CAOCH, THE PIPER

One winter's day long, long ago,

When I was a little fellow,

A piper wandered to our door,

Gray-headed, blind, and yellow.

And O how glad was my young heart,

Though earth and sky looked dreary,

To see the stranger and his dog,

Poor Pinch and Caoch O'Leary!

And when he stowed away his bag

Crossbarred with green and yellow,

I thought and said, "In Ireland's ground,

There's not so fine a fellow."

And Fineen Burke and Shane Magee,

And Eily, Kate, and Mary,

Rushed in with panting haste to see

And welcome Caoch O'Leary.

O, God be with those happy times,

O, God be with my childhood,

When I, bare-headed, roamed all day

Bird-nesting in the wild wood!

I'll not forget those sunny hours

However years may vary;

I'll not forget my early friends,

Nor honest Caoch O'Leary.

Poor Caoch and Pinch slept well that night,

And in the morning early

He called me up to hear him play

"The wind that shakes the barley."

And then he stroked my flaxen hair,

And cried, "God mark my deary!"

And how I wept when he said, "Farewell,

And think of Caoch O'Leary!"

And seasons came and went, and still

Old Caoch was not forgotten,

Although I thought him dead and gone,

And in the cold clay rotten;

And often when I walked and danced

With Eily, Kate, and Mary,

We spoke of childhood's rosy hours,

And prayed for Caoch O'Leary.

Well—twenty summers had gone past,

And June's red sun was sinking,

When I, a man, sat by my door,

Of twenty sad things thinking.

A little dog came up the way,

His gait was slow and weary,

And at his tail a lame man limped,

'Twas Pinch and Caoch O'Leary.

Old Caoch! but ah! how woe-begone!

His form is bowed and bending,

His fleshless hands are stiff and wan,

Ay, time is even blending

The colours on his threadbare bag,

And Pinch is twice as hairy

And thin-spare as when first I saw

Himself and Caoch O'Leary.

"God's blessing here!" the wanderer cried,

"Far, far be hell, black viper;

Does anybody hereabouts

Remember Caoch, the piper?"

With swelling heart I grasped his hand;

The old man murmured, "Deary,

Are you the silken-headed child

That loved poor Caoch O'Leary?"

[Original]

"Yes, yes!" I said. The wanderer wept

As if his heart was breaking;

"And where, avic machree" * he said,

"Is all the merry-making

I found here twenty years ago?"

"My tale," I sighed, "might weary:

Enough to say, there's none but me

To welcome Caoch O'Leary."

"Vo, vo, vo!" the old man cried,

And wrung his hands in sorrow;

"Pray lead me in, astore machree,

And I'll go home to-morrow.

My peace is made, I'll calmly leave

This world so cold and dreary,

And you shall keep my pipes and dog,

And pray for Caoch O'Leary."

With Pinch I watched his bed that night;

Next day his wish was granted,—

He died, and Father James was brought,

And the requiem mass was chanted.

The neighbours came;—we dug his grave,

Near Eily, Kate, and Mary,

And there he sleeps his last sweet sleep,—

God rest you, Caoch O'Leary!

J. Keegan.

* Vic ma chree, Son of my heart.

[Original]