Mud hovels fringe the 'fair-green' of this town, A spot misnamed, at every season brown, O'erspread with countless man and beast to-day Which bellow, squeak, and shout, bleat, bray, and neigh. The 'jobbers' there, each more or less a rogue, Noisy or smooth, with each his various brogue, Cool wiry Dublin, Connaught's golden mouth, Blunt Northern, plaintive sing-song of the South, Feel cattle's ribs, or jaws of horses try For truth, since men's are very sure to lie, And shun with parrying blow and practised heed The rushing horns, the wildly prancing steed. The moisten'd penny greets with sounding smack The rugged palm, which smites the greeting back; Oaths fly, the bargain like a quarrel burns, And oft the buyer turns, and oft returns; Now mingle Sassenach and Gaelic tongue; On either side are slow concessions wrung; An anxious audience interfere; at last The sale is closed, and whisky binds it fast, In cave of quilting upon oziers bent, With many an ancient patch and breezy rent. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE SAND-MAN by PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR AN ANCIENT PROPHECY by PHILIP FRENEAU A WINTER PIECE by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH A SWING SONG by WILLIAM ALLINGHAM THE MAID VAR MY BRIDE by WILLIAM BARNES STANZAS by JOHN GARDINER CALKINS BRAINARD GILBERT: 2. THE WELCOME HOME by CHARLOTTE BRONTE THE WANDERER: 5. IN HOLLAND: DEATH-IN-LIFE by EDWARD ROBERT BULWER-LYTTON |