The Poetry Corner

The Three Roads

By Victor James Daley

There is a town in Ireland, A little town I know; Its girls have tender Irish eyes Beneath their brows of snow; And in the field around it The Fairy Hawthorns grow. O, the Hawthorn is a Queen And the daughter of a King, And amidst her branches green The sweet brown thrushes sing. And from that little city Three roads forever run And on those roads the people, The father and the son, The mother and the daughter, Walk till the day is done. O, the Hawthorn is a Queen And the daughter of a King, And amidst her branches green The thrushes sadly sing. One road runs to the seaport Where stately vessels lie American, Australian The weeping exiles cry, Farewell to Grave and Hearthstone! Dear Ireland - good-bye! O, the Hawthorn is a Queen And the daughter of a King, And amidst her branches green "Farewell!" the thrushes sing. One road it is a red, red road That road to England goes; The battle-drums are sounding, The trump of battle blows; And Ireland's sons go forth to fight Against Red England's foes. O, the Hawthorn is a Queen And the daughter of a King, And within her heart of green The mournful thrushes sing. One road it is a quiet road; They travel it full slow, Their eyes are filled with sorrow, The silent folk who go To where the Stones of Silence Are shining, row on row. O, the Hawthorn is a Queen And a Lady fair and grand, And the thrushes sing the keen Of the Dead - in Ireland.