Oh! many and many a time, In the dim old days, When the chapel's distant chime Pealed the hour of evening praise, I've bowed my head in prayer: Then shouldered scythe or bill, And travelled free of care To my home across the hill: Whilst the blue, blue smoke Of my cottage in the coom, Softly wreathing, Sweetly breathing, Waved my thousand welcomes home. For oft and oft I've stood, Delighted in the dew, Looking down across the wood, Where it stole into my view-- Sweet spirit of the sod Of our own Irish earth, Going gently up to God, From the poor man's hearth. O, the blue blue smoke Of my cottage in the coom, Softly wreathing, Sweetly breathing, Waved my thousand welcomes home. But I hurried swiftly on, When Herself from the door Came swimming like a swan Beside the Shannon shore: And after her in haste, On pretty, pattering feet, Our rosy cherubs raced Their daddy dear to meet: While the blue, blue smoke Of my cottage in the coom, Softly wreathing, Sweetly breathing, Waved my thousand welcomes home. But the times are sorely changed Since those dim old days, And far, far I've ranged From those dear old ways: And my colleen's golden hair To silver all has grown, And our little cherub pair Have cherubs of their own: And the black, black smoke, Like a heavy funeral plume, Darkly wreathing, Fearful breathing, Crowns the city with its gloom. But 'tis our comfort sweet, Through the long toil of life, That we'll turn with tired feet From the noise and the strife, And wander slowly back In the soft western glow, Hand in hand, by the track That we trod long ago: Till the blue, blue smoke Of our cottage in the coom, Softly wreathing, Sweetly breathing, Waves our thousand welcomes home. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...YOU ON THE TOWER by THOMAS HARDY POPPIES IN THE WHEAT by HELEN MARIA HUNT FISKE JACKSON EPITAPHS OF THE WAR, 1914-18: THE COWARD by RUDYARD KIPLING THE HIGHER GOOD by THEODORE PARKER A GENTLE ECHO ON WOMAN (IN THE DORIC MANNER) by JONATHAN SWIFT THERE IS NO LOVING AFTER DEATH by ASCLEPIADES OF SAMOS TO THE GALLIC EAGLE by BERNARD BARTON LEMNISCUS AD COLUMNAM S. SIMEONIS STYLITAE APPENSUS by JOSEPH BEAUMONT |