IRELAND, MOTHER OF PRIESTS

IRELAND, MOTHER OF PRIESTS

By Shane Leslie

The fishwife sits by the sideOf her childing bed,Her fire is deserted and sad,Her beads are long said;Her tears ebb and flow with the sea,Her grief on the years,But little she looks to the tide,And little she hears:For children in springtime play roundHer sorrowing heart,To win them their feeding she lovesTo hunger apart;Her children in summer she countsAwhile for her own;But winter is ever the same,The loved ones are flown.Far over the sea they are gone,Far out of her kenThey travel the furthest of seasAs fishers of men.Yet never a word to her sonsTo keep them at home,And never a motherly cryGoes over the foam;She sits with her head in her hands,Her eyes on the flame,And thinks of the others that played,Yet left her the same,With vesture she wove on the loomFour-coloured to be,And lanterns she trimmed with her hairTo light them to sea.Oh, far have the living ones gone,And further the dead,For spirits come never to watchThe fisherwife’s bed;And sonless she sits at the hearth,And peers in the flame,She knows that their fishing must comeAs ever it came—A fishing that never set home,But seaways it led,For God who has taken her sonsHas buried her dead.

The fishwife sits by the sideOf her childing bed,Her fire is deserted and sad,Her beads are long said;Her tears ebb and flow with the sea,Her grief on the years,But little she looks to the tide,And little she hears:For children in springtime play roundHer sorrowing heart,To win them their feeding she lovesTo hunger apart;Her children in summer she countsAwhile for her own;But winter is ever the same,The loved ones are flown.Far over the sea they are gone,Far out of her kenThey travel the furthest of seasAs fishers of men.Yet never a word to her sonsTo keep them at home,And never a motherly cryGoes over the foam;She sits with her head in her hands,Her eyes on the flame,And thinks of the others that played,Yet left her the same,With vesture she wove on the loomFour-coloured to be,And lanterns she trimmed with her hairTo light them to sea.Oh, far have the living ones gone,And further the dead,For spirits come never to watchThe fisherwife’s bed;And sonless she sits at the hearth,And peers in the flame,She knows that their fishing must comeAs ever it came—A fishing that never set home,But seaways it led,For God who has taken her sonsHas buried her dead.

The fishwife sits by the sideOf her childing bed,Her fire is deserted and sad,Her beads are long said;Her tears ebb and flow with the sea,Her grief on the years,But little she looks to the tide,And little she hears:For children in springtime play roundHer sorrowing heart,To win them their feeding she lovesTo hunger apart;Her children in summer she countsAwhile for her own;But winter is ever the same,The loved ones are flown.Far over the sea they are gone,Far out of her kenThey travel the furthest of seasAs fishers of men.Yet never a word to her sonsTo keep them at home,And never a motherly cryGoes over the foam;She sits with her head in her hands,Her eyes on the flame,And thinks of the others that played,Yet left her the same,With vesture she wove on the loomFour-coloured to be,And lanterns she trimmed with her hairTo light them to sea.Oh, far have the living ones gone,And further the dead,For spirits come never to watchThe fisherwife’s bed;And sonless she sits at the hearth,And peers in the flame,She knows that their fishing must comeAs ever it came—A fishing that never set home,But seaways it led,For God who has taken her sonsHas buried her dead.

The fishwife sits by the side

Of her childing bed,

Her fire is deserted and sad,

Her beads are long said;

Her tears ebb and flow with the sea,

Her grief on the years,

But little she looks to the tide,

And little she hears:

For children in springtime play round

Her sorrowing heart,

To win them their feeding she loves

To hunger apart;

Her children in summer she counts

Awhile for her own;

But winter is ever the same,

The loved ones are flown.

Far over the sea they are gone,

Far out of her ken

They travel the furthest of seas

As fishers of men.

Yet never a word to her sons

To keep them at home,

And never a motherly cry

Goes over the foam;

She sits with her head in her hands,

Her eyes on the flame,

And thinks of the others that played,

Yet left her the same,

With vesture she wove on the loom

Four-coloured to be,

And lanterns she trimmed with her hair

To light them to sea.

Oh, far have the living ones gone,

And further the dead,

For spirits come never to watch

The fisherwife’s bed;

And sonless she sits at the hearth,

And peers in the flame,

She knows that their fishing must come

As ever it came—

A fishing that never set home,

But seaways it led,

For God who has taken her sons

Has buried her dead.


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