May Day I wish I were to-day on the hill behind the wood,-- My eyes on the brown bog there and the Shannon river,-- Behind the wood at home, a quickened solitude When the winds from Slieve Bloom set the branches there a-quiver. The winds are there now and the green of May On every feathery tree-bough, tender on every hedge: Over the bog-fields there larks carol to-day, And a cuckoo is mocking them out of the woodland's edge. Here a country warmth is quiet on the rocks That alone make never a change when the May is duly come; Here sings no lark, and to-day no cuckoo mocks: Over the wide hill a hawk floats, and the leaves are dumb. |
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