I HAVE gathered luss At the wane of the moon, And supped its sap With a yewen spoon. I have sat a spell By the carn of Medb, And smelt the mould Of the red queen's grave. I have dreamed a dearth In the darkened sun, And felt the hand Of the Evil One. I have fathomed war In the comet's tail, And heard the crying Of Gall and Gael. I have seen the spume On the dead priest's lips, And the 'holy fire' On the spars of ships; And the shooting stars On Barthelmy's Night, Blanching the dark With ghostly light; And the corpse candle Of the seer's dream, Bigger in girth Than a weaver's beam; And the shy hearth-fairies About the grate, Blowing the turves To a whiter heat. All things on earth To me are known, For I have the gift Of the Murrain Stone! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE POOR by WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS NAPOLEON AND THE BRITISH [OR ENGLISH] SAILOR [BOY] by THOMAS CAMPBELL GOOD NIGHT by PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR TO THE FOUR COURTS, PLEASE by JAMES STEPHENS BARBARA FRIETCHIE [SEPTEMBER 13, 1862] by JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER ADDRESS TO A CHILD DURING A BOISTEROUS WINTER EVENING by DOROTHY WORDSWORTH |