[970] The Kerry Christmas Carol

Title : The Kerry Christmas Carol
Poet : Sigerson Clifford
Date : 25 Dec 2001
1stLine: Brush the floor and ...
Length : 28 Text-only version  
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Christmas Day guest poem sent in by "Frank O'Shea" <foshea@>

The Kerry Christmas Carol
Brush the floor and clean the hearth,
And set the fire to keep,
For they might visit us tonight
When all the world's asleep.

Don't blow the tall white candle out
But leave it burning bright,
So that they'll know they're welcome here
This holy Christmas night.

Leave out the bread and meat for them,
And sweet milk for the Child,
And they will bless the fire, that baked
And, too, the hands that toiled.

For Joseph will be travel-tired,
And Mary pale and wan,
And they can sleep a little while
Before they journey on.

They will be weary of the roads,
And rest will comfort them,
For it must be many a lonely mile
From here to Bethlehem.

O long the road they have to go,
The bad mile with the good,
Till the journey ends on Calvary
Beneath a cross of wood.

Leave the door upon the latch,
And set the fire to keep,
And pray they'll rest with us tonight
When all the world's asleep.

    -- Sigerson Clifford


Sigerson Clifford (1913 - 1984)

Grew up in Cahirciveen on the Ring of Kerry and attended the Christian
Brothers school in that town. Worked most of his life in Dublin, the first
generation of Irish civil servants after independence.

He wrote a number of plays, some of which were produced in the Abbey
Theatre and was also prominent in the early days of Irish radio.

His verse is a mixture of the wistful and the gay, recreating a time of
childhood innocence and celebrating his native Kerry. He writes often about
the tinkers, the travelling people who in his young days were an accepted
and usually welcomed feature of rural life. Now it has become politically
correct to call them travellers and people fight to keep them out of their
neighbourhood. His book of verse Ballads of a Bogman from which today's
poem is taken, was first released in 1955 and has been in print since.

The poem is an evocation of an old Irish custom in which each household
would leave a lighted candle in their window on Christmas night. There was
a pious belief that Joseph and Mary and the Child still wandered the roads
of the world, looking for a place to rest from the persecution of Herod.
That they should show a preference for the roads of rural Ireland was
accepted as a given.

Frank O'Shea

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From: Tim Buckley <tim_buc@>

I am in Antarctica - a long time fan of Sigerson Clifford poetry, 
particularly his "Tinker" poems
I would dearly love to get the words to some of them and the Boys of Barr 
na Sraidhe
I obviously do not have access to shops/mail down here.
Can you please help

Thanks

Tim Buckley (originally from Ireland)

From: Martin DeMello <martindemello@>

--- Tim Buckley <tim_buc@> wrote:
> I am in Antarctica - a long time fan of Sigerson Clifford poetry,
> particularly his "Tinker" poems I would dearly love to get the words
> to some of them and the Boys of Barr na Sraidhe I obviously do not
> have access to shops/mail down here. Can you please help

Hi Tim,

I put the question to the list, and several people have sent in copies. The
most useful responses pointed me to http://www.sceilig.com/index2.htm, which
has copies of several of Clifford's poems, and
http://www.worldzone.net/music/rudall/srcd004.html which has some audio files. 

martin