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Classic and Contemporary Poetry


BRIGHIDIN BAN MO STOR (FAIR YOUNG BRIDE) by EDWARD WALSH

First Line: I AM A WANDERING MINSTREL MAN
Last Line: BRIGHIDIN BAN MO STOR.

I AM a wandering minstrel man,
And Love my only theme,
I've strayed beside the pleasant Bann,
And eke the Shannon's stream;
I've piped and played to wife and maid
By Barrow, Suir, and Nore,
But never met a maiden yet
Like Brighidin ban mo stor.

My girl hath ringlets rich and rare,
By Nature's fingers wove --
Loch-Carra's swan is not so fair
As is her breast of love;
And when she moves, in Sunday sheen,
Beyond our cottage door,
I'd scorn the high-born Saxon queen
For Brighidin ban mo stor.

It is not that thy smile is sweet,
And soft thy voice of song --
It is not that thou fliest to meet
My comings lone and long!
But that doth rest beneath thy breast
A heart of purest core,
Whose pulse is known to me alone,
Brighidin ban mo stor.



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