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The clanking chain they're doomed to drag, In torture day'and,night. Becaore. around their own green flag, They battled Tor the right ! If marshalled hosts had followed them Instead of Faltered bands . They would have grasped the ocean gem' From England's robber hands; And heaven. with approving snide, Wouldbless the noble deed, • That gave new life to Eijn's isle, - Matadiled Millions freed! Then blame them not because they- failed to freedom's holy fight, For they Were men that never quailed Before the tyrant's m'ght They were not crouching coward shaves— They would not minions be; And facing dungeons, gibbets, graves - . They struggle to be free! Alai, the star of freedomed'paled, And set in'&eper gloom, And they who first its beaming hailed Bove met the " felons" doom; - And now within the prison cell - [ Thole , ooble,'thring braves ' Yearn, for the home they love so well, Beyond the rolling waves Oh, ye who dwell in this free land, Heed sympathy's kind voice ; Reach out to them a willing hand, . And bid their hearts rejoice ! While Earsuth, by our generous aid, Escapes a !! traitor's' doom, Let not the star of Erin fade Above-the " felon's' tomb. g 7 The following beautiful limes are furnished by' muter stroke of Lord By rom's pea: _ s s • 'Till sweet to hear. Wiaight oo the Woe and moonlit t mead oar of Adria's gondolier, , By datance mellow'd, o'er the waterssweep; ?rennet to see the evening star_appear; TM sweet to listen as the night•winds creep ram lent to sweet to vie , ?" on high Tim rainbow, based on ocean, open the sky; Trsiweet to hear the watch-dog's honest. lark &y deep-mouth'd welcome es we draw near home; %sweet to know there is an.eye will mark Om coming and look brighter when we come ; 'Ts to sweet to be awukedd by the lark, Or lord by falling waters; sweet the hum Nimes, the voice of girls, the song of birds; I hop of children, and their earliest. words. Swot is the vintage when the showering grapes In Bacchanal profusion reel to earth Forple and gushing; sweet are our escapes • From civic revelry*rural mirth ; Sweet to the miser are • his glittering heaps; - Sweet to the father is his first-born s birth; Sint is revenge—especially to women. Pillage to soilden prae.money to seamen. * * 'Thiweet to win, no matter how, cues hinreill IBr blood or ink; 'tis sweet to put end To crib; 'tis sometimes sweet to hare our quar els, - Particularly with a tiresome friend; Sweet is old wine in bottles, ale in barrels; Dew is the helplen . creature we defend Ago,hat the world; and dear the schoolboy yet lye:Die forget, there we are forgot. Bs Kind to thecOld; Es kind to those litho are in the autumn of life, for thou knowest not what sufferings they nuty hare endured, or how much it may still be their portal to bear. Are they querulous ' c unreasonable ? Allow not thine unger to iisdie against them ; rebuke them not, for doubtless inapy and severe have been the crus e, anittials of earlier years; and perchanee heir dispositions, while in the springtime slf 'de, where more gentle and flexible thari thine ott Do they require aid.frt.m thee Then_ redder it cheerfully, and. forget not that the. tittenmy come when thou mayst desire the este assistance from others, that now thou headrest unto them. Do all that is needful tr r the old, anti do it with alacrity, And 'Oink hoot hard if circa is required at thine hand, leg when age has set its seal on THY brow: tad ft led thy limbs with trembling,- 'others lady wait upon thee unwillingly, and feel re- - hind when the cuffin-lid hasd thy ce covere f