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Broadside ballad entitled 'Poor Irish Stranger'

Transcription

POOR

IRISH STRANGER

Pity the fate of a poor Irish stranger,
That wanders so far from his home,
That sighs for protection from want, woe, and danger,
That knows not from which way for to roam.
Yet I'll never return to Hibernia's green bowers,
For tyranny tramples the sweetest of flowers,
That once gave me comfort in loneliest hours?
Now they are gone I shall ne'er see them more.


With wonder I gazed on yon lofty building,
As in grandeur I rose from its lord,
But soon I beheld my fair garden yielding
The choicest of fruit for his foe.
But, where is my father's lone cottage of clay,
Wherein I' ve spent many a long day,
Alas ! has his lordship conniv'd it away ?
Yes, it is gone, I shall never see it more.


When nature was seen in the sloe bush and bramble,
All smiling in beautiful bloom,
Over the fields without danger, I often
Did ramble amidst their perfume ;
I have wranged through the woods where the gay feather'd
throng
Joyfully sung their loud echoing song?
These days then of summer passed sweetly along,
Now they're gone?I shall ne'er see them more !


When the sloe and the berries hung ripe on the bushes
I have gathered them off without harm?
I have gone to the field and shorn the green rushes,
Preparing for winter's cold storm !
Along with my friends telling tales of delight,
Beguiling the hours of the long winter's night,
Those days gave me pleasure?I could them invite ;
Now they're gone, I shall ne'er see them more.


Oh, Erin ! oh, Erin ! it grieves me to ponder
The wrongs of thy injurned isle !
Of thy sons may a thousand from home do wander
On shores far away an exile !
But give me the power to cross the main,
Calumbia might yield me some shelter from pain,
I am only lamenting whilst here I remain,
For the boys I shall ne'er see again.


Sold by JAMES LINDSAY, Printer and Wholesale
Stationer, &c., 9 King Street, (off Trongate,) Glas-
gow.          Upwards of 5,000 sorts always on hand ;
also, a great variety of Picture-Books, Song-Books,
Histories, &c. Shops and Hawkers supplied on
Liberal Terms.

Hand-Bills, Circulars, Invoices, Business and Fancy
Cards, Large Posting Bills, Society Articles, Pamph-
lets, & Letter-Press Printing of every description,
neatly and expeditiously executed on Moderate Terms.
Printing Office, 28 Nelson Street and 56 Trongate.

43

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Probable date of publication: 1852-1859   shelfmark: L.C.Fol.178.A.2(050)
Broadside ballad entitled 'Poor Irish Stranger'
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