Volume Ii Part 67 (2/2)
Francis A. Fahy [1854-
LITTLE MARY Ca.s.sIDY
Oh, 'tis little Mary Ca.s.sidy's the cause of all my misery, And the raison that I am not now the boy I used to be; Oh, she bates the beauties all that we read about in history, And sure half the country-side is as hot for her as me.
Travel Ireland up and down, hill, village, vale and town-- Fairer than the Cailin Donn, you're looking for in vain; Oh, I'd rather live in poverty with little Mary Ca.s.sidy Than emperor, without her, be of Germany or Spain.
'Twas at the dance at Darmody's that first I caught a sight of her, And heard her sing the ”Droighnean Donn,” till tears came in my eyes, And ever since that blessed hour I'm dreaming day and night of her; The devil a wink of sleep at all I get from bed to rise.
Cheeks like the rose in June, song like the lark in tune, Working, resting, night or noon, she never leaves my mind; Oh, till singing by my cabin fire sits little Mary Ca.s.sidy, 'Tis little aise or happiness I'm sure I'll ever find.
What is wealth, what is fame, what is all that people fight about To a kind word from her lips or a love-glance from her eye?
Oh, though troubles throng my breast, sure they'd soon go to the right-about If I thought the curly head of her would rest there by and by.
Take all I own to-day, kith, kin, and care away, s.h.i.+p them all across the say, or to the frozen zone: Lave me an orphan bare--but lave me Mary Ca.s.sidy, I never would feel lonesome with the two of us alone.
Francis A. Fahy [1854-
THE ROAD
”Now where are ye goin',” ses I, ”wid the shawl An' cotton umbrella an' basket an' all?
Would ye not wait for McMullen's machine, Wid that iligant instep befittin' a queen?
Oh, you wid the wind-soft gray eye wid a wile in it, You wid the lip wid the troublesome smile in it, Sure, the road's wet, ivery rain-muddied mile in it--”
”Ah, the Saints'll be kapin' me petticoats clean!”
”But,” ses I, ”would ye like it to meet Clancy's bull, Or the tinks poachin' rabbits above Slieve-na-coul?
An' the ford at Kilmaddy is big wid the snows, An' the whisht Little People that wear the green close, They'd run from the bog to be makin' a catch o' ye, The king o' them's wishful o' weddin' the match o' ye, 'Twould be long, if they did, ere ye lifted the latch o' ye--”
”What fairy's to touch her that sings as she goes!”
”Ah, where are ye goin', ses I, ”wid the shawl, An' the gray eyes a-dreamin' beneath it an' all?
The road by the mountain's a long one, depend Ye'll be done for, alannah, ere reachin' the end; Ye'll be bate wid the wind on each back-breakin' bit on it, Wet wid the puddles and lamed wid the grit on it,-- Since lonesome ye're layin' yer delicut fit on it--”
”Sure whin's a road lonesome that's stepped wid a friend?”
That's stepped wid a friend?
Who did Bridgy intend?
Still 'twas me that went wid her right on to the end!
Patrick R. Chalmers [18
<script>