dots-menu
×

Home  »  Collected Poems by A.E.  »  151. An Irish Face

Walter Murdoch (1874–1970). The Oxford Book of Australasian Verse. 1918.

151. An Irish Face

NOT her own sorrow only that hath place

Upon yon gentle face.

Too slight have been her childhood’s years to gain

The imprint of such pain.

It hid behind her laughing hours, and wrought

Each curve in saddest thought

On brow and lips and eyes. With subtle art

It made that little heart

Through its young joyous beatings to prepare

A quiet shelter there,

Where the immortal sorrows might find a home.

And many there have come;

Bowed in a mournful mist of golden hair

Deirdre hath entered there.

And shrouded in a fall of pitying dew,

Weeping the friend he slew,

The Hound of Ulla lies, with those who shed

Tears for the Wild Geese fled.

And all the lovers on whom fate had warred

Cutting the silver cord

Enter, and softly breath by breath they mould

The young heart to the old,

The old protest, the old pity, whose power

Are gathering to the hour

When their knit silence shall be mightier far

Than leagued empires are.

And dreaming of the sorrow on this face

We grow of lordlier race,

Could shake the rooted rampart of the hills

To shield her from all ills,

And through a deep adoring pity won

Grow what we dream upon.