When Erin First Rose, by William Drennan
From The Cabinet of Irish Literature, Volume 2, edited by Charles A. Read
When Erin First Rose
When Erin first rose from the dark swelling flood,
God bless'd the
green island and saw it was good;
The em'rald of Europe, it sparkled
and shone,
In the ring of the world the most precious stone.
In her
sun, in her soil, in her station thrice blest,
With her back towards
Britain, her face to the
West,
Erin stands proudly insular, on her steep shore,
And strikes her high
harp 'mid the ocean's deep
roar.
But when its soft tones seem to mourn and to
weep,
The dark chain of silence is thrown o'er the deep;
At the thought of
the past the tears gush from
her eyes,
And the pulse of her heart makes her white bosom
rise.
O! sons of green Erin, lament o'er the time
When religion was war, and
our country a crime,
When man in God's image inverted his plan,
And
moulded his God in the image of man.
When the int'rest of state wrought the general woe,
The stranger a
friend, and the native a foe;
While the mother rejoic'd o'er her
children oppressed,
And clasp'd the invader more close to her breast.
When with pale for
the body and pale for the soul,
Church and state joined in compact to
conquer
the whole;
And as Shannon was stained with Milesian blood,
Ey'd each other askance
and pronounced it was good.
By the groans that ascend from your forefathers'
grave
For their country thus left to the brute and the
slave,
Drive the demon of bigotry home to his den,
And where Britain made
brutes now let Erin
make men.
Let my sons like the leaves of the shamrock unite,
A partition of sects
from one footstalk of right,
Give each his full share of the earth and
the sky,
Nor fatten the slave where the serpent would die.
Alas! for poor Erin that some are still seen,
Who would dye the grass
red from their hatred to
green;
Yet, oh! when you're up, and they're down, let
them live,
Then yield them that mercy which they would
not give.
Arm of Erin, be strong! but be gentle as brave;
And uplifted to strike,
be still ready to save;
Let no feeling of vengeance presume to defile
The cause of, or men of, the Emerald Isle.
The cause it is good, and the men they are true,
And the Green shall
outlive both the Orange and
Blue.
And the triumphs of Erin her daughters shall
share
With the full swelling chest, and the fair flowing
hair.
Their bosoms heave high for the worthy and brave,
But no coward shall
rest in that soft-swelling wave;
Men of Erin! awake, and make haste to
be blest!
Rise! arch of the ocean, and queen of the West!
See also:-
Two
Ulster Patriots (Dr William Drennan and Mrs Martha McTier)
Other poems by William
Drennan:-
The Wake of
William Orr
O
Sweeter
Than the Fragrant Flower
The
Wild Geese
My
Father
A
Song from
the Irish
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