WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
Sprays of Shamrock cover

Sprays of Shamrock

Chapter 12: Tyrconnell
Open in WeRead

Explore more books like this:

About This Book

A sequence of short lyrical poems evokes Irish landscapes, lakes, hills, and coastal scenes, often blending local place-names with mythic and folk references. The verses range from ballad-like narratives to tender songs, meditating on longing, love, exile, and devotion while observing seasonal change and rural life. Vivid natural imagery, ancient monuments, and communal memory recur throughout, producing a tone that shifts between wistful nostalgia and bright celebration as it explores how landscape and legend shape feeling and identity.

The Project Gutenberg eBook of Sprays of Shamrock

This ebook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this ebook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this eBook.

Title: Sprays of Shamrock

Author: Clinton Scollard

Release date: February 9, 2009 [eBook #28032]
Most recently updated: March 15, 2023

Language: English

Credits: David Wilson, Curtis Weyant and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)

*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SPRAYS OF SHAMROCK ***


[p i]
SPRAYS OF SHAMROCK


[p iii]
SPRAYS OF SHAMROCK
BY CLINTON SCOLLARD

PORTLAND MAINE
THE MOSHER PRESS
MDCCCCXIV

[p iv]
COPYRIGHT
CLINTON SCOLLARD
1914

[p v]
CONTENTS

  PAGE
MUCKROSS 3
THE HILL OF MAEVE 5
AT KILLYBEGS 7
THE CRIPPLE 8
AN EXILE 9
ABBEYDORNEY 10
A SONG FOR JOYCE’S COUNTRY 12
BALLAD OF PROTESTANT’S LEAP 14
ETCHING AT NIGHT 16
THE SPECTRAL ROWERS 17
TYRCONNELL 18
THE WAY OF THE CROSS 19
THE ISLE OF DOOM 20
DESMOND 21
THE LITTLE CREEK COONANA 22
O’DONNELL ABOO 23
NIGHTFALL IN SLIGO 24
CARROWMORE 26
ON CARAGH LAKE 27
[p vi]
RAHINANE
28
THE WIND OF MOURNE 29
MAN AND MAID 30
THE HUNTER 32
RAIN SONG 33
A ROVER 34
QUEENS 35
THE WONDERS 36
AT MONAREE 37
HEATHER SONG 38
OFF CONNEMARA 39
POPPIES AT MONASTERAVEN 40
THE GLEN OF CASTLEMAINE 41
SONG 42
KILMELCHEDOR 43
AT DINGLE 44
BACK TO KILLARNEY 45
GLENCAR WATER 46
FROM DERRY TO KERRY 47
A KING IN KERRY 48
A KERRY LAD 51
A KERRY DAY 52
[p vii]
A KERRY ROAD
53
A KERRY GARDEN 54
DOWN IN KERRY 55
HOLY WELLS 56
LOW TIDE 57
THE “BOHAREEN” 58
AN IRISH IDYL 60
AN IRISH LASS 61
THE BRIDGE OF LUCKEEN 62
DONEGAL 64
AN IRISH SONG 66

[p 1]
SPRAYS OF SHAMROCK


[p 2]
Just a few songs of her,
Not of the wrongs of her
    Many and bitter and long though they be,—
Songs of the hills of her,
Songs of the rills of her,
    Ireland, set like a gem in the sea!

Just a few songs of her,
Not of the thongs of her,
    She that is bound, and yet fain would be free,—
Songs of the gleams of her,
Glamours and dreams of her,
    Ireland, girt by the arms of the sea!

[p 3]

MUCKROSS

[decorative A]At night there came unto MacCarthy More
A hooded vision with a voice that said,
“Go thou straightway and raise a house to God
Upon the spot where stands the Rock of Song!”
So with the golden lifting of the dawn
Upsprang the chieftain and loud called his kerns,
And bade them seek the Rock. For many a day
They roved the sweeping meads and fens and fells
In fruitless search, and ever forth again
Relentlessly he drove them from his hold
Beside the dimpling waters of Lough Leane.
“The Rock!” he cried, “find ye the Rock of Song!”
And still they found it not. Then the gaunt chief,
His long locks hoary with the frost of years,
Girded himself, and turned his tottering steps
Abroad in the soft lengthening of the dusk
Athwart a woodland close, and saw and heard
A little maid, her pitcher held at poise,
Singing an old lament in minors clear
[p 4]
And plaintive as the twilight, words that voiced
The poignant, passionate yearning of the soul.
“A sign!” the spent man whispered low, “a sign!”
And on the spot he raised a house to God.

[p 5]
THE HILL OF MAEVE

I

This is the hill of Maeve, the queen,
A mighty bulwark of gray-green

Whereon was set, by hands unknown,
A rugged monument of stone.

The great winds mourn, and sobs the wave
Beneath the lichened cairn of Maeve.

II

From many a rocky Leitrim height
O’er Lough Gill’s waters, blue and bright,

From where Benbulbin fronts the foam,
And sees the Sligo ships put home,

Maeve’s hill is like a pharos flame,
As is eternally her name!

III

’Neath azure tides of morning air
Ripple the waves of Ballysadare

[p 6]
Under where frowning Knocknarea
Looks o’er the Rosses far to sea,—

Looks far to sea, remembering
Maeve’s loveliness, a vanished thing.

IV

The cromlechs, gray with eld, below,
Recall the dreams of long ago,—

The dreams of kern and king, both slave
To beauty, and the white Queen Maeve;

And though she slumbers, deep, so deep,
Her golden memory may not sleep!

[p 7]
AT KILLYBEGS

At Killybegs above the crags
    The gray gulls pipe with voices thinned,
And all the green trees are like flags
    That wave and waver in the wind.

At Killybegs about the dunes
    Rustle the crispy grass and whin,
And low the long tide croons and croons
    As it creeps out, as it creeps in.

At Killybegs the white sails race
    When the blue sea is like a floor;
Like doubt night falls with haggard face;
    Sometimes the ships return no more.

The brown bee drains the cottage flowers
    Of honey to their crimson dregs,
And love hath many happy hours
    ’Twixt birth and death at Killybegs!

[p 8]
THE CRIPPLE

I have dreams of the outer islands,
    Firths and forths of the Far-Away;
I have dreams of the heathery highlands
    Under the golden day.

I have dreams of a sliding river—
    Shannon—under the stars and sun;
I have dreams how the oar-blades quiver,
    And the silvery salmon run.

I have dreams of a blithe lad striding
    Out through the streets of Limerick-town;
I have dreams of a sweet maid biding
    Under a thatch of brown.

But here I lie all huddled and hidden,
    (Oh, the eternity it seems!)
Brooding desolate and bed-ridden,
    Living only in dreams!

[p 9]
AN EXILE

I can remember the plaint of the wind on the moor,
    Crying at dawning, and crying at shut of the day,
And the call of the gulls that is eerie and dreary and dour,
    And the sound of the surge as it breaks on the beach of the bay.

I can remember the thatch of the cot and the byre,
    And the green of the garth just under the dip of the fells,
And the low of the kine, and the settle that stood by the fire,
    And the reek of the peat, and the redolent heathery smells.

And I long for it all though the roses around me are red,
    And the arch of the sky overhead has bright blue for a lure,
And glad were the heart of me, glad, if my feet could but tread
    The path, as of old, that led upward and over the moor!

[p 10]
ABBEYDORNEY

Abbeydorney, Abbeydorney,
    Long ago thy race was run,
Prone thou art ’mid thickets thorny,
    Shrine of Kyrie Eleison!

Scarcely now a wild rose petal
    The neglected cloister owns,
And the flaunting dock and nettle
    Wave above the chancel stones.

Once through Kerry twilights tender
    Vesper bells their anthems tolled,
And ’mid chants, in churchly splendor,
    Princely abbots were enrolled.

Tall Fitz Maurice with his crozier,
    O’Clonarchy of Lismore,
They are less now than the osier
    Swaying by the Cashen’s shore!

Only when the moon is hidden,
    Only when the moor-winds rave,
Eerily arise unbidden
    Ghostly transept, ghostly nave.

[p 11]
Only when the night grows denser
    March the bent monks one by one,
Singing to the sway of censer,
    Kyrie—Kyrie Eleison!

So, amid thy thickets thorny,
    All thy state and glory seem,
Abbeydorney, Abbeydorney,
    Like a dim and fleeting dream!

[p 12]
A SONG FOR JOYCE’S COUNTRY

O a song for Joyce’s Country, where the grim wild mountains be,
And the wind wails over the moorland as the wind wails over the sea,
Where the new moon’s silver sickle sees little of grain to reap,
And the wraith of the mist goes creeping as soft as the feet of sleep!

O a song for Joyce’s Country, and the lonely loughs that lie,
Wrapt in the cloak of silence, under the great gray sky;
For the glens that have held in keeping for more than a thousand springs
The ancient Druid wonders and the secrets of the kings!

O a song for Joyce’s Country, and the graves of the mightiest men
That ever had birth in Erin! Will their like e’er come again?
Men of the thews of titans, of the strong, unwavering hand,
Who wrested a meagre guerdon from the breast of this lean land!

[p 13]
O a song for Joyce’s Country, since it haunts one like a dream
That comes in the dusk ere dawning, ere the first bright sunrise beam;
A dream of dolor and vastness, of clouds that are swept and swirled
O’er the desolate wastes and waters of a joy-forsaken world!

[p 14]
BALLAD OF PROTESTANT’S LEAP

It was Sir Frederick Hamilton’s men
    Were hungry for the fray,
And it was a son of the bog and fen
    Would guide them on their way.

By the good book an oath he took,
    This glib and open guide,
And so it was over bent and brook
    They needs must up and ride.

They rode them fast, they rode them far,
    By day’s last fitful flame,
Until, by the light of the evening star,
    To a heathery slope they came.

Then spake the guide, with a glint of pride,
    With a catch of his breath spake he,
“Ye may fall, if over the crest ye ride,
    On the Irish enemy!

“When I drop my cloak by yon stunted oak,
    Do ye ply the lash and spurs,
And there ’ll be no one see another sun
    Of the popish worshippers!”

[p 15]
He has gone to the crest by the dwarfèd tree,
    He has crept on foot and hand,
And now with a wave his cloak drops he
    As a sign to the waiting band.

Oh, it ’s ride, Sir Frederick Hamilton’s men,
    Ye men of ire and brawn,
And it ’s smile, ye son of the bog and fen,
    To see them urge swift on!

Did they purge with the sword the Irish camp?
    Nay, for the story saith
Through the evening dusk, through the evening damp,
    They rode to a tryst with death.

It was over a cliff that was black and sheer
    To the vale of fair Glencar
That they plunged with frenzied shrieks of fear
    ’Neath the eye of the mountain star.

Oh, it was Sir Frederick Hamilton’s men
    Set forth to smite and slay,
And it was a son of the bog and fen
    That guided them on their way!

[p 16]
ETCHING AT NIGHT

I wandered in the streets of Galway-town,
When night had let her dusky curtains down,
And in a doorway, tall and fair and slight,
Framed by an inner beam of golden light,
Beheld a maiden of madonna face,
Pensive and sad, yet with a nameless grace,
Presage, I thought, of the unfolding years,
That hide some things that are too deep for tears!

[p 17]
THE SPECTRAL ROWERS

What is that shimmering line of white
Gliding under the stark midnight—
    Gliding—gliding—gliding—gliding—
Where the river gleams when the moon is bright?

There is never a sound save the night bird’s cry,
And the languid water lapsing by—
    Lapsing—lapsing—lapsing—lapsing—
Under the arch of a leaden sky.

’T is the winding Garavogue’s spectral crew,
Bound for the port of dreams-come-true—
    Rowing—rowing—rowing—rowing—
With a swinging stroke that is firm and true.

Do they ever reach their bourn? may be;
Yet who can say?—not we!—not we!—
    Fading—fading—fading—fading—
Ere morn comes over the hills to the sea.

’T is so with all of the visions of man,
Howe’er he strive and howe’er he plan—
    Fleeting—fleeting—fleeting—fleeting—
For life, alas, is a narrow span!

[p 18]
TYRCONNELL

They crowned Tyrconnell
    On the rock of Doon;
“Hail! hail!” they said,
To that anointed head,
The henchman all;
They led him to the hall;
“Hail! hail! Tyrconnell!”
How the rafters rang!
Clang! clang!
How the blades out-sprang,
    Like shimmering lake-water underneath the moon!

They slew Tyrconnell
    On the rock of Doon;
“Traitor!” they said,
Of that anointed head,
The henchmen all
Who haled him from the hall;
“Base, base Tyrconnell!”
How the scabbards rang!—
Clang! clang!
As the blades out-sprang,
    Like shimmering lake-water underneath the moon!

[p 19]
THE WAY OF THE CROSS

Where the wild sea-mew flocks and flees,
    And neither winds nor skies beguile,
Foam-set amid the Irish seas
    Is rugged Skellig Michael isle.

Up its escarpments, rough and grim,
    To its bleak summit rimmed with moss,
The monks of old with prayer and hymn
    Hewed out the weary “Way of the Cross.”

Gone are these holy toilers—gone;
    They rest now in their long repose,
From the red dusk to the red dawn,
    ’Neath the sea-pinks and tangled rose.

But sorrow bides with us and ill,
    And stress and sacrifice and loss,
And we must strive to meet them still
    Climbing the weary “Way of the Cross.”

[p 20]
THE ISLE OF DOOM

Out of the mist off Galway shore,
    Out of the morning mist,
Rose the island of Hy Brasail
    With its crags of amethyst;

Crags of purple and amethyst,
    And meads of gleaming green,
Rose the island of Hy Brasail
    With a shimmer of sea between.

And what shall come to Galway shore,
    What shadow of doom prevail,
With this fading dream of the mists of morn,
    This island of Hy Brasail?

[p 21]
DESMOND

By the “Church of the Name” lies Desmond,
    The body of Desmond lies,
And the wind of the east cries “Desmond,”
    And “Desmond” the west wind cries.

And the wind of the south calls “Desmond,”
    And “Desmond” the north wind calls,
As it sweeps round the keep Ardnagreagh,
    The keep of the crumbling walls.

And the dawn wind grieves for Desmond,
    And “Desmond” the night wind sighs;
And where is the head of Desmond,
    He of the dusk-deep eyes?

They buried the body of Desmond
    Hard by the “Church of the Name,”
But they hung the head of Desmond
    High o’er the Gate of Shame.

Yet he was a brave man, Desmond,
    A man of a hundred score,
So all the winds of the upper air,
    They mourn for him evermore.

[p 22]
THE LITTLE CREEK COONANA

Oh, the little creek Coonana,
    How clear it runs and cold
Where “Conn of the hundred battles”
    Fought in the days of old!

Only the long wind dirges,
    Only the long wind cries,
Where the giant Knocknatubber
    Mounts to the vast gray skies.

Only the wind and the surges
    Moan and moan and moan,
But the little creek Coonana,
    It sings in a merry tone.

Only the wind and the surges
    Have aught to do with fears;
Only the wind and the surges
    Tell the tale of tears.

But the little creek Coonana,
    It lilteth cheerily
Where the giant Knocknatubber
    Glooms on the glooming sea.

[p 23]
O’DONNELL ABOO

Out of Ulster came O’Donnell,
    Black O’Donnell and his crew,—
Kelly, More, Mac Carthy, Connell,
    Joined the cry—“O’Donnell Aboo!”

Woe once more, red woe for Kerry,
    Blood-drops were as mountain dew
When that cry so mad, yet merry,
    Rang and rang—“O’Donnell Aboo!”

Gone those sanguine days of slaughter,
    Sword and matchlock, pike and brand;
Peace now o’er the ways of water,
    Peace o’er all the length of land.

Yet sometimes when night is sealing
    Cairn and ruined shrine from view,
Down the Kerry glens goes pealing
    That wild cry—“O’Donnell Aboo!”

[p 24]
NIGHTFALL IN SLIGO

I

I heard the bells of Sligo say
The tranquil requiem of day.

I saw the fires of sunset burn
Dim in the great west’s golden urn.

O’er Calvary’s sharp spire afar
Clear flowered one hyacinthine star.

Then mother Night her children hid
Under her purple coverlid.

[p 25]
II

Well can I recall that eve at Sligo,
And the vacant arches of the abbey
Framing the ethereal rose of sunset!
Round about me silence and gray shadow
Peopled with the wraiths of time departed,—
Monks with back-thrown cowls who pace the cloisters
Now deep-mounded, crumbled, clad with ivy.
No more from the tower their chimes of silver
Will the bells fling o’er the town and river,
O’er the Garavogue soft-gliding seaward!
Nevermore—save in deep dreams at midnight.
Death, the immemorial lord of mortals,
He is abbot in the aisles of Sligo
Till the spheres proclaim the resurrection!