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The Lament Of Maeldune

Over the hills of heather
  Wakens the windy morn,
In the island of Inisfalen
  Where my fathers were bred and born.
Round me, grey in the glooming,
  The though of the troublous seas,
Spangled with spray far flying,
  Lashed white by a boisterous breeze.

And oh! But it's long I've left it,
  Following fame and strife, –
For great it grew in my bosom,
  The pride and the love of life, –
Since I went from the misty meadows
  High up on the hill that lie,
Gladly to greet all dangers,
  Gladly to dare and die.

Perchance, in the land I long for,
  Round the rooms that I loved of old,
The winds are wailing in sorrow
  In the halls of my forebears bold.
And it's oh for the scent of the seaweed,
  In the land that I loved of yore,
In the island of Inisfalen,
  Grey billow and shingled shore.

Notes

From THE FOREMOST TRAIL, by Cicely Fox Smith, published by Sampson Low, Marston & Co., London, UK, © 1899, pp. 76-77.

Contributed by Ian "Nobby" Dye of Bristol, UK.

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