[Note: Air--``The Brown Irish Girl;'' Or, ``By the lake whose gloomy shore.''] Men who for the land do toil, Humble brethren of our soil, Charms or spells we did not wind O'er your independent mind; Priestly frown, or bigot threat, From your priests ye have not met; True, we call'd ye forth--what then! 'Twas as brother--Irishmen! By the love between us grown At the desart's storm--blanch'd stone, When, sore troubled and afraid, There we knelt, and there we pray'd,--
By its memory, old and rare, Since our straw--thatch'd house of prayer, Of the rude hill part and prize, On the rude hill dared arise-- By its great increase, since we Rear'd our own sheds, lowlily, Near, and like, and still, around, No friends but each other found-- By the love such lot accords-- Bedside comforts, fireside words-- By that love, in Ireland's name, We did call ye, and ye came!