Contents
List of Illustrations
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{1} 

A SONG OF THE OPEN ROAD
AND OTHER VERSES

{2} 

{3} 

{4} 

{5} 

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A  SONG OF  THE
OPEN ROAD AND
OTHER    VERSES
By   Louis   J.   McQuilland

With a Proem in Verse by “G. K. C.”
A Preface by CECIL CHESTERTON
And   an  Impression   of  the  Author
and   Three   Decorative   Drawings  by
D A V I D   W I L S O N

HEATH CRANTON, LIMITED
FLEET LANE, LONDON
{6}

NOTE

Some of the poems in this volume appeared in the “Spectator,” “VanityFair,” “The New Witness,” “The Sketch” and “The Gypsy.” Several of theshorter verses were originally published in the “Daily News,” the“Sunday Pictorial” and the “Sunday Herald.” Messrs. Boosey & Co., 295Regent Street, possess the sole musical rights of the lyric, “When ISail to the Fortunate Islands.”

All rights reserved.

{7}

BALLADE TO AN IRISHMAN

To L. J. McQ.

TO verse and to the long ago,
The game we played at, pretty dears,
When some of us were clever (oh!)
And all of us were Modern (Cheers)
When, Pioneers, O Pioneers,
Stuck in the mud in various ways—
I drink to Ireland down the years,
To thine, and mine, and better days.
Even then, at least we did not go
With them that lent their lengthy ears,
To Pigott, Carson, nark and Co.,
Not then preferred the snivelling sneers
Of damned and putrid profiteers
(If I may be allowed the phrase),
To justice and the great arrears,
To thine and mine and better days.{8}
And now St. George’s shield can show,
Not shamed, with them that were his peers,
And on us too such daybreak glow
...

BU KİTABI OKUMAK İÇİN ÜYE OLUN VEYA GİRİŞ YAPIN!


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