The Kiltartan Poetry Book; prose translations from the Irish by Lady Gregory
page 26 of 60 (43%)
page 26 of 60 (43%)
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Misfortune has come upon us all together The poor, the rich, the weak and the strong The great lord by whom hundreds were maintained The powerful strong man, and the man that holds the plough; And the cross laid on the bare shoulder of every man. Our feasts are without any voice of priests And none at them but women lamenting Tearing their hair with troubled minds Keening miserably after the Fenians. The pipes of our organs are broken Our harps have lost their strings that were tuned That might have made the great lamentations of Ireland. Until the strong men come back across the sea There is no help for us but bitter crying, Screams, and beating of hands, and calling out. I do not know of anything under the sky That is friendly or favourable to the Gael But only the sea that our need brings us to, Or the wind that blows to the harbour The ship that is bearing us away from Ireland; And there is reason that these are reconciled with us, For we increase the sea with our tears And the wandering wind with our sighs. |
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