the careless--those who 'go out looking at their sheep
on Sunday instead of going to Mass'--are warned that 'on the side of the
hill of the tears there will be Ochone!'
His love songs are many; and they were not always thought to bring ill
luck; for I am told of a girl 'that was not handsome at all, but ugly, that
he made a song about her for civility; for she used to be in a house
where he used to lodge, and the song got her a husband; and there is a
son of hers living now down in Clare-Galway.' And an old woman tells
me, with a sigh of regret for what might have been, that she saw
Raftery one time at a dance, and he spoke to her and said: 'Well planed
you are; the carpenter that planed you knew his trade.' 'And I said:
"Better than you know yours;" for there were two or three of the strings
of his fiddle broke. And then he said something about O'Meara, that
lived near us; and my father got vexed at what he said, and would let
him speak no more with me. And if it wasn't for him speaking about
O'Meara, and my father getting vexed, he might have made words
about me like he did for Mary Hynes and for Mary Brown.'
'Bridget Vesach,' which I have heard in many cottages, as well as from
the old woman in Gort Workhouse, begins: 'I would wed courteous
Bridget without coat, shoe, or shirt. Treasure of my heart, if it were
possible for me, I would fast for you nine meals, without food, without
drink, without any share of anything, on an island of Lough Erne, with
desire for you and me to be together till we should settle our case.... My
heart started with trouble, and I was frightened nine times that morning
that I heard you were not to be found.... I would sooner be stretched by
you with nothing under us but heather and rushes, than be listening to
the cuckoos that are stirring at the break of day.... I am in grief and in
sorrow since you slipped from me across the mearings.'
Another love poem, 'Mairin Stanton,' shows his habit of mixing
comparisons drawn from the classics with those drawn from nature:--
'There's a bright flower by the side of the road, and she beats Deirdre in
the beauty of her voice; or I might say Helen, Queen of the Greeks, she
for whose sake hundreds died at Troy.
'There is light and brightness in her as in those others; her little mouth
is as sweet as the cuckoo on the branch. You would not find a mind like
hers in any woman since the pearl died that was in Ballylee.
'To see under the sky a woman settled like her walking on the road on a
fine sunny day, the light flashing from the whiteness of her breast
would give sight to a man without eyes.
'There is the love of hundreds in her face, and there is the promise of
the evening star. If she had been living in the time of the gods, it is not
Venus that would have had the apple.
'Her hair falls down below her knees, waving and winding to the mouth
of her shoes; her locks spread out wide and pale like dew, they leave a
brightness on the road behind her.
'She is the girl that has been taught the nicest of all whose eyes still
open to the sun; and if the estate of Lord Lucan belonged to me, on the
strength of my cause this jewel would be mine.
'Her slender lime-white shape, her face like flowers, her neck, her
cheek, and her amber hair; Virgil, Cicero, and Homer could tell of
nothing like her; she is like the dew in the time of harvest.
'If you could see this plant moving or dancing, you could not but love
the flower of the branch. If I cannot get a hundred words with Mairin
Stanton, I do not think my life will last long.
'She said "Good morrow" early and pleasantly; she drank my health,
and gave me a stool, and it not in the corner. At the time that I am
ready to go on my way I will stay talking and talking with her.'
The 'pearl that was at Ballylee' was poor Mary Hynes, of whom I have
already spoken. His song on her is very popular; 'a great song, so that
her name is sung through the three parishes.' She must have been
beautiful, for many who knew her still speak of her beauty, of her long,
shining hair, and the 'little blushes in her cheeks.' An old woman says:
'I
Continue reading on your phone by scaning this QR Code
Tip: The current page has been bookmarked automatically. If you wish to continue reading later, just open the
Dertz Homepage, and click on the 'continue reading' link at the bottom of the page.