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I know a land of salt and pepper stalks and moss, whose jagged, hazy coast a thousand flowers bears — of Ireland I boast. Even now my heart is sick for a home I never had. If I were there, what I would do, I'll tell to you.... I'd show my love the mountain's nooks, I'd pounce the foeman's daring rooks, and plunder every dusty book, and sleep in emerald vales. We'd clamber up to a secret cave and there we'd dwell, away from the pell-mell, and fast away in purple robes, pretending we were noble-born (for Ireland, we ought to be), we'd in defiance hunger stave. See now, her cloud legions marching in step like flares emerging from the wood. While horses roam her sunlit plains and flowers shudder in her breeze; while puddles form in shallow pools, my watered mind accustoms trees of bleak and twisted nature, on the wild icicle river, coldly biting my knees. But here afar away, there's treasure under every glistening leaf, 'twixt frond and fern, bristle and bramble, and bounding stream. By daylight, Eire counts every rock; at starlight, assesses her stock. I know a land whose greenery bursts in the morning dew, and gives hopeful cause to a hundred generations of stoic sword-brethren flashing down the coast, singing their jolly tune, as the oak decks are mounted with freedom's guns emboldening battle new. Her amber-gilded name spears through clouded sea and Cambrian cliff: if every isle were touched as this! by saintly light from Atlas' air. She is the jewel of the isles, the song of countless souls. As men march down her summer roads to meet their tender-hearted lovers at home in comfort from callous kings, the breeze will bring news of another christening or crossing... for then each girl will spy him coming, and make haste to alert the town, and they will all turn out with joy to welcome home their darling boy; to herald the ending of famine and war, and so they will shout for centuries more!
0
Mar 17, 2019
Mar 17, 2019 at 1:54 PM UTC
Sweet Ireland
I know a land of salt and pepper stalks and moss, whose jagged, hazy coast a thousand flowers bears — of Ireland I boast. Even now my heart is sick for a home I never had. If I were there, what I would do, I'll tell to you.... I'd show my love the mountain's nooks, I'd pounce the foeman's daring rooks, and plunder every dusty book, and sleep in emerald vales. We'd clamber up to a secret cave and there we'd dwell, away from the pell-mell, and fast away in purple robes, pretending we were noble-born (for Ireland, we ought to be), we'd in defiance hunger stave. See now, her cloud legions marching in step like flares emerging from the wood. While horses roam her sunlit plains and flowers shudder in her breeze; while puddles form in shallow pools, my watered mind accustoms trees of bleak and twisted nature, on the wild icicle river, coldly biting my knees. But here afar away, there's treasure under every glistening leaf, 'twixt frond and fern, bristle and bramble, and bounding stream. By daylight, Eire counts every rock; at starlight, assesses her stock. I know a land whose greenery bursts in the morning dew, and gives hopeful cause to a hundred generations of stoic sword-brethren flashing down the coast, singing their jolly tune, as the oak decks are mounted with freedom's guns emboldening battle new. Her amber-gilded name spears through clouded sea and Cambrian cliff: if every isle were touched as this! by saintly light from Atlas' air. She is the jewel of the isles, the song of countless souls. As men march down her summer roads to meet their tender-hearted lovers at home in comfort from callous kings, the breeze will bring news of another christening or crossing... for then each girl will spy him coming, and make haste to alert the town, and they will all turn out with joy to welcome home their darling boy; to herald the ending of famine and war, and so they will shout for centuries more!
Dawnstar
Written by
out of the blue
Mar 17, 2019
Mar 17, 2019 at 1:54 PM UTC
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