Thomas MacDonagh (Томас Макдона)
In the Storm
With laughing eyes and storm-blown hair You came to my bedside; I thought your living soul was there, And that my dreams had lied; But ere my lips had power to speak A word of love to you, The moonlight fell upon your cheek, And it was of death's hue. Sudden I heard the storm arise, I heard its summons roll: Wistful and wondering your eyes Were fading from my soul. The moonlight waned, and shadows thick Went keening on the storm-- Ah! for the quiet that was quick, The cold heart that was warm!
Thomas MacDonagh’s other poems:
- Isn’t It Pleasant for the Little Birds
- To James Clarence Mangan
- A Woman
- Dublin Tramcars
- Of the Man of My First Play
Poems of other poets with the same name (Стихотворения других поэтов с таким же названием):