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Classic and Contemporary Poetry
THE COMING OF NIAMH, by JAMES HENRY COUSINS First Line: Softly, as comes a wind across the sea Last Line: Enthroned in vast, unutterable peace. Subject(s): Mythology - Irish | |||
SOFTLY, as comes a wind across the sea That thrills the waves to music on the beach, And stirs the trees to whisperings each to each, And bids the birds pipe low sweet song of glee; So, like a summer morning, came to me My Queen, my Niamh; and her gentle speech Spake regal lineage longer than the reach Of memory, older than the thrones that be. And thro' the tumults that around me rise, She speaks of hidden and tremendous things -- Grails yet unwon, and Quests that never cease; And calls me forth to where, with quenchless eyes, She with the deathless dwells, and folds her wings Enthroned in vast, unutterable Peace. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE LANAWN SHEE by FRANCIS LEDWIDGE THE PASSING OF CAOILTE by FRANCIS LEDWIDGE DEIRDRE by WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS DUNLANG O'HARTIGAN: LAMENT OF AOIBHELL, THE FAIRY QUEEN by PATRICK JOSEPH MCCALL THE TRYST AFTER DEATH by ANONYMOUS OLD MYTHOLOGIES by JOHN MONTAGUE BEHIND THE PLOUGH by JAMES HENRY COUSINS |
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