A Celebration 
of Women Writers

"To the Comely Four of Aran" 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. 80-81.

Editor: Mary Mark 
Ockerbloom

[Page 80] 

TO THE COMELY FOUR OF ARAN.

         I send my prayer upon
         The winds that chase the sun,
O Four who are most comely and renowned!
         Conal the Wanderer,
         And Brendan grave, of Birr,
Fursey, and Berchain of this holy ground.

         Keep you my treasure safe
         From sorrow and from chafe;
From the strange deadly things that haunt the world
         When dark lies, dewy-cool;
         From rush-fringed bogland pool;
And from the storm-whipped sea's green snare upcurled

         O when his weary feet
         Journeyed through snow and sleet
On high bald mountains where the way was lone,
         My prayers went as a light
         Before him in the night,
And Christ, the Kind, was kindly to my own.

         He is my secret love,
         O Four who sit above!
To you I whisper all my hungering heart
         He is my dear desire,
         My soul's red altar-fire,
And, bitter woe! too long are we apart.

[Page 81] 

         By Oghil Well in gray
         Mist ere the dawn of day,
I knelt for sake of him and cried to you,
         And made my hands a cup,
         And drank the white wave up,
The three keen draughts that chilled me through and through.

         His bright head be your care,
         O tender Saints and fair!
Be you his mantle in the dew and rain,
         His shelter from the cold,
         The staff within his hold,
And mine the grieving be, the cold, the pain.

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Editor: Mary 
Mark Ockerbloom