A Celebration 
of Women Writers

"The Song of Ciabhan" by Ethna Carbery [aka Mrs. Seumus MacManus, Anna Johnston] (1866-1902)
From: The Four Winds of Eirinn: Poems by Ethna Carbery. (Anna MacManus.), Complete Edition, Edited by Seumas MacManus. Dublin, Ireland: M. H. Gill and Son, Ltd. 1906. pp. 7-8.

Editor: Mary Mark 
Ockerbloom

[Page 7] 

THE SONG OF CIABHAN.

To the Isle of Peace
  I turn our prow:
No angry seas
  Shall fright you now;
But calm lake waters
  Lie smooth as glass,
  Where we shall pass
From the place of slaughters.

The slow blue stars
  Beneath your brows
At the clash of wars
  Need never rouse;
Through day hours winging,
  My love shall tend,
  And my gold harp send
You to sleep with singing.

Tall blossoms gleam
  Where the spear-sharp sedge
Sways in its dream
  By the wavelet's edge;
There shall come to harm you
  No scourging wind;
  But south-blown, kind,
It shall soothe and charm you.

[Page 8] 

A wattled dun
  Safe-sheltered, strong,
For my treasured one
  Hath waited long;
Of the wild bee's honey
  A queenly fare
  Shall glad you there
In a grianán sunny.

Broad wings of red,
  And green and azure,
Make a roof outspread
  To give you pleasure;
Strange scrolls are shining
  On walls lime-white–
  A mystic sight
In their wondrous twining.

Its oaken door
  Hath a threshold shady,
To lure you o'er,
  O sunbright lady.
My wolf-hound lingers
  Beside our seat
  For the stroking, Sweet,
Of your slender fingers.

In our Isle the calm
  Slow-dropping dew
Shall shed its balm
  'Twixt night and you:
And peace shall hover,
  Till Angus calls,
And the Great Peace falls
  On beloved and lover.

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Editor: Mary 
Mark Ockerbloom