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Page:The Tricolour, Poems of the Irish Revolution.djvu/73

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THE FLAMING TONGUES OF WAR

To go to fight on foreign strand,
For foreign rights and foreign land?

The Lion's fangs have sought to kill
A Nation's soul, a Nation's will;
From tooth and claw thy wounded breast
Has held them safe, has held them blest.
About thy head great eagles are,
They fly with scream and storm of war,
Their shadows fall, we do not know
If they be friend,—if they be foe.

For Lion's roar we have no fears,
We fought him down the restless years.
We watch the Eagles in the sky,
Lest they should land—or pass us by.
But, yet beware! the Lion goes
To strike our friends—to charm our foes.
By hamlet small, by hill and dale
The creeping foe is on our trail;

His face is kind, his voice is bland,
He prates of faith and fatherland;
Shall we go forth to die and die
For Belgium's tear, and Serbia's sigh?
Oh, Volunteers, through field and town

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