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Poem by Dora Sigerson Shorter


The Banshee


Now God between us and all harm,
For I to-night have seen
A banshee in the shadow pass
Along the dark boreen.
And as she went she keened and cried
And combed her long white hair,
She stopped at Molly Reilly's door,
And sobbed till midnight there.
And is it for himself she moans,
Who is so far away?
Or is it Molly Reilly's death
She cries until the day?
Now Molly thinks her man is gone
A sailor lad to be;
She puts a candle at her door
Each night for him to see.
But he is off to Galway town,
(And who dare tell her this?)
Enchanted by a woman's eyes,
Half-maddened by her kiss.
So as we go by Molly's door
We look towards the sea,
And say, "May God bring home your lad,
Wherever he may be."

I pray it may be Molly's self
The banshee keens and cries,
For who dare breathe the tale to her,
Be it her man who dies?
But there is sorrow on the way,
For I to-night have seen
A banshee in the shadow pass
Along the dark boreen.



Dora Sigerson Shorter


Dora Sigerson Shorter's other poems:
  1. An Eclipse
  2. A Friend in Need
  3. Beware
  4. The Sacred Fire
  5. The Sea-Mew


Poems of the other poets with the same name:

  • Anonymous The Banshee ("SHE sat beside the haunted stream")
  • Alice Crist The Banshee ("As we came down the old boreen")

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