Alfred H. Miles, ed. Women Poets of the Nineteenth Century. 1907.
By Songs and Ballads. III. A Legend of TyroneEllen OLeary (18311889)
A
Ruled in high state, with his fair English bride,
A quaint cottage stood, till swept down by some gale;
And of that vanished home the old wives tell this tale.
Crouched round a bare hearth in hard, frosty weather,
Three lone, helpless weans cling close together;
Tangled those gold locks, once bonnie and bright—
There’s no one to fondle the baby to-night.
The big tears stream down with low wailing chaunt;
Sweet Ely’s slight arms enfold the gold head;
“Poor weeny Willie, sure mammie is dead—
Come down, holy angels, and take us away!”
Eily and Eddie keep kissing and crying—
Outside the weird winds are sobbing and sighing.
Only a quick coo of gladness from Will.
The sheiling no longer seems empty and bare,
For, clothed in white raiment, the mother stands there.
She rains down soft kisses for each shy caress,
Her light, loving touches smooth out tangled locks,
And pressed to her bosom the baby she rocks.
To Eily and Eddy ’tis heaven on earth,
For mother’s deft fingers have been everywhere,
She lulls them to rest in the low sugaun chair.
As petals fold into the heart of a rose;
But ope soon again in awe, love, but not fear,
And fondly they murmur, “Our mammie is here!”
They lie in sweet slumbers, she starts at a sound!
The cock loudly crows, and the spirits away—
The drunkard steals in at the dawning of day.
Glides in the dead mother to nurse Willie bawn,
Or is it an angel who sits by the hearth?
An angel in heaven, a mother on earth.