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PAGE 2

The Three Christmas Waits
by [?]

“Although I’m hold and black,
My hanguish is most great;
Great Prince, O call me back,
And I vill be your Vait!
And never no more vill break the Lor,
As I did in ‘Forty-eight.”

The tailer thus did close
(A pore old blackymore rogue),
When a dismal gent uprose,
And spoke with Hirish brogue:
“I’m Smith O’Brine, of Royal Line,
Descended from Rory Ogue.

“When great O’Connle died,
That man whom all did trust,
That man whom Henglish pride
Beheld with such disgust,
Then Erin free fixed eyes on me,
And swoar I should be fust.

“‘The glorious Hirish Crown,’
Says she, ‘it shall be thine:
Long time, it’s wery well known,
You kep it in your line;
That diadem of hemerald gem
Is yours, my Smith O’Brine.

“‘Too long the Saxon churl
Our land encumbered hath;
Arise my Prince, my Earl,
And brush them from thy path:
Rise, mighty Smith, and sveep ’em vith
The besom of your wrath.’

“Then in my might I rose,
My country I surveyed,
I saw it filled with foes,
I viewed them undismayed;
‘Ha, ha!’ says I, ‘the harvest’s high,
I’ll reap it with my blade.’

“My warriors I enrolled,
They rallied round their lord;
And cheafs in council old
I summoned to the board–
Wise Doheny and Duffy bold,
And Meagher of the Sword.

“I stood on Slievenamaun,
They came with pikes and bills;
They gathered in the dawn,
Like mist upon the hills,
And rushed adown the mountain side
Like twenty thousand rills.

“Their fortress we assail;
Hurroo! my boys, hurroo!
The bloody Saxons quail
To hear the wild Shaloo:
Strike, and prevail, proud Innesfail,
O’Brine aboo, aboo!

“Our people they defied;
They shot at ’em like savages,
Their bloody guns they plied
With sanguinary ravages:
Hide, blushing Glory, hide
That day among the cabbages!

“And so no more I’ll say,
But ask your Mussy great.
And humbly sing and pray,
Your Majesty’s poor Wait:
Your Smith O’Brine in ‘Forty-nine
Will blush for ‘Forty-eight.”