The Dedication to a Book of Stories Selected from the Irish Novelists
There was a green branch hung with many a bell | When her own people ruled this tragic Eire; | And from
its murmuring greenness, calm of Faery, | A Druid kindness, on all hearers fell. | | | | | It charmed away the merchant
from his guile, | And turned the farmers memory from his cattle, | And hushed in sleep the roaring ranks of
battle: | And all grew friendly for a little while. | | | | | Ah, Exiles wandering over lands and seas, | And planning,
plotting always that some morrow | May set a stone upon ancestral Sorrow! | I also bear a bell-branch full
of ease. | | | | | I tore it from green boughs winds tore and tossed | Until the sap of summer had grown weary! | I
tore it from the barren boughs of Eire, | That country where a man can be so crossed; | | | | | Can be so battered,
badgered and destroyed | That hes a loveless man: gay bells bring laughter | That shakes a mouldering
cobweb from the rafter; | And yet the saddest chimes are best enjoyed. | | | | | Gay bells or sad, they bring you
memories | Of half-forgotten innocent old places: | We and our bitterness have left no traces | On Munster
grass and Connemara skies. |
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By PanEris
using Melati.
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