[An Illustrated History of Ireland from AD 400 to 1800 by Mary Frances Cusack]@TWC D-Link book
An Illustrated History of Ireland from AD 400 to 1800

CHAPTER IX
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By noble and true-hearted men, faithful through centuries of persecution.

And loudly and nobly, though it be but faint to human ears, is that echo uttered also by the aged woman who lies down by the wayside to die in the famine years,[143] because she prefers the bread of heaven to the bread of earth, and the faith taught by Patrick to the tempter's gold.

By the emigrant, who, with broken heart bids a long farewell to the dear island home, to the old father, to the grey-haired mother, because his adherence to his faith tends not to further his temporal interest, and he must starve or go beyond the sea for bread.

Thus ever and ever that echo is gushing up into the ear of God, and never will it cease until it shall have merged into the eternal alleluia which the often-martyred and ever-faithful children of the saint shall shout with him in rapturous voice before the Eternal Throne.
[Illustration: ST.

PATRICK'S BELL.] [Illustration: CROMLECH, AT CASTLE MARY, CLOYNE.] FOOTNOTES: [125] _Authenticated_ .-- A copy of this ancient hymn, with a Latin and English translation, may be found in Petrie's _Essay on Tara_, p.


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