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SONGS AND BALLADS OF IRELAND.

POOR PAT MUST EMIGRATE.-Continued.

MOLLY CAREW.

With spirits bright and purses light, my boys, we can no longer OCH hone! and what will I do?
stay,
For the shamrock is immediately bound for America;
For there is bread and work, which I cannot get in Donegal,

I told the truth, by great Saint Ruth, believe me what I say. Good night, my boys, with heart and hand, all you who take Ireland's part,

I can no longer stay at home, for hear of being too late;
If ever again I see this land, I hope it will be with a Fenian band,
So God be with old Ireland; poor Pat must emigrate.

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Least bard of the hills! were it mine to inherit
The fire of thy harp, and the wing of thy spirit,
With the wrongs which like thee to our country has bound me,
Did your mantle of song fling its radiance around me,
Still still in those wilds might young liberty rally,
And send her strong shout over mountain and valley;
The star of the west might yet rise in its glory,
And the land that was darkest be brightest in story.

I, too, shall be gone-but my name shall be spoken
When Erin awakes, and her fetters are broken;
Some minstrel will come, in the summer eve's gleaming,
When freedom's young light on his spirit is beaming,
And bend o'er my grave with a tear of emotion,
Where calm Avon-Buee seeks the kisses of ocean,
Or plant a wild wreath, from the banks of that river,
O'er the heart, and the harp, that are weeping forever.

Sure my love is all crost
Like a bud in the frost,

And there's no use at all in my going to bed;
For 'tis dhrames and not sleep comes into my

head:

And 'tis all about you,

My sweet Molly Carew

And indeed 'tis a sin and a shame:
You're complater than Nature
In every feature,

The snow can't compare

With your forehead so fair,

And I rather would see just one blink of your

eye

Than the purtiest star that shines out of the sky

And by this and by that,

For the matter o' that,

You're more distant by far than that

same!

Och hone! wirrasthrue!

I'm alone in this world without you.

Och hone! but why should I spake
Of your forehead and eyes,
When your nose it defies
Paddy Blake, the schoolmaster, to put it in
rhyme?

Tho' there's one Burke, he says, that would
call it snublime.

And then for your cheek!

Throth, 'twould take him a week
Its beauties to tell as he'd rather.
Then your lips! oh Machree!

In their beautiful glow
They a patthern might be
For the cherries to grow.

'Twas an apple that tempted our mother, we

know

For apples were scarce, I suppose, long ago;
But at this time o' day,
'Pon my conscience, I'll say
Such cherries might tempt a
father!

Och hone! wirrasthrue!

man's

I'm alone in this world without you.

Och hone! by the man in the moon,
You taze me all ways

That a woman can plaze,
For you dance twice as high with that thief

Pat Magee,

As when you take share of a jig, dear, with

me,

Tho' the piper I bate,

For fear the owld chate

Wouldn't play you your favorite tune;
And when you're at mass
My devotion you crass,
For 'tis thinking of you
I am, Molly Carew;

While you wear, on purpose, a bonnet so deep,
That I can't at your sweet purty face get a
peep:

Oh, lave off that bonnet,
Or else I'll lave on it

The loss of my wandherin' sowl!
Och hone! wirrasthrue!
Och hone! like an owl,

Day is night, dear, to me, without you!

MOLLY CAREW.-Contiinued.
Och hone! don't provoke me to do it;
For there's girls by the score
That love me-and more;

And you'd look very quare if some morning you'd meet

My weddin' all marchin' in pride down the sthreet;

Throth, you'd open your eyes,
And you'd die with surprise,

To think 'twasn't you was come to it!
And, faith, Katty Naile,

And her cow, I go bail, Would jump if I'd say "Katty Naile, name the day." And tho' you're fair and fresh as a morning in May,

While she's short and dark like a cowld winther's day,

Yet if you don't repent
Before Easther, when Lent
Is over I'll marry for spite;
Och hone! wirrasthrue!
And when I die for you,

My ghost will haunt you every night.

BROSNA'S BANKS.

YES, yes, I idled many an hour-
(0, would that I could idle now,
In wooing back the wither'd flower
Of health into my wasted brow!)
But from my life's o'ershadowing close,
My unimpassioned spirit ranks
Among its happiest moments those
I idled on the Brosna's Banks.
For there upon my boyhood broke
The dreamy voice of nature first;
And every word the vision spoke,

How deeply has my spirit nursed!
A woman's love, a lyre, or pen,

A rescued land, a nation's thanks,
A friendship with the world, and then
A grave upon the Brosna's Banks.

For these I sued, and sought, and strove,
But now my youthful days are gone,
In vain, in vain-for woman's love
Is still a blessing to be won;
And still my country's cheek is wet,
The still unbroken fetter clanks,
And I may not forsake her yet

To die upon the Brosna's Banks.

Yet idle as those visions seem,

They were a strange and faithful guide, When Heaven itself had scarce a gleam To light my darken'd life beside; And if from grosser guilt escaped

I fel no dying dread, the thanks Are due unto the power that shaped My visions on the Brosna's Banks.

And love, I feel, will come at last,

Albeit too late to comfort me; And fetters from the land be cast, Though I may not survive to see. If then the gifted, good, and brave

Admit me to their glorious ranks, My memory may, tho' not my grave, Be green upon the Brosna's Banks.

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"Twas but four days thereafter, of a stormy evening late, When a horseman reared his charger in before the castle gate, And gazing upwards, he descried by the light of the pale moon shed,

Impaled upon an iron stake, a well-known gory head!

"So, Parez! thou hast met thy meed!" he said, and turned away

"And was it a foe that thus avenged me on that fatal day? Now, by my troth, albeit I hate the Saxon and his land,

I could, methinks, for one brief moment press the Talbot's hand!

EMMET'S FAREWELL TO HIS SWEETHEART. FAREWELL, love, farewell, love, I now must leave you, The pale moon is shining her last beam on me;

In truth, I do declare I never deceived you,
For it's next to my heart is dear Erin and thee.

Draw near to my bosom, my first and fond true love,
And cherish the heart that beats only for thee;
And let my cold grave with green laurels be strewn, love,
And cherish the heart that beats only for thee;

Oh, never again in the moonlight we'll roam, love,
When the birds are at rest and the stars they do shine;
Oh, never again shall I kiss thy sweet lips, love,
Or wander by streamlets with thy hands pressed in mine.

Oh, should a mother's love make all others forsake me,
Oh, give me a promise before that I die,

That you'll come to my grave when all others forsake me, And there with the soft winds breath sigh then for sigh.

My hour is approaching, let me take one fond look, love, And watch thy pure beauty till my soul does depart; Let thy ringlets fall on my face and brow, love,

Draw near till I press thee to my fond and true heart. Farewell, love, farewell, love, the words are now spoken, The pale moon is shining her last beams on me: Farewell, love, farewell, love, I hear the death token, Never more in this world your Emmet you'll see.

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THE PRETTY GIRL OF LOCH DAN.
THE shades of eve had crossed the glen
That frowns o'er infant Avonmore;
When, nigh Loch Dan, two weary men,
We stopped before a cottage door.
God save all here," my comrade cries,
And rattles on the raised latch-pin;
"God save you kindly," quick replies
A clear sweet voice, and asks us in.
We enter; from the wheel she starts,
A rosy girl with soft black eyes;
Her fluttering court'sy takes our hearts,
Her blushing grace and pleased surprise.
Poor Mary, she was quite alone,

For, all the way to Glenmalure,
Her mother had that morning gone
And left the house in charge with her.

But neither household cares, nor yet
The shame that startled virgins feel,
Could make the generous girl forget
Her wonted hospitable zeal.

She brought us in a beechen bowl,

Sweet milk, that smacked of mountain thyme,

Oat cake, and such a yellow roll

Of butter-it gilds all my rhyme! And while we ate the grateful food, (With weary limbs on bench reclined), Considerate and discreet, she stood Apart, and listened to the wind. Kind wishes both our souls engaged From breast to breast spontaneous ran The mutual thought-we stood pledged,

and

THE MODEST ROSE ABOVE LOCH DAN. "The milk we drink is not more pure, Sweet Mary-bless those budding charms! Than your own generous heart, I'm sure, Nor whiter than the breast it warms!" She turned and gazed, unused to hear Such language in that homely glen; But, Mary, you have nought to fear, Though smiled on by two stranger men. Not for a crown would I alarm

Your virgin pride by word or sign; Nor need a painful blush disarm

My friend of thoughts as pure as mine. Her simple heart could not but feel

The words we spoke were free from guile; She stooped, she blushed, she fixed her wheel,

"Tis all in vain-she can't but smile! Just like sweet April's dawn appears

Her modest face-I see it yet-
And though I lived a hundred years
Methinks I never could forget
The pleasure, that, despite her heart,
Fills all her downcast eyes with light,
The lips reluctantly apart,

The white teeth struggling into sight;
The dimples eddying o'er her cheek,-

The rosy cheek that won't be still!O! who could blame what flatterers speak, Did smiles like this reward their skill? For such another smile, I vow, Though loudly beats the midnight rain, I'd take the mountain-side e'en now, And walk to Luggelaw again!

SHULE AROON.

I WOULD I were on yonder hill,
"Tis there I'd sit and cry my fill,
And every tear would turn a mill,
Is go de tu mo murnin slan.

CHORUS.

Shule, shule, shule aroon,

Shule go succir, agus shule go cuin,
Shule go den durrus angus eligh glum,
Is go de tu mo murnin slan.

I'll sell my rock, I'll sell my reel,
I'll sell my only spinning wheel,
To buy for my love a sword of steel,
Is go de tu mo murnin slan.

I'll dye my petticoats, I'll dye them red,
And round the world I'll beg my bread,
Until my parents shall wish me dead,
Is go de tu mo murnin slan.

I wish, I wish, I wish in vain,

I wish I had my heart again,

And vainly think I'd not complain,

Is go de tu mo murnin slan.

But now my love has gone to France, To try his fortune to advance.

If he e'er come back 'tis but a chance, Is go de tu mo murnin slan.

LOVE'S YOUNG DREAM.

OH! the days are gone, when beauty bright
My heart's chain wove;
When my dream of life, from morn till night,
Was love, still love!
New hope may bloom,
And days may come,
Of milder, calmer beam,

But there's nothing half so sweet in life
As love's young dream!

Oh! there's nothing half so sweet in life
As love's young dream!

Tho' the bard to purer fame may soar,
When wild youth's past;

Tho' he win the wise, who frown'd before,
To smile at last;
He'll never meet

A joy so sweet

As when first he sung to woman's ear In all his noon of fame,

His soul-felt flame;

And, at every close, she blushed to hear

The one loved name!

Oh! that hallow'd form is ne'er forgot,
Which First Love trac'd;

Still it lingering haunts the greenest spot
On Memory's waste!

'Twas odor fled

As soon as shed;

'Twas morning's winged dream!

"Twas a light, that ne'er can shine again On life's dull stream!

Oh! 'twas light, that ne'er can shine again On life's dull stream!

THE DEAR EMERALD ISLE.

KIND friends, will ye help a poor, weary stranger,
Who's foot-sore and weary and hungry the while?
I've nothing to give, but an orphan will bless you
If you'll help a poor boy from the dear em'rald isle.
But a year ago, sure, I was smiling and happy;
Not a care on my mind, and a heart free from guile,
In a dear little cabin at the foot of the mountain,

That rears its proud head o'er the dear em'rald isle.

My father and mother, God bless their dear mem'ry,
Were contented and happy, although they were poor;
The land it was bad, and they worked late and early
To pay up the rent, with the wolf at the door.
At length my poor father took ill of a fever,

From toiling so hard on the bleak, barren soil; Although my poor mother was careful and tender, He died, and now lies 'neath the dear em'rald isle.

Then the sheriff he came with a band of armed ruffians
To turn out a child and a mother so gray;
And deaf to all pleading they tore down our cabin-
Like a flower she drooped and faded away:

Then hunger and sorrow soon told on my mother;
Like a flower she dropped and faded away;

And with a last blessing, while her poor child caressing,
She gave up her life and was laid 'neath the clay.

Then they laid my dear mother beside my poor father—
I planted a shamrock just over their grave;
While I, a poor orphan, driven forth by misfortune,
To leave that dear land, and to cross the wild wave;
But, wherever I wander, I ever shall ponder

And dream of the time when nature did smile
On my father and mother and dear loving brother
And the old cabin home in the dear em'rald isle.

Then if ever the Father shall look down in pity,
And cast off the yoke that does Ireland enslave,
I'll hie me back then to the scenes of my childhood,
And pluck a pure shamrock from my dear parents' grave.
Don't say no more, boy, for I, too, am a daughter;

And to think of her wrongs, oh, it makes my blood rile;
And I pray that the time is not very far distant
When the green shall wave proud o'er the dear em'rald isle.

MCCARTHY'S MARE.

WE started for the fair, with spirits light and hearty,
Behind McCarthy's mare, oh! it was a lively party!
You never saw the likes of it, believe me what I say,
Sure, we had a roaring racket, but the mare she ran away.

CHORUS.

Off she wint! off she wint! be gob, I was not worth a cint; The sate was just as hard as flint, behind McCarthy's mare.

"Hould her in!" McCarthy cried, "

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'Stop her! says McCue,

I tho't I'd shake to pieces, as along the road we flew;
Me head was swimming like a top, my heart was in despair,
The divil himself was in the wheels behind McCarthy's mare.

McCarthy held the reins, and Murphy held McCarthy,
But whiskey filled their brains and made them wild and hearty
Maloney tumbled out behind, and there we let him lay-
Sure I offered to assist him-but the mare she ran away!

Me dacent coat was tore, me hat was left behind me,

I rattled and I swore, and I thought the dust would blind me In holes and ditches wint the wheels, oh, murther, what a day Sure, myself was kilt entirely, with the mare that run away.

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