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Lisa

Beautiful Irish Poem

Song

by Thomas Moore
the greatest Irish lyrist
born Dublin, 1779 - died 1852
Have you not seen the timid tear
Steal trembling from mine eye?
Have you not mark'd the flush of fear,
Or caught the murmur'd sigh?
And can you think my love is chill,
Nor fix'd on you alone?
And can you rend, by doubting still,
A heart so much your own?

To you my soul's affections move
Devoutly, warmly, true:
My life has been a task of love,
One long, long thought of you.
If all your tender faith is o'er,
If still my truth you'll try;
Alas! I know but one proof more -
I'll bless your name, and die!

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Tis true my friend! Sharing on this page has made me look more seriously on my writing. Wrote a blog on my page today even!

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Louise Moloney said this day, on LI, "there's no better place to be than in Dublin on a sunny day," and there's none of us couldn't agree more. Got me to thinking about a great Irish literary tradition coming up soon . . . Bloom's Day. Got to be in Dublin on Bloom's Day once, while still a literature teacher several years ago. My wife and I did the walk and bought so many books I had to leave some with my cousin.

Anyway, since dear Lisa started this great forum so long ago, we've most all enjoyed the poetry. Here is a piece of writing by Joyce that not only tastes like great Irish poetry, but helps bring one side of the grand City of Dublin to life for those who can't be there just now. A little piece but grand.


"By lorries along Sir John Rogerson's Quay, Mr. Bloom walked soberly, past Windmill Lane, Leask's the linseed crusher's, the postal telegraph office... past the sailors' home. He turned from the morning noises of the quayside and walked through Lime Street. By Brady's cottages a boy for the skins lolled... a smaller girl with scars of eczema on her forehead eyed him, listlessly holding her battered caskhoop.
As he set foot on O'Connell Bridge a puffball of smoke plumed up from the parapet. ...He crossed at Nassau street corner and stood before the window of Yeates and Son, pricing the field glasses. Or will I drop into old Harris's and have a chat with young Sinclair? Well-mannered fellow. Probably at his lunch."

So spake Joyce. And God bless him, too!

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This was very interesting-made me almost miss Dublin (I am not a fan).

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AWESOME,
Dia dhuit a MoCara,
Life in Dublin is special,.......was thinking about a song over here from
Lorrrina Mc Kennitt,.....Dicken`s Dublin..( The Palace )you can feel the
pulse,the smell,sound,activity,like a love one that you dont leave.

James Joyce is a great one Frank,very glad you brought him up,living
in Dublin must be a trill with the lows and hights,but Special

Thank you for sharing.....Sith agus Slainte bha..Felicia and Frank

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Dia dhuit a Frank,
About Bloom`s Day Frank,Would you please tell me what was it like....??
And why you had to leave all your books with your cousin..?? was that in Dublin Frank..??Very interresting Frank,would like to hear more..!!
Slan agus beannachti..!!mo cara..........................................Pierre

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......Kilcash
Kilcash was the home of one branch of the Butler family,
Althought it is doubtful that Yeats who had Butler blood in him
knew this,it was one of is favorite poems,and there is a good deal
of his work in it.

What shall we do to timber?
The last of the woods is down.
Kilcash and the house of its glory
And the bell of the house are gone,
The spot where that lady waited
Who shamed all women for grace
When earls came sailing to greet her
And Mass was said in the place.

My grief and my affliction
Your gates are taken away,
Your avenue needs attention,
Goats in the garden stray.
The courtyard`s filled with water
And the great earls where are they?
The earls, the lady, the people
Beaten into the clay.

No sound of duck or geese there,
Hawk`s cry or eagle`s call,
No humming of the bees there
That bought honey and wax for all,
Nor even the song of the birds there
When the sun goes down in the west,
No cukoo on the top of the boughs there,
Singing the world to rest.

There`s mist there tumbling from branches,
Unstirred by night and by day,
And darkness falling from heaven,
For our fortune has ebbed away,
There`s no holly nor hazel nor ash there,
The pasture`s rock and stone,
The crown of the forest has withered,
And the last of its game is gone.

I beseech of Mary and Jesus
That the great come home again
With long dances danced in the garden,
Fiddle music and mirth among men,
That Kildash the home of our fathers
Be lifted on high again,
And from that to the deluge of waters
In bounty and peace remain.

To all Beautyfull Irish Poem`s friends...............Pierre

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It's summer and the wee people are about. We cannot forget them, all sorts of the little people. with different tasks to do. Mostly to bring us secret joy and enlighten our imaginations. Are they in your yard? Have you ever waited into the orange and blue of an evening hoping to see them? I did when I was a child; built small huts of sticks and pebbles. I believed in them. My Irish aunt told me they were as real as any person.

Now it's summer and they are frisky and wandering about. Tell your children about them. Seek them yourself, for they bring more to the heart than the news of the day and the world.

Here is a poem about the fairies, in whom Yeats believed. I dedicate this poem to all of my LI family, especially to Walter, Pierre, Felicia, Dabhoch, Jim in Greece, and especially Lisa, the Colleen who started the whole poetry adventure.

Frank Daub




A Lover's Quarrel Among the Fairies


A moonlight moor. Fairies leading a child.

Male Fairies: Do not fear us, earthly maid!
We will lead you hand in hand
By the willows in the glade,
By the gorse on the high land,

By the pasture where the lambs
Shall awake with lonely bleat,
Shivering closer to their dams
From the rustling of our feet.

You will with the banshee chat,
And will find her good at heart,
Sitting on a warm smooth mat
In the green hill's inmost part.

We will bring a crown of gold
Bending humbly every knee,
Now thy great white doll to hold --
Oh, so happy would we be!

Ah it is so very big,
And we are so very small!
So we dance a fairy jig
To the fiddle's rise and fall.

Yonder see the fairy girls
All their jealousy display,
Lift their chins and toss their curls,
Lift their chins and turn away.

See you, brother, Cranberry Fruit --
He! ho! ho! the merry blade! --
Hugs and pets and pats yon newt,
Teasing every wilful maid.

Girl Fairies: Lead they one with foolish care,
Deafening us with idle sound --
One whose breathing shakes the air,
One whose footfall shakes the ground.

Come you, Coltsfoot, Mousetail, come!
Come I know where, far away,
Owls there be whom age makes numb;
Come and tease them till the day.

Puffed like puff-balls on a tree,
Scoff they at the modern earth --
Ah! how large mice used to be
In their days of youthful mirth!

Come, beside a sandy lake,
Feed a fire with stems of grass;
Roasting berries steam and shake --
Talking hours swiftly pass!

Long before the morning fire
Wake the larks upon the green.
Yonder foolish ones will tire
Of their tall, new-fangled queen.

They will lead her home again
To the orchard-circled farm;
At the house of weary men
Raise the door-pin with alarm,

And come kneeling on one knee,
While we shake our heads and scold
This their wanton treachery,
And our slaves be as of old.

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Dia dhuit a Frank,
Fairies....................joyfull first
Unexpected actions.........charms
Beautyfull Frank.............wish everybody could see them...and learn...
Thank you for sharing,you are amazing..............................................Pierre
Ps.le gach dea beannacht

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Frank,

Don’t you just love the rhyme?! Music to my ears. And don’t these little fellas spend all of their time making little brogues? And there are female fairies too! Makes sense . . . all work and no play a happy male fairy does not make.

Beautiful poem – the Master at work.

Walter . . .

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Clancy Bros recorded a lovely reading of Yeat's Host of the Air in 1961 at Carnegie Hall in New York and put it on their "At Carnegie Hall" Album--worth a listen if you're a Yeats fan and is on Youtube at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B6zOmW1P_is

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Dia dhuit a Dan Mc,Guinness,
Thank you for the link Dan,appreciate your presence,will
go and seek the site and listen to it.
You are Welcome......Sith Agus Slainte Bha......Pierre

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For my dear, dear friends who have continued to share great Irish poetry and their love of it . . . I have been remiss in posting anything for a long while. I came across this poem while looking for something to send to my cousin in Dublin. He'll be having surgery in two days and I want him to realize what a treasue he has been to me. Dermot is 73 and if ever there was an Irishman who fit the following poem, it's Him.


The Cry of a Dreamer
John Boyle O Riley 1844-1890

I am tired of planning and toiling
In the crowded hives of men;
Heart-weary of building and spoiling,
And spoiling and building again.
And I long for the dear old river,
Where I dreamed my youth away;
For a dreamer lives forever,
And a toiler dies in a day.

I am sick of the showy seeming
Of a life that is half a lie;
Of the faces lined with scheming
In the throng that hurries by.
From the sleepless thoughts' endeavor,
I would go where the children play;
For a dreamer lives forever,
And a thinker dies in a day.

I can feel no pride, but pity
For the burdens the rich endure;
There is nothing sweet in the city
But the patient lives of the poor.
Oh, the little hands too skillful,
And the child-mind choked with weeds!
The daughter's heart grown willful,
And the father's heart that bleeds!

No, no! from the street's rude bustle,
From the trophies of mart and stage,
I would fly to the woods' low rustle
And the meadows' kindly page.
Let me dream as of old by the river,
And be loved for the dream alway;
For a dreamer lives forever,
And a toiler dies in a day.

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