On the 5th of January,!878, three of the Irish political prisoners, who had been confined since!866, were set at liberty. The released men were received by their fellow-countrymen in London. “They are well,” said the report, ” but they look prematurely old.”
THEY are free at last! They can face the sun;
Their hearts now throb with the world’s pulsation;
Their prisons are open-their night is done;
‘Tis England’s mercy and reparation!
The years of their doom have slowly sped-
Their limbs are withered-their ties are riven;
Their children are scattered, their friends are dead-
But the prisons are open-the “crime” forgiven.
God! what a threshold they stand upon:
The world has passed on while they were buried;
In the glare of the sun they walk alone
On the grass-grown track where the crowd has hurried.
Haggard and broken and seared with pain,
They seek the remembered friends and places:
Men shuddering turn, and gaze again
At the deep-drawn lines on their altered faces.
What do they read on the pallid page?
What is the tale of these woeful letters?
A lesson as old as their country’s age,
Of a love that is stronger than stripes and fetters.
In the blood of the slain some dip their blade,
And swear by the stain the foe to follow:
But a deadlier oath might here be made,
On the wasted bodies and faces hollow.
Irishmen! You who have kept the peace-
Look on these forms diseased and broken:
Believe, if you can, that their late release,
When their lives are sapped, is a good-will token.
Their hearts are the bait on England’s hook;
For this are they dragged from her hopeless prison;
She reads her doom in the Nation’s book-
She fears the day that has darkly risen;
She reaches her hand for Ireland’s aid-
Ireland, scourged, contemned, derided;
She begs from the beggar her hate has made;
She seeks for the strength her guile divided.
She offers a bribe-ah, God above!
Behold the price of the desecration:
The hearts she has tortured for Irish love
She brings as a bribe to the Irish nation!
O, blind and cruel! She fills her cup
With conquest and pride, till its red wine splashes:
But shrieks at the draught as she drinks it up-
Her wine has been turned to blood and ashes.
We know her-our Sister! Come on the storm!
God send it soon and sudden upon her:
The race she has shattered and sought to deform
Shall laugh as she drinks the black dishonor.
(John Boyle O Reilly)
More Poetry from John Boyle O Reilly:
John Boyle O Reilly Poems based on Topics: Man, Love, God, Faces, World, Night, War & Peace, Liberty & Freedom, Pain, Friendship, Place- The Amber Whale: A Harpooneer's Story (John Boyle O Reilly Poems)
- Uncle Ned's Tale: An Old Dragoon's Story (John Boyle O Reilly Poems)
- Uncle Ned's Tales: How The Flag Was Saved (John Boyle O Reilly Poems)
- The Pilgrim's Fathers (John Boyle O Reilly Poems)
- The Statues In The Block (John Boyle O Reilly Poems)
- The Mutiny Of The Chains (John Boyle O Reilly Poems)
Readers Who Like This Poem Also Like:
Based on Topics: Love Poems, Man Poems, God Poems, World Poems, Night Poems, War & Peace Poems, Faces Poems, Friendship Poems, Place Poems, Pain Poems, Belief & Faith PoemsBased on Keywords: deep-drawn, sapped, pulsation, contemned, desecration, irishmen, reparation, fellow-countrymen, open-the