A Celebration 
of Women Writers

"The Wayfarer" 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. p. 72.

Editor: Mary Mark 
Ockerbloom

[Page 72] 

THE WAYFARER.

He had no crown upon his head
  When first he met me by the way,
His feet upon the thorns had bled,
  His gown was trodden gray:
    But in his eyes, stars, moon, and sun,
        Were one.

He came, his empty hands outheld,
  I gave to him with glad good-will:
And since my pitying heart rebelled
  That he should fare so ill,
    I took his gold head to my breast
        For rest.

Then lo! his empty hands were piled
  With all gifts craved in dreams of mine,
And over me the pilgrim-child
  Spilled benefits divine:
    Joy, Heart's Desire, and Peace most fair,
        Fell there.

For my great pity in his stress
  Because that sad and bare he went,
I now am clad with happiness,
  And rich in sweet content:
    'Twas Love, the King, who crossed my way
        To-day.

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Editor: Mary 
Mark Ockerbloom