Yeats' FAIRY AND FOLK
TALES OF THE IRISH PEASANTRY
A LAMENTATION
For the Death of Sir Maurice Fitzgerald, Knight, of Kerry, who
was killed in Flanders, 1642.
FROM THE IRISH, BY CLARENCE MANGAN
There was lifted up one voice of woe,
One lament of more than
mortal grief, Through the wide South to and fro, For a fallen
Chief. In the dead of night that cry thrilled through me, I
looked out upon the midnight air? My own soul was all as
gloomy, As I knelt in prayer.
O'er Loch Gur, that night, once--twice-yea, thrice-- Passed a
wail of anguish for the Brave That half curled into ice Its
moon-mirroring wave. Then uprose a many-toned wild hymn
in Choral swell from Ogra's dark ravine, And Mogeely's Phantom
Women Mourned the Geraldine!
Far on Carah Mona's emerald plains Shrieks and sighs were
blended many hours, And Fermoy in fitful strains Answered from
her towers. Youghal, Keenalmeaky, Eemokilly, Mourned in
concert, and their piercing keen Woke wondering life the
stilly Glens of Inchiqueen.
From Loughmoe to yellow Dunanore There was fear; the traders
of Tralee Gathered up their golden store, And prepared to
flee; For, in ship and hall from night till morning, Showed
the first faint beamings of the sun, All the foreigners heard the
warning Of the Dreaded One!
"This," they spake, "portendeth death to us, If we fly not
swiftly from our fate! Self-conceited idiots! thus Ravingly to
prate! Not for base-born higgling Saxon trucksters Ring
laments like those by shore and sea! Not for churls with souls like
hucksters Waileth our Banshee!
For the high Milesian race alone Ever flows the music of her
woe! For slain heir to bygone throne, And for Chief laid
low! Hark! ... Again, methinks, I hear her weeping Yonder! is
she near me now, as then? Or was but the night-wind
sweeping Down the hollow glen?
  
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![Aran Islanders, J. Synge [1898] (public domain photograph)](irishwmn.jpg) |