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My Own Green Land

Topics: classic

It was in the early morning         Of life, and of hope to me,     I sat on a grassy hillside         Of the Isle beyond the sea,     Erin's skies of changeful beauty         Were bending over me.     The landscape, emerald tinted,         Lying smiling in the sun,     The grass with daisies sprinkled,         And with shamrocks over run,     The Maine water flashed and dimpled,         Still flowing softly on.     The lark in the blue above me,         A tiny speck in the sky,     Rained down from its bosom's fulness         A shower of melody,     Dropping through the golden sunlight,         And sweetly rippling by     Afar in the sunny distance,         O'er the river's further brim,     Like a stern old Norman warder,         Stood the castle tall and grim,     And, nearer a grassy ruin,         Where an old name grew dim     I knew that the balmy gladness         Was brooding from sea to sea,     But I felt a note of sadness         That sobered my youthful glee,     The love of my mother Erin         Stirred all my heart in me     Oh Erin! my mother Erin,         Thou land of the tearful smile,     Hearts that feel, and hands of helping         Are thy children's blessed Isle'     The stranger is so no longer         That rests on thy breasts awhile     Be he Saxon, Dane or Norman,         That steps on thy kindly shore,     Who sets his foot on thy daisies         Is kinder for evermore,     For thy cead mille failtha         Thrills warm to his bosom's care.     But Erin, never contented         Struggles again and again,     As all proud and free born captives         Must strive with the conqueror's chain.     That, if ever snapped asunder,         Is riveted firm again     The words of an Hebrew exile,         Like to some sweet song's refrain,     That sweetly goeth and cometh         And echoes through heart and brain,     "Be sure that the day is coming         "When Erin shall rise again     "She only of all the nations,         "Since in dust our temple lies,     "Has not our blood on our garments         "Has brought no tears to our eyes,     "He says, they prosper who love us         "Thy Erin at last shall rise."     I waited, watched for the blessing         Promised, oh so long ago,     I looked for the brilliant future         The end of the long drawn woe,     My hopes, with my years, Time the reaper,         Hath laughingly laid them low.     Oh Erin! my mother Erin!      Will "to be" repeat what has been?     Will your sons ever "shoulder to shoulder"         Be strong and united seen?     Will ever the foreign lilies         Blend with the nation's green?     For in other lands the peoples,         Quite forgetting ancient wrong,     Have blended and fused, becoming         Because of their union strong,     Leaving all old feuds and battles,     As themes for romance and song     From party's Promethean vulture,         When wilt thou get release?     When will the strife of races,         The strife of religions cease?     And the hearts of thy loving children         Mingle and be at peace?

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"It was in the early morning..."

"My Own Green Land" is a quintessential example of Nora Pembroke (Margaret Moran Dixon McDougall)'s signature style... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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