A Celebration 
of Women Writers

"All Soul's Night" 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. 48.

Editor: Mary Mark 
Ockerbloom

[Page 48] 

ALL SOUL'S NIGHT.

Mhuire a's truagh! Mhuire a's truagh!
  A foot went by in the night,
  A swift foot that I knew,
  And I saw in the chill moonlight
  A golden ghostly head–
  O my Love long dead!

Mhuire a's truagh! Mhuire a's truagh!
  Is it colder yet in the clay,
  Since the wandering's come on you
  'Twixt the dark and the day;
  Now the frost's on the window-pane
  And you come to my door again?

Mhuire a's truagh! Mhuire a's truagh!
  Do you bring me the word at last
  That the waiting hours are through
  And my loneliness is past?
  That after the joy denied
  I may rest satisfied.

Mhuire a's truagh! Mhuire a's truagh!
  'Twill be sweet to sleep in the sod,
  With the singing lark in the blue,
  Under the smile of God;
  So that a grave we share
  Together, Heart's Dearest, there.

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Editor: Mary 
Mark Ockerbloom