She sailed across in 1882, From a town in Cork called Skibbereen. To work and save was all she knew; Just a lass she was, only eighteen.
She wed a fellow ****, a charming sort, He sired three children, then he left. She had no lawyer had no resort; He left her broke, marooned, bereft.
My mother told me stories of her Irish Gran; She said the woman had a brogue; When she got old her hair was white as sand; The no-good husband was a rogue.
My mother asked her many times about her life; “What was your childhood like in Skibbereen?” “Ach, it was nothing but hardship and strife; The times were harsh, and meals were lean.”
She never went back across the sea; Never set foot in her country again; Lost touch with the whole of her family; Was penniless at her life’s end.
And now my mother too is gone; She died with one regret; She never got to see the place; The house where her grandmother slept.
My mother, I did what you could not, I made this trip for you. I touch the stone in the very spot Where the root of our family grew.
It’s nothing much to look at, a ruin in a field; But I take a moment and grieve; This is where our fate was sealed; When that girl decided to leave.
She left her homeland, all she knew; Sailed off to the great beyond; The one thing she could never undo Was the rupturing of the family bond.
My mother, you made us hold our family dear, To promise our love so strong; Was it because you saw so clear Your grandmother’s pain so long?
I bow my head and say a prayer, And ask for a portion of grace; For you and her, travelers over there, In a foreign, mysterious place. I hope you’ve met her in that land, And maybe now you understand.