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1876–1925

KITTY O'NEIL

Norah Mary Holland

O a bit of a dance in an Irish street — Hogan was there, and Hennessy, Many a colleen fair and sweet, And Kitty O'Neil she danced with me;

Kitty O'Neil, with eyes of brown, And feet as light as the flakes o’ snow. Was it last year, O Kitty aroon, Or was it a hundred years ago?

Hogan is out on a Texan plain, Hennessy fell in Manila fight, And I — I am back in New York again In my old arm-chair at the Club to-night;

And Kitty O'Neil — the snow lies white On the turf above her across the sea, And stranger colleens are dancing light Where Kitty O'Neil once danced with me.

O the Antrim glens and the thrushes’ song, And the hedges white with blossoming may, Many a colleen tripping along, But none so fair as the one away:

“Musha, God save you!” I to them say, “God save you kindly!” they answer me; I shiver and wake, in the dawning grey, And Kitty O'Neil lies over the sea.

O a bit of a dance in an Irish street — Hogan was there, and Hennessy, Many a colleen fair and sweet, And Kitty O'Neil she danced with me;

Kitty O'Neil, with eyes of brown, And feet as light as the flakes of snow. Was it last year, O Kitty aroon, Or was it a hundred years ago?

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KITTY O'NEIL · Norah Mary Holland · Poetry Cove