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Classic and Contemporary Poetry
OWEN REILLY: A KEEN, by JAMES CLARENCE MANGAN Poet's Biography First Line: Oh! Lay aside the flax, and put away the wheel Last Line: Now that her bones lie in the sod!' | |||
Oh! lay aside the flax, and put away the wheel , And sing with me, but not in gladness- The heart that's in my breast is like to break with sadness- God, God alone knows what I feel! II There's a lone, a vacant place beside the cheerless hearth, A spot my eyes are straining after- Oh! never more from thence will ring my boy's light laughter, The outgushing of his young heart's mirth! III No more will his hands clasp the cross before the shrine Of Christ's immaculate Virgin Mother. Never, oh! never more will he pour forth another Prayer for himself, or me, or mine! IV The young men on the mountain sides will miss-miss long, The fleetest hurler of their number. Powerless, alas! to-night in death's unbroken slumber, Lies he, the Lithe of Limb, the Strong! V Oh! raise the keen, young women, o'er my darling's grave- Oh! kneel in prayer o'er his low dwelling; At break of day this morn there knelt his mother, telling Her beads for him she could not save! VI Oh! plant, young men, the Shamrock near my darling's head, And raise the hardy fir tree over The spot: the strange wayfarer then will know they cover My Oweneen's dark burial-bed! VII Heard ye not, yestereven, the Banshee deplore His death on heath-clad Killenvallen? "Ul-ullalu!" she cried, "a green young oak is fallen, For Owen Reilly lives no more!" VIII There stands a lone grey hazel-tree in Glen-na-ree, Whose green leaves put buds forth and wither. I sigh and groan as often as I wander thither, For I am like that lone grey tree! IX My four belovèd sons, where are they? Have they not Left me a wreck here all as lonely? They withered and they died! I, their old mother, only Remain to weep and wail my lot! X But I will follow them now soon; for oft amid The storm I hear their voices calling, "Come home!"-and in my dreams I see the cold clay falling Heavily on my coffin-lid! XI When the dark night films o'er my eyes, oh! let me be Laid out by Aileen Bawn Devany; And let the lights around me at my wake be as many As the white hairs yet left to me! XII See that the tall white slender gowans blow and bloom In the grass round my head-stone brightly; I would not have the little orphan daisy nightly Mourning in solitude and gloom! XIII Let there be shrieking on the hill and in the glen, Throughout the length and breadth of Galway's Green land! Kathleen Dubh Reilly has herelf been always The Queen of Keeners; mourn her then! XIV Lights will be seen to dance along Carn Corra's height, And through the burial-field; but follow Them not, young men and women! for, o'er hill and hollow They will but lure to Death and Night! XV But come ye to my grave when, in the days of May, The gladsome sun and skies grow warmer, And say, "Here sleeps Kathleen, where tempest cannot harm her, Soft be her narrow bed of clay!" XVI And count your beads, and pray, "Rest her poor soul, O God! She willed no ill to breathing mortal- Grant her, then, Thou, a place within Heaven's blessèd portal, Now that her bones lie in the sod!" | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SIBERIA by JAMES CLARENCE MANGAN TWENTY GOLDEN YEARS AGO by JAMES CLARENCE MANGAN DUHALLOW by JAMES CLARENCE MANGAN SOUL AND COUNTRY by JAMES CLARENCE MANGAN ST. PATRICK'S HYMN BEFORE TARAH by JAMES CLARENCE MANGAN THE DAWNING OF THE DAY by JAMES CLARENCE MANGAN THE KARAMANIAN EXILE by JAMES CLARENCE MANGAN THE NAMELESS ONE; BALLAD by JAMES CLARENCE MANGAN THE ONE MYSTERY by JAMES CLARENCE MANGAN THE RUINS OF DONEGAL CASRLE by JAMES CLARENCE MANGAN |
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