Bodenstown
Churchyard
Thomas
Davis
(1814-1845),
In
Bodenstown
churchyard
there is
a green
grave, And
wildly
around
it the
winter
winds
rave; Small
shelter
I ween
are the
ruined
walls
there When the
storm
sweeps
down on
the
plains
of
Kildare.
Once I
lay on
that sod
it lies
over
Wolfe
Tone And
thought
how he
perished
in
prison
alone, His
friends
unavenged
and his
country
unfreed "Oh,
bitter,"
I cried,
"is the
patriots
meed.
"For in
him the
heart of
a woman
combined With
heroic
spirit
and a
governing
mind A martyr
for
Ireland,
his
grave
has no
stone His name
seldom
named,
and his
virtues
unknown."
I was
woke
from my
dream by
the
voices
and
tread Of a
band who
came
into the
home of
the
dead; They
carried
no
corpse,
and they
carried
no
stone, And they
stopped
when
they
came to
the
grave of
Wolfe
Tone.
There
were
students
and
peasants,
the wise
and the
brave, And an
old man
who knew
him from
cradle
to
grave, And
children
who
thought
me
hard-hearted,
for they On that
sanctified
sod were
forbidden
to play.
But the
old man,
who saw
I was
mourning
there,
said: "We
come,
sir, to
weep
where
young
Wolfe
Tone is
laid, And
we're
going to
raise
him a
monument,
too A plain
one, yet
fit for
the
simple
and
true."
My heart
overflowed,
and I
clasped
his old
hand, And I
blessed
him, and
blessed
every
one of
his
band: "Sweet,
sweet
tis to
find
that
such
faith
can
remain To the
cause
and the
man so
long
vanquished
and
slain."
In
Bodenstown
churchyard
there is
a green
grave, And
freely
around
it let
winter
winds
rave Far
better
they
suit him
the ruin
and
gloom Till
Ireland,
a
nation,
can
build
him a
tomb.
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