Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
Americas: Vol. XXX. 1876–79.
Thomas Moore at St. Anns
By Thomas DArcy McGee (18251868)O
A poet from the farther shore
Framed as he went his solemn song,
And set it by the boatman’s oar.
From morning dawn to evening light;
Like nature’s chorister’s, his wing
And voice were only stilled at night.
For by the moon’s auspicious ray,
Like Philomela on her rose,
His song eclipsed the songs of day.
And quickly passed; but as he flew
Our river’s glorious song he heard,
His tongue was loosed,—he warbled too!
To be the poets of the land:
He nowhere found a nobler theme
Than you, ye favored, have at hand.
Not mid the classic Cyclades,
Not where the Persian sun-god smiles,
Found he more fitting theme than these.
Behold above there looketh forth
The star that lights the path of song,—
The constant star that loves the north!