By honor bound in woe or weal,
Whate’er she bids he
dares to do;
Try him with bribes—they won’t
prevail;
Prove him in fire—you’ll
find him true.
He seeks not safety, let his post
Be where it ought in danger’s
van;
And if the field of fame be lost,
It won’t be by an Irishman.
Erin! loved land! from age to age,
Be thou more great, more famed,
and free,
May peace be thine, or shouldst thou wage
Defensive war, cheap victory.
May plenty bloom in every field
Which gentle breezes softly
fan,
And cheerful smiles serenely gild
The home of every Irishman.
JAMES ORR.
* * * * *
TURLOUGH MACSWEENEY.
A health to you, Piper,
And your pipes silver-tongued,
clear and sweet in their crooning!
Full of the music they gathered at morn
On your high heather hills
from the lark on the wing,
From the blackbird at eve on the blossoming
thorn,
From the little green linnet
whose plaining they sing,
And the joy and the hope in the heart
of the Spring,
O,
Turlough MacSweeney!
Play us our Eire’s most sorrowful
songs,
As she sits by her reeds near
the wash of the wave,
That the coldest may thrill at the count
of her wrongs,
That the sword may flash forth
from the scabbard to save,
And the wide land awake at the wrath of
the brave,
O,
Turlough MacSweeney!
Play as the bards played in days
long ago,
When O’Donnell, arrayed for the foray or
feast,
With your kinsmen from Bannat and Fannat and Doe,
With piping and harping, and blessing of priest,
Rode out in the blaze of the sun from the East,
O, Turlough MacSweeney!
Play as they played in that rapturous
hour
When the clans heard in gladness his young fiery
call
Who burst from the gloom of the Sassenach tower,
And sped to the welcome in dear Donegal,
Then on to his hailing as chieftain of all—
O, Turlough MacSweeney!
Play as they played, when, a trumpet
of war,
His voice for the rally, pealed up to the blue,
And the kerns from the hills and the glens and the
scaur
Marched after the banner of conquering Hugh—
Led into the fray by a piper like you,
O, Turlough MacSweeney!
And surely no note of such music
shall fail,
Wherever the speech of our Eire is heard,
To foster the hope of the passionate Gael,
To fan the old hatred, relentless when stirred,
To strengthen our souls for the strife to be dared,
O, Turlough MacSweeney!
May your pipes, silver-tongued, clear and sweet in their crooning,
Keep the magic they captured at dawning and even
From the blackbird at home, and the lark on its journey,
From the thrush on its spray, and the little green linnet.
A health to you, Piper!