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The inalienable heritage, and other poems cover

The inalienable heritage, and other poems

Chapter 48: AFTERWORD
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About This Book

A varied collection of poems that moves between narrative ballads and concentrated lyrics, exploring Irish landscapes, seascapes, and historical memory. Many pieces register close natural observation—boglands, coastal skies, and small wild flora—alongside formal interest in metre and musical lines. Several poems dramatize risky, intimate acts or past conflicts, while others dwell on illness, sleeplessness, and endurance, drawing philosophical reflections from nature. The volume balances storytelling energy with reflective, often elegiac verse about belonging, loss, and the persistence of memory.

AFTERWORD

Out of the dusk of slow-accomplished Time,
Out of the shadows, out of the long past,
Lifting that past up on thy haughty rhyme,
Wakening those silenced voices, heard at last;
Fierce with the tumults of eight hundred years,
Loud with their cries of echoing strife and scorn;
Soft with their woes; child of their hopes and fears,
Poet we look for, come; awake! Be born!
Our little life fills out its little round,
Our little pipes play on their puny strains.
We grope, we fumble on the dusky ground,
Still searching, hoping, for some scattered grains.
Stammering weak ditties on an alien strand,
Babbling poor plaintive notes, which sink forlorn,
We sport; we toy. The theme demands thy hand,
Poet we look for, come; awake! Be born!
Sing as thou must. Sing in what tongue thou wilt,
So thou make plain that tale to every ear,
Uplifting all its sorrow, pity, guilt,
For friends and foes, or friends once foes, to hear,
Till every shore washed by the encircling sea,
From eve’s first portal to the gates of morn,
Echoes that voice, and takes its tone from thee.
Poet we look for, come; awake! Be born!

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