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Classic and Contemporary Poetry
ST. JOHN'S EVE, by CHARLES JOSEPH KICKHAM Poem Explanation First Line: Yes, gertrude, I remember well | |||
[Do you remember that St. John's live, three year ago, when we walked round by Ballycullen to see the bonfires?' -Letter to Kickham in Woking Convict Prison.] YES, Gertrude, I remember well That St. John's Eve, three years ago, When, as the slanting sunbeams fell Across the mountains all aglow, Upon the lonely bridge we turned To watch the roseate, russet hue, Till faint and fainter still it burned As if 'twere quenched by falling dew. Then up the sloping hill we clomb, And backward looked with pensive eyes, Along the vale, our own sweet home, The dearest spot beneath the skies; Dear for the golden hours that were When life's glad morn all radiant shone, Fondly dear for loved ones there, The sun glides down behind the hill; The shadows deepen while we gaze; The chapel, the Old Home, the mill, Are hidden in the twilight haze. The wayside shepherd on the height Waits our approach, nor seems to heed His vagrant flock throng out of sight - Adown the winding road they speed. Deep learn'd was he in Gaelic lore, And loved to talk of days gone by; ( A saddening theme, those days of yore!) And still he turned with sparkling eye From Druid rites and Christian fane, From champion bold and monarch grand, To tell of fray and foray when His sires were princes in the land. When to the Well-mile bridge we came, You pointed where the moonbeams white Silvered the stream; when, lo! a flame, A wavy flame of ruddy light, Leaped up, the farmyard fence above, And, while his children's shout rang high, His cows the farmer slowly drove Across the blaze, he knew not why.[1] Soon round the vale- above, below, And high upon the blue hills' brows The bonfires shine with steady glow, Or blink through screening orchard boughs. And now, in my lone dismal cell, While I that starry scene recall - The fields, the hills, the sheltered dell- I close my eyes and see them all. My dear-loved land must it be mine No more, except in dreams, to see ? Yet think not, friends, that I repine At my sad fate - if sad it be. Think not the captive weakly pines, That from his soul all joy hath flown. Oh, no! the 'solemn starlight' shines As brightly as it ever shone. And though I've had my share of pain, And sunken is my cheek and pale. Yet, Gertrude, were it ours again On St. John's Eve, in Compsey vale, While loitering by the Anner stream To view the mountain's purpled dome - Waiting to see the bonfires gleam All round our quiet hill-clasped home - We'd talk of bygone blissful hours - And oh! what blissful hours I've known! It was a world of smiles and flowers, That little home-world of our own. And happy thoughts each heart would fill - What else but happy could we be, While Hope stood smiling on the hill And in the valley, Memory ? | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE IRISH PEASANT GIRL by CHARLES JOSEPH KICKHAM PATRICK SHEEHAN by CHARLES JOSEPH KICKHAM MYLES O'HEA by CHARLES JOSEPH KICKHAM SLIEVENAMON by CHARLES JOSEPH KICKHAM LORD ALCOHOL; SONG by THOMAS LOVELL BEDDOES LOVE AT SEA by THEOPHILE GAUTIER FIRST CYCLE OF LOVE POEMS: 1 by GEORGE BARKER |
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