'FROM IRELAND'

part of the From Ireland web site©Dr. Jane Lyons

Thomas Osborne Davis Ballads & Poetry

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A Nation Once Again
A Rally for Ireland May 1689
Clares Dragoons
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Dungannon Convention, 1782
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Native Swords
Oh! The Marriage
Orange & Green will carry the day
Song of the Volunteers of 1782
The Banks of the Lee
The Penal Days
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Tones Grave
 
 

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 Tracing Your Irish Ancestors, Third Edition

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The Penal Days by Thomas Oborne Davis

Oh! Weep those days the penal days
When Ireland hopelessly complained.
Oh! Weep those days, the penal days,
When Godless persecution reigned;
When year by year,
For serf and peer,
Fresh cruelties were made by law,
And, filled with hate,
Our senate sate
To weld anew each fetter's flaw.
Oh! Weep those days, those penal days -
Their memory still on Ireland weighs.

They bribed the flock, they bribed the son,
To sell the priest and rob the sire;
Their dogs were taught alike to run
Upon the scent of wolf and friar.
Among the poor,
Or on the moor,
Were hid the pious and the true -
While traitor knave,
And recreant slave,
Had riches, rank and retinue;
And, exiled in those penal days,
Our banners over Europe blaze.

A stranger held the land and tower
Of many a noble fugitive;
No popish lord had lordly power,
The peasant scarce had leave to live:
Above his head
A ruined shed,
No tenure but a tyrant's wil -
Forbid to plead,
Forbid to read,
Disarmed, disfranchised, imbecile -
What wonder if our step betrays
The freedman born in penal days?

They're gone, they're gone, those penal days!
All creeds are equal in our isle:
Then grant, O Lord, thy plenteous grace,
Our ancient feuds to reconcile.
Let all atone
For blood and groan,
For dark revenge and open wrong:
Let all unite
For Ireland's right,
And drown our griefs in freedoms song:
Till time shall veil in twilight haze,
The memory of those penal days.

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©Dr. Jane Lyons