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Poems by Speranza

Chapter 225: O'CONNELL
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About This Book

The collection gathers lyrical and narrative poems that blend political passion, religious reflection, and romantic and mythic storytelling. Many pieces mourn famine and social injustice, portray martyrdom and national aspiration, and offer exhortations and supplications on behalf of the homeland. Other poems translate or adapt European sagas, medieval romances, and devotional hymns, while shorter lyrics record love, loss, memory, and spiritual longing. The volume alternates rousing public verse with intimate personal pieces, moving between direct civic address, elegiac lament, narrative ballad, and contemplative lyric, unified by moral intensity and rhetorical richness.


HIBERNIÆ LIBERATOR AD LIMINA APOSTOLORUM PERGENS GENOÆ OBDORMIVIT.


CROWNED with a liberated people's love,
Crowned by the Nations with eternal fame,
His great heart burning still with patriot-fire,
Tho' Death's pale shadow rested on his brow,
Forth went the mighty Chief from his loved Land,
'Mid the hushed reverence paid to dying Kings,
On his last pilgrimage; yearning to find rest
For the o'erwearied hero-heart and brain,
After great trials pass'd and triumphs won,
Within the Temple-City of the World.
But, faint with combats of a glorious life,
Tho' Freedom's hymns still murmured on his lips,
And his dim eyes still tracked the western Sun
Would rise on Ireland, but no more for him,
Seeking the gates of God's great Church on earth,
He found the gates of Heaven, and entered in.
There Angels met him with the conqueror's Palm,
And passing from the portal to the Throne,
Circled with golden glitter of their wings,
God crowned him Victor for his work well done!