Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
Ireland: Vol. V. 1876–79.
Wayconnell Tower
By William Allingham (18241889)T
Left rock and ruin vaguely seen;
Thick ivy-cables held them fast,
Light boughs descended, floating green.
And, far above, it set me free,
When all the golden fan of light
Was closing down into the sea.
It led to; and so high was that,
The tallest trees were not so tall
That they could reach to where I sat.
Dark ivy fringed its round of sky,
Where slowly, in the deepening hour,
The first few stars unveiled on high.
The murmur of the cool gray tide,
With tears that trembled on the brim,
An echo sad to these I sighed.
The cloud along the sunset sleeps;
The phantom of the golden moon
Is kindled in thy quivering deeps,
Fixed in a ruin-window strange,
Some countless period, watching still
A moon, a sea, that never change!
The duteous wave is ebbing fast;
And now, as from the niche I go,
A shadow joins the shadowy past.
Sadly enrich the distant view!
And welcome, scenes of toil and strife;
To-morrow’s sun arises new.