Page:Poems Acton.djvu/130

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120
POEMS.
Oh! woe to the day when that prayer denied it,
The long-open heart closed to hope's fervent trust;
And they lighted the fierce brand of crime, in their darkness,
For ever to raze their proud worth, to the dust.
For ever? no! Erin—thy ruins but seem such,
O er-grown by the rank weeds of faction and woe;
But tear them from round thee, and all thy lost glory
Will once more break forth from its fetters below.
All praise to the hands that are stretched forth to aid thee
In wiping the blood-stain from off thy green land;
And pity and scorn for the soul that in silence
Can look on thy children, a perishing band!
And ye, Erin's sons! quench the false flame that lights ye
To deeds which 'twere better deep darkness should hide;
For e'en amid sorrow, the cheer of the conscience
Is worth to the true heart, the whole world beside.
Ah, trust! and bright blessings will yet be above ye,
And joy, long unknown, may be traced on your brow;
And the cloud's "silver lining" may tell of the sunshine
To break through the gloom which encircles ye now!
R. A.