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From this out, from a word I heard yesterday.' The next is very simple, and puts into more homely words the feeling of 'lonesomeness' that is looked upon as almost the worst of evils by the Irish countryman, as we see by his proverb: 'It is better to be quarreling than to be lonesome.' 'I would be lonesome in it,' is often the reason given for a refusal to go from bog or mountain cabin to some crowded place 'where there is not heed for one or love.' 'Oh! if there were in this world Any nice little place, To be my own, my own for ever, My own only, I would have great joy--great ease-- Beyond what I have, Without a place in the world where I can say: "This is my own." It's a pity for a man to know, And it's a pain, That there is no place in the world Where there is heed for him or love; That there is not in the world for him A heart or a hand To give help to him To the mering of the next world. 'It is hard and it is bitter, And a sharp grief, It is woe and it is pity, To be by oneself. It is nothing the way you are, To anyone at all. It is nothing the way you are, To yourself at last!' I suppose the following may be called a political poem, from its elusive reference to Home Rule. I was not sure on the point myself; for I thought the wearer of the 'blue cloak and birds' feathers,' must be a fine lady, perhaps laying enchantment on the fields. But I heard some one ask the _Craoibhin_ who he meant, and his answer was: 'I suppose I was thinking of an aide-de-camp':-- 'I am looking at my cows walking, What are you that would put me out of my luck? Can I not walk, can I not walk, can I not walk in my own fields? 'I will not always be turned backwards. If there is need to be humble to you, great is my grief, If I cannot walk, if I cannot walk, if I cannot walk in my own fields. 'It's little my respect, and it's little my desire, For your blue cloak, and your birds' feathers. Can I not walk, can I not walk, can I not walk in my own fields? 'The day is coming as it's easy to see, When there shall not be among us the ugly like of you. And each one shall be walking, and each one shall be walking, Wherever shall be his will and his own desire.' There are some love songs in the li
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