| [Jan 30, 1847. |

|
The "Keen"* comes wailing on the wind, That sweeps o'er Erin's mountains blue; It chills the heart of Earl and hind-- It lends the land a ghastly hue! The song of death by Death is chanted! The dying bear the shroudless dead; Th' uncoffin'd clay a grave is granted-- The very worm averts his head.
Darkly proceed the famish'd cotters;
Slowly the gaunt procession wends-- |
And yet-- oh! paradox-- oh! shame!-- Oh! blind improvidence! The land Is of the best that ever came Forth from its mighty Maker's hand. Fertile and fair, it should have been The glory of the British crown; And now, behold the shudd'ring scene!-- The seedless fields-- the spectral town.
But Nature vindicates her God;
The "Keen" comes wailing on the blast, |
"Deaths here are daily increasing. Dr. Donovan and I are just this moment after returning from the village of South Reen, where we had to bury a body ourselves that was eleven days dead; and where do you think? In a kitchen garden. We had to dig the ground, or rather the hole, ourselves; no one would come near us, the smell was so intolerable. We are half dead from the work lately imposed on us."
* The Irish Lament for the Dead.