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An Irish Crazy-Quilt: Smiles and tears, woven into song and story

Chapter 3: THE OLD BOREEN.
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About This Book

A collection of songs, ballads, sketches and short stories that portray rural life and political agitation in Ireland, alternating humor and sorrow. Poetic pieces celebrate local scenes, laments and patriotic anthems, while sketches and tales dramatize landlord-tenant struggles, emigration, clerical figures, and Fenian and Land League sentiment. Voice ranges from comic ballads and satire to solemn memorial odes and soldier songs. The volume mixes lyrical forms, sonnets, and narrative sketches to capture popular speech, community rituals, and social critique amid hardship and resistance.

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Title: An Irish Crazy-Quilt: Smiles and tears, woven into song and story

Author: Arthur M. Forrester

Release date: May 20, 2020 [eBook #62180]
Most recently updated: October 18, 2024

Language: English

Credits: Produced by Sonya Schermann, Chuck Greif and the Online
Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This
file was produced from images generously made available
by The Internet Archive)

*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AN IRISH CRAZY-QUILT: SMILES AND TEARS, WOVEN INTO SONG AND STORY ***

An Irish Crazy-Quilt.

SMILES AND TEARS, WOVEN INTO SONG AND STORY.


BY
ARTHUR M. FORRESTER.


BOSTON:
ALFRED MUDGE & SON PRINTERS, 24 FRANKLIN STREET.
1891.

 

Copyright,
1890,
By
ARTHUR M. FORRESTER.

 


TO THE

“FELONS” OF IRELAND,

THE BRAVE AND FAITHFUL FEW,

Who have been Exiled or Imprisoned or Executed

Because they Loved their Native Land more than
Home or Liberty or Life
,

This Volume

IS DEDICATED BY THE AUTHOR.

 

 

CONTENTS.

SONGS AND BALLADS.
 Page.
The Church of Ballymore7
The Old Boreen9
The Irish Schoolhouse11
Pat Murphy’s Cows13
Father Tom Malone16
You Can Guess18
Only!19
Songs of Innisfail20
The Lord of Kenmare32
An Old Irish Tune39
Harvey Duff45
Ivan Petrokoffsky52
The Emperor’s Ring54
Black Loris56
The Red Heart Daisy67
The Tide is Turning68
Our Own Again70
The Tale of a Tail71
The Seasick Sub-Commissioners75
Clare Constabulary Caione77
Clause Twenty-six78
Jenkins, M. P.80
Thady Malone81
Rory’s Reverie83
Our Land Shall be Free102
The Felons of Our Land111
An Official Valuation112
A Bewildered Boycotter113
A Complaint of Coercion115
O’Neil’s Address (Benburb)118
The Fenian’s Dream119
The Speaker’s Complaint126
Erin Machree128
Balfour’s Wish135
Our Cause136
Served Him Right138
Rapparee Song140
To the Landlords of Ireland141
Balfour Rejoices142
The Irish Brigade149
Faithful to the Last156
Fenian Battle Song158
The Grave of the Martyrs159
Death’s Victory160
The Green Flag at Fredericksburg161
The Flag of Our Land162
Hurrah for Liberty163
The Messenger165
John Bull’s Appeal175
The Story of a Bomb177
Avenging, Though Dim180
Christmas Dirge of London Police180
Ireland’s Prayer182
John Bull’s New Year183
Ready and Steady185
The Charge of the Guards193
An Address to Slaves195
The Lion’s Lamentation200
Memorial Ode to Irish Dead202
Song of King Alcohol209
Contrary Cognomens210
An Æsthetic Wooing211
The Drunkard’s Dream212
Constable X222
Lucifer’s Laboratory223
The Monopolist’s Moan224
With the Grand Army Veterans225
The Irish Soldier at Grant’s Grave228
Maine and Mayo229
The Priest with the Brogue238
Arab War Song240
The Linguist of the Liffey247
Peggy O’Shea250
The Boston Carrier’s Plaint253
New England’s Marksmen260
Calcraft and Price270
Entitled to a Raise272
The Postman’s Wooing273
Sonnets to a Shoemaker275
At the College Sports278
Mulrooney: A Trooper’s Tale286
STORIES AND SKETCHES.
Taming a Tiger22
Ryan’s Revenge34
Harvey Duff40
A Seditious Slide47
Who Shot Phlynn’s Hat?58
A Double Surprise86
Philipson’s Party103
That Traitor Timmins129
A Picturesque Penny-a-Liner144
Snooks151
Caledonian Candlesticks152
A Typical Trial168
Why Smithers Resigned186
Exploits of an Irish Reporter197
A Political Lesson Spoiled199
An Orange Oration205
Frederick’s Folly215
A Sandy Row Skirmish232
Hobbies in Our Block241
Not a John L. Sullivan244
A Windy Day at Cabra248
Apropos of the Census256
A Mixed Antiquarian261
Jones’s Umbrella263
Lessons in the French Drama265
A Commercial Crisis276
A Musical Revenge280
A Liar Laid Out282

 

AN IRISH CRAZY-QUILT.

THE CHURCH OF BALLYMORE.

I HAVE knelt in great cathedrals with their wondrous naves and aisles,
Whose fairy arches blend and interlace,
Where the sunlight on the paintings like a ray of glory smiles,
And the shadows seem to sanctify the place;
Where the organ’s tones, like echoes of an angel’s trumpet roll,
Wafted down by seraph wings from heaven’s shore—
They are mighty and majestic, but they cannot touch my soul
Like the little whitewashed church of Ballymore.
Its priest was plain and simple, and he scorned to hide his brogue
In accents that we might not understand,
But there was not in the parish such a renegade or rogue
As to think his words not heaven’s own command!
He seemed our cares and troubles and our sorrows to divide,
And he never passed the poorest peasant’s door—
In sickness he was with us, and in death still by our side—
God be with you, Father Tom, of Ballymore.
There’s a green graveyard behind it, and in dreams at night I see
Each little modest slab and grassy mound;
For my gentle mother’s sleeping ’neath the withered rowan tree,
And a host of kindly neighbors lie around!
The famine and the fever through our stricken country spread,
Desolation was about me, sad and sore,
So I had to cross the waters, in strange lands to seek my bread,
But I left my heart behind in Ballymore!
I am proud of our cathedrals—they are emblems of our love
To an ever-mighty Benefactor shown;
And when wealth and art and beauty have been given from above,
The devil should not have them as his own!
Their splendor has inspired me—but amidst it all I prayed
God to grant me, when life’s weary work is o’er,
Sweet rest beside my mother in the dear embracing shade
Of the little whitewashed church of Ballymore!

THE OLD BOREEN.

EMBROIDERED with shamrocks and spangled with daisies,
Tall foxgloves like sentinels guarding the way,
The squirrel and hare played bo-peep in its mazes,
The green hedgerows wooed it with odorous spray;
The thrush and the linnet piped overtures in it,
The sun’s golden rays bathed its bosom of green.
Bright scenes, fairest skies, pall to-day on my eyes,
For I opened them first on an Irish boreen!
But green fields were blighted and fair skies beclouded,
Stern frost and harsh rain mocked the poor peasant’s toil,
Ere they burst into blossom the buds were enshrouded,
The seed ere its birth crushed in merciless soil;
Wild tempests struck blindly, the landlord, less kindly,
Aimed straight at our hearts with a “death sentence” keen;
The blast spared our sheeling, which he, more unfeeling,
Left roofless and bare to affright the boreen.
A dirge of farewell through the hawthorn was pealing,
The wind seemed to stir branch and leaf with a sigh,
As, down on a tear-bedewed shamrock sod kneeling,
I kissed the old boreen a weeping good-by;
And vowed that should ever my patient endeavor
The grains of success from life’s harvest-field glean,
Where’er fortune found me, whatever ties bound me,
My eyes should be closed in the dear old boreen.
Ah! Fate has been cruel, in toil’s endless duel
With sickness and want I have earned only scars;
Life’s twilight is nearing—its day disappearing—
My weary soul sighs to escape through its bars;
But ere fields elysian shall dazzle its vision,
Grant, Heaven, that its flight may be winged through the scene
Of streamlet and wild-wood, the home of my childhood,
The grave of my kin, and the dear old boreen!

AN IRISH SCHOOLHOUSE.

UPON the rugged ladder rungs—whose pinnacle is Fame—
How often have ambitious pens deep graven Harvard’s name;
The gates of glory Cambridge men o’er all the world assail,
And rulers in the realm of thought look back with pride to Yale.
To no such Alma Mater can my Muse in triumph raise
Its Irish voice in canticles of gratitude and praise;
Yet still I hold in shrine of gold, and until death I will,
The little schoolhouse, thatched with straw, that lay behind the hill.
Perhaps—and yet ’tis hard to think—our boastful modern school
Might feel contempt for master, for his methods and his rule;
Would scorn his simple ways—and in the rapid march of mind
His patient face and thin gray locks would lag far, far behind.
No matter; he was all to us, our guide and mentor then;
He taught us how to face life’s fight with all the grit of men;
To honor truth, and love the right, and in the future fill
Our places in the world as he had done behind the hill.
He taught us, too, of Ireland’s past; her glories and her wrongs—
Our lessons being varied with the most seditious songs:
We were quite a nest of rebels, and with boyish fervor flung
Our hearts into the chorus of rebellion when we sung.
In truth, this was the lesson, above all, we conned so well
That some pursued the study in the English prison cell,
And others had to cross the seas in curious haste, but still
All living love to-day, as then, the school behind the hill.
The wind blows through the thatchless roof in stormy gusts to-day;
Around its walls young foxes now, in place of children, play;
The hush of desolation broods o’er all the country-side;
The pupils and their kith and kin are scattered far and wide.
But wheresoe’er one scholar on the face of earth may roam,
When in a gush of tears comes back the memory of home,
He finds the brightest picture limned by Fancy’s magic skill,
The little schoolhouse, thatched with straw, that lay behind the hill.

PAT MURPHY’S COWS.