Poems by Denis Florence MacCarthy
page 108 of 379 (28%)
page 108 of 379 (28%)
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Of which was filled with the expanding barbs
"That is enough: by that one blow I fall," Ferdiah said. "Indeed, I now may own That I am sickly after thee this day, Though it behoved not thee that I should fall By stroke of thine;" and then these dying words He added, tottering back upon the bank: FERDIAH. O Hound, so famed for deeds of valour doing, 'Twas not thy place my death to give to me; Thine is the fault of my most certain ruin, And yet 'tis best to have my blood on thee. The wretch escapes not from his false position, Who to the gap of his destruction goes; Alas! my death-sick voice needs no physician, My end hath come--my life's stream seaward flows. The natural ramparts of my breast are broken, In its own gore my struggling heart is drowned:-- Alas! I have not fought as I have spoken, For thou hast killed me in the fight, O Hound! Cuchullin towards him ran, and his two arms Clasping about him, lifted him and bore The body in its armour and its clothes Across the Ford unto the northern bank, In order that the slain should thus be placed |
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