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Classic and Contemporary Poetry


THE MEDITATION OF COLUM by WILLIAM SHARP

First Line: PRAISE BE TO GOD, AND A BLESSING TOO AT THAT, AND A BLESSING
Last Line: AND HATH NO THOUGHT OF MY SONS IN THE DEEPS OF THE AIR AND THE SEA?
Subject(s): CHRISTIANITY; JESUS CHRIST - LEGENDS; MEDITATION; SALVATION;

@3Before the Miracle of the Fishes and the Flies@1

I

Praise be to God, and a blessing too at that, and a blessing!
For Colum the White, Colum the Dove, hath worshipped;
Yea he hath worshipped and made of a desert a garden,
And out of the dung of men's souls hath made a sweet savour of burning.

II

A savour of burning, most sweet, a fire for the altar,
This he hath made in the desert; the hell-saved all gladden.
Sure he hath put his benison, too, on milchcow and bullock,
On the fowls of the air, and the man-eyed seals, and the otter.

III

But where in his Dûn in the great blue mainland of Heaven
God the Allfather broodeth, where the harpers are harping His glory;
There where He sitteth, where a river of ale poureth ever,
His great sword broken, His spear in the dust, He broodeth.

IV

And this is the thought that moves in His brain, as a cloud filled with thunder
Moves through the vast hollow sky filled with the dust of the stars:
What boots it the glory of Colum, since he maketh a Sabbath to bless me,
And hath no thought of my sons in the deeps of the air and the sea?



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