,
Solemn without, relaxed at home;
I like them full of push and go
When love has left me overcome.
I find no fault in them, by God,
But being old and gone to waste
Who still are girls at forty odd –
And every man may suit his taste.
Frank O’Connor
Aoibhinn, a leabhráin, do thriall
Delightful, book, your trip
to her of the ringlet head,
a pity it’s not you
that’s pining, I that sped.
To go, book, where she is
delightful trip in sooth!
the bright mouth red as blood
you’ll see, and the white tooth.
You’ll see that eye that’s grey
the docile palm as well,
with all that beauty you
(not I, alas) will dwell.
You’ll see the eyebrow fine
the perfect throat’s smooth gleam,
and the sparkling cheek I saw
latterly in a dream.
The lithe good snow-white waist
that won mad love from me –
the handwhite swift neat foot –
these in their grace you’ll see.
The soft enchanting voice
that made me each day pine
you’ll hear, and well for you –
would that your lot were mine.
Flann O’Brien
The Dispraise of Absalom
Veiled in that light amazing,
Lady, your hair soft wavèd
Has cast into dispraising
Absalom son of David.
Your golden locks close clin
ging,
Like birdflocks of strange seeming,
Silent with no sweet singing
Draw all men into dreaming.
That bright hair idly flowing
Over the keen eyes’ brightness,
Like gold rings set with glowing
Jewels of crystal lightness.
Strange loveliness that lingers
From lands that hear the Siren:
No ring enclasps your fingers,
Gold rings your neck environ,
Gold chains of hair that cluster
Round the neck straight and slender,
Which to that shining muster
Yields in a sweet surrender.
Robin Flower
‘O woman, shapely as the swan’
O woman, shapely as the swan,
On your account I shall not die:
The men you’ve slain – a trivial clan –
Were less than I.
I ask me shall I die for these –
For blossom teeth and scarlet lips –
And shall that delicate swan-shape
Bring me eclipse?
Well-shaped the breasts and smooth the skin,
The cheeks are fair, the tresses free –
And yet I shall not suffer death,
God over me!
Those even brows, that hair like gold,
Those languorous tones, that virgin way,
The flowing limbs, the rounded heel
Slight men betray!
Thy spirit keen through radiant mien,
Thy shining throat and smiling eye,
Thy little palm, thy side like foam –
I cannot die!
O woman, shapely as the swan,
In a cunning house hard-reared was I:
O bosom white, O well-shaped palm,
I shall not die!
Padraic Colum
Swift Love
Swifter than greyhound that none e’er outran
Is the will of my mistress to bed with a man.
Swifter than starling her heart is afire
With inconstant desire.
Swifter than gales in the cold time of spring,
Around the hard crags ceaselessly ravaging,
Is the lust of a heart that is empty and dry,
And a hungry green eye.
By the Lord of Hard Judgment that lives evermore!
By the High King of Heaven, there never before
Was her like among women, for who was afire
With so swift a desire?
Edward, Lord Longford
Piece Making
Slaney, daughter of Flanagan
let’s make a piece right well,
not the slack work of an innocent
to barter or to sell.
I have a tawny spindle
for a twistless piece is no good
and you have the needed colours,
a skein of black and red.