COLUMBA AND THE STORK.

The cliffs of Iona were red, with the moon to lee,

A finger of rock in the infinite wind and the sea;

And white on the cliffs as a volley of spray down-flying,

The beautiful stork of Eiré indriven and dying.

I stole from the choir; I fed him, I bathed his breast,

Till in late sunshine he lifted his wing to the west.

Oh, the bells of the Abbey were calling clearer and bolder,

And I feared the pale admonishing face at my shoulder.

Columb the saint’s! but I said, with mine arm in air,

(Of that banished body and homesick spirit aware,)

“The bird is of Eiré; out of the storm I bore him;

And lo, he is free, with the valleys of Eiré before him.”

Of the man that was Eiré-born, and in exile yet,

This the reproach I had, and cannot forget,

This the reproach I had, and never another:

“Blessed art thou, to have lightened the heart of my brother!”