The Wind on the Hills by Dora Sigerson Shorter
The only poems left in my file are by the same handful of poets. I’m reverting to my former policy of posting a poem by a poet I’ve only posted once previously.
The Wind on the Hills
By Dora Sigerson Shorter
Go not to the hills of Erinn
When the night winds are about,
Put up your bar and shutter,
And so keep danger out.
For the good-folk whirl within it,
And they pull you by the hand,
And they push you on the shoulder,
Till you move to their command.
And lo! you have forgotten
What you have known of tears,
And you will not remember
That the world goes full of years.
A year there is a lifetime,
And a second but a day,
And an older world will meet you
Each morn you come away.
Your wife grows old with weeping,
And your children one by one
Grow gray with nights of watching,
Before your dance is done.
And it will chance some morning
You will come home no more;
Your wife sees but a withered leaf
In the wind about the door.
And your children will inherit
The unrest of the wind,
They shall seek some face elusive,
And some land they never find.
Where the wind is loud, they sighing
Go with hearts unsatisfied,
For some joy beyond remembrance,
For some memory denied.
And all your children’s children,
They cannot sleep or rest,
When the wind is out in Erinn
And the sun is in the west.

I thoroughly enjoy this poem every time I read it. There is something about her use of imagery and detail which sparks the imagination…A poem which will stand the test of time. Truly wonderful.
Thank you for commenting! I only read this poem for the first time the day I posted it, but I quite liked it as well. Have you read The Comforters? Shorter must really like wind. There is something very haunting about both these poems…