Padraic Colum (1881–1972). Anthology of Irish Verse. 1922.
By William A. Byrne82. The Bog Lands
T
God gave the bogland brown,
But man has made a pall o’ smoke
To hide the distant town.
Unscreened by hill or spire,
From primrose dawn, a lovely range,
To sunset’s farewell fire.
Us with their monotone,
But windy calls of quail and crake
Unto our beds are blown.
To work before the sun;
At eve the heart’s lone Angelus
Blesses our labour done.
In sunshine and in rain,
That men by winter-fires may thank
The wielders of the slane.
That sullies idle hands;
So hear we through the silent time
God speaking sweet commands.
For which tired wealth may sigh—
The freedom of the fields of light,
The gladness of the sky.
The curlew and the plover,
To tease the mind with pipings faint
No memory can recover;
In wind and windless weather;
The bees that have no singing-rules
Except to buzz together.
To see the purest ends;
Each evening through the brown-turf light
The Rosary ascends.
The drowsy minutes fall,—
The only pendulum that swings
Across the crannied wall.
The quiet rest you crave;
The long, deep bogland solitude
That fits a forest’s grave;
Beneath God’s loving hand,
Where, wondering at the grace of sleep,
The Guardian Angels stand.