FAREWELL, O Patrick Sarsfield, may luck be on your path!
Your camp is broken up, your work is marred for years;
But you go to kindle into flame the King of Frances wrath,
Though you leave sick Eire in tears
Och, ochone!
May the white sun and moon rain glory on your head,
All hero as you are, and holy man of God!
To you the Saxons owe a many an hour of dread
In the land you have often trod
Och, ochone!
The Son of Mary guard, and bless you to the end!
Tis altered is the time when your legions were astir,
When at Cullen you were hailed as conqueror and friend,
And you crossed Narrow-water near Birr,
Och, ochone!
Ill journey to the north, over mount, moor, and wave;
Twas there I first beheld drawn up, in file and line,
The brilliant Irish hosts; they were bravest of the brave.
But alas, they scorned to combine
Och, ochone!
I saw the royal Boyne when his billows flashed with blood
I fought at Graine Og, when a thousand horsemen fell;
On the dark empurpled plain of Aughrim, too, I stood,
On the plain by Tubberdonnys well
Och, ochone!
To the heroes of Limerick, the City of the Fights,
Be my best blessing borne on the wings of the air;
We had card-playing there oer our camp fires at night,
And the Word of Life, too, and prayer
Och, ochone!
But for you, Londerderry, may plague smite and slay
Your people! May ruin desolate you stone by stone!
Through you theres many a gallant youth lies coffinless today
With the winds for mourners alone
Och, ochone!
I clomb the high hill on a fair summer noon,
And saw the Saxons muster, clad in armour blinding bright:
Oh, rage withheld my hand, or gunsman and dragoon
Should have supped with Satan that night!
Och, ochone!
How many a noble soldier, how many a cavalier,
Careered along this road, seven fleeting weeks ago,
With silver-hilted sword, with matchlock and with spear,
Who now, mavrone! lieth low
Och, ochone!
All hail to thee, Beinn Eidir but ah, on thy brow
I see a limping soldier, who battled and who bled
Last year in the cause of the Stuart, though now
The worthy is begging his bread
Och, ochone!
And Diarmid oh, Diarmid he perished in the strife;
His head it was spiked upon a halberd high;
His colours they were trampled: he had no chance of life
If the Lord God Himself stood by!
Och, ochone!
But most, oh my woe I lament and lament
For the ten valient heroes who dwelt nigh the Nore,
And my three blessed brothers; they left me and went
To the wars, and returned no more
Och, ochone!
On the bridge of the Boyne was our first overthrow;
By Slaney the next, for we battled without rest;
The third was at Aughrim. O Eire! thy woe
Is a sword in my bleeding breast
Och, ochone!
Oh, the roof above our heads, it was barbarously fired,
While the black Orange guns blazed and bellowed around!
And as volley followed volley, Colonel Mitchel inquired
Whether Lucan still stood his ground?
Och, ochone!
But OKelly still remains, to defy and to toil,
He has memories that hell wont permit him to forget,
And a sword that will make the blue blood flow like oil
Upon many an Aughrim yet!
Och, ochone!
And I never shall believe that my fatherland can fall
With the Burkes, and the Dukes, and the son of Royal James,
And Talbot, the captain, and Sarsfield above all,
The beloved of damsels and dames
Och, ochone!
A Farewell To Patrick Sarsfield, Earl Of Lucan
written byJames Clarence Mangan
© James Clarence Mangan