Song of the Fomoroh

Nora Hopper Chesson

1871 to 1906

Poem Image
Track 1

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It's light, and tender, and merry,
And turned him from his path:
We shall enter in your souls, our kin,
Is neither of night nor day.
The voice blows out of the twilight,
As thistle-drift is blown,
We've snatched from his hands the sea-pinks
And still our bondsmen be:
Are sin, and desire, and sorrow,
May cast off care, and grow strong and fair,
And the world hears, and moves on.
That the sword might be swift to slay,
Lo! we have bitted and bridled him,
And sore we travail that ye
That they might be blown away.
Yet there he will not stay:
From the waves that beat we have called his feet
With his heart's blood red our fires we fed
Though the house of the Dawn's his homestead,
And the seeds that its call has sown
With none to say him Nay —
And the voice that compels his coming
We have fed our fire to heart's desire,
From his wings we've ta'en the scarlet stain,
And he maketh no delay,
Who dare set bounds to the Red Wind,
To the long grass of the rath.
Wherewith his cliffs were drest:
And the ashes at last to his own wind cast,
For we are the dark Formoroh,
He hath heard our call through his tempest fall,
The red plumes from his crest:
And who shall our slaying see?
The East Wind in his wrath?
With the bird that beat in his breast.
Ay, we ha' bridled the red East Wind

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