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Homesick

I’€™ve lit the Christmas candle,
As we used to long ago
When it shone through cabin windows
On Holly-hedge and snow.
In this fine new house they’€™ve built me
That is furnished rich and fair–
But I’€™m hearing now the breakers rolling round the cliffs of Moher,
And my heart is aching, aching for a breath of Irish air.
 
The wren boys on St. Stephen’€™s Day.
Went singin’€™ up and down
With their poor dead wren and thorn bush,
I heard them through the town.
But to-night down lighted city streets,
I hear the distant band,
And when’€™er they play '€˜our own’€™ hymns or tune of dear old Ireland,
The poor old foolish heart of me is in another land.
 
‘€˜Twas a lonely hillside chapel,
Where we tramped to midnight Mass,
With the flaring lights we carried
Throwing shadows on the grass.
But to-night my boy will drive me
In his grand new limousine,
And he’€™ll wrap my furs around me, proudly caring for his Mother,
And I’€™ll ride to the Cathedral just as grand as any queen.
 
Ah! No, I’€™m not repinin’€™,
And I love this wide new land,
And I’€™m proud to see the childer
Growin’€™ prosperous and grand,
But roots strike deep in Irish soil,
Old memories are sweet,
And to-night my heart is yearnin’€™ for the cabin I was born in,
And I smell the reek of turf-smoke driftin’€™ up the city streets.
Other works by Alice Guerin Crist...



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