A Celebration of Women Writers

" The Doves." by Katharine Tynan (1861-1931)
From: Twenty One Poems by Katharine Tynan: Selected by W. B. Yeats. by Katharine Tynan. Dundrum: Dun Emer Press, 1907. pp. 30-32.

Editor: Mary Mark Ockerbloom

THE DOVES

The house where I was born,
Where I was young and gay,
Grows old amid its corn,
Amid its scented hay.

[Page 31] 

Moan of the cushat dove,
In silence rich and deep;
The old head I love
Nods to its quiet sleep.

Where once were nine and ten
Now two keep house together;
The doves moan and complain
All day in the still weather.

What wind, bitter and great,
Has swept the country's face,
Altered, made desolate
The heart-remembered place ?

What wind, bitter and wild,
Has swept the towering trees
Beneath whose shade a child
Long since gathered heartease ?

Under the golden eaves
The house is still and sad,
As though it grieves and grieves
For many a lass and lad.

[Page 32] 

The cushat doves complain
All day in the still weather;
Where once were nine or ten
But two keep house together.

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Editor: Mary Mark Ockerbloom