Thomas Osborne Davis
Edited by T. W. Rolleston
Whole text
-  p.363
- His kiss is sweet, his word is kind,
 His love is rich to me;
 I could not in a palace find
 A truer heart than he.
 The eagle shelters not his nest
 From hurricane and hail,
 More bravely than he guards my breast—
 The Boatman of Kinsale.
- The wind that round the Fastnet sweeps
 Is not a whit more pure—
 The goat that down Cnoc Sheehy leaps
 Has not a foot more sure.
 No firmer hand nor freer eye
 E'er faced an autumn gale—
 De Courcy's heart is not so high—
 The Boatman of Kinsale.  p.364
- The brawling squires may heed him not,
 The dainty stranger sneer—
 But who will dare to hurt our cot
 When Myles O'Hea is here?
 The scarlet soldiers pass along;
 They'd like, but fear to rail;
 His blood is hot, his blow is strong—
 The Boatman of Kinsale.
- His hooker's in the Scilly van
 When seines are in the foam;
 But money never made the man,
 Nor wealth a happy home.
 So, blest with love and liberty,
 While he can trim a sail,
 He'll trust in God, and cling to me—
 The Boatman of Kinsale.
The Boatman of Kinsale
Air: An Cota Caol
Document details
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File description
Title statement
Title (uniform): The Boatman of Kinsale
Author: Thomas Osborne Davis
Editor: T. W. Rolleston
Responsibility statement
Electronic edition compiled by: Beatrix Färber
Proof corrections by: Beatrix Färber and Olan Daly
Edition statement
1. First draft, revised and corrected.
Extent: 760 words
Publication statement
Publisher: CELT: Corpus of Electronic Texts: a project of University College Cork
Address: College Road, Cork, Ireland—http://www.ucc.ie/celt
Date: 2012
Distributor: CELT online at University College, Cork, Ireland.
CELT document ID: E850004-023
Availability: Available with prior consent of the CELT programme for purposes of academic research and teaching only.
Source description
Source
- First published in the Nation on 16 November 1844.
Other writings by Thomas Davis
- Thomas Davis, Essays Literary and Historical, ed. by D. J. O'Donoghue, Dundalk 1914.
- Sir Charles Gavan Duffy (ed.), Thomas Davis, the memoirs of an Irish patriot, 1840-1846. 1890. [Reprinted entitled 'Thomas Davis' with an introduction of Brendan Clifford. Millstreet, Aubane Historical Society, 2000.]
- Thomas Davis: selections from his prose and poetry. [Edited] with an introduction by T. W. Rolleston. London and Leipzig: T. Fisher Unwin (Every Irishman's Library). 1910. [Published in Dublin by the Talbot press, 1914.]
- Thomas Osborne Davis, Literary and historical essays 1846. Reprinted 1998, Washington, DC: Woodstock Books.
- Essays of Thomas Davis. New York, Lemma Pub. Corp. 1974, 1914 [Reprint of the 1914 ed. published by W. Tempest, Dundalk, Ireland, under the title 'Essays literary and historical'.]
- Thomas Davis: essays and poems, with a centenary memoir, 1845-1945. Dublin, M.H. Gill and Son, 1945. [Foreword by an Taoiseach, Éamon de Valera.]
- Angela Clifford, Godless colleges and mixed education in Ireland: extracts from speeches and writings of Thomas Wyse, Daniel O'Connell, Thomas Davis, Charles Gavan Duffy, Frank Hugh O'Donnell and others. Belfast: Athol, 1992.
Davis, Thomas Osborne (1910). ‘The Boatman of Kinsale’. In: Thomas Davis: Selections from his prose and poetry. Ed. by T. W. Rolleston. 363—364. Dublin and London: The Talbot Press.
You can add this reference to your bibliographic database by copying or downloading the following:
@incollection{E850004-023,
  author 	 = {Thomas Osborne Davis},
  title 	 = {The Boatman of Kinsale},
  editor 	 = {T. W. Rolleston},
  booktitle 	 = {Thomas Davis: Selections from his prose and poetry},
  publisher 	 = {The Talbot Press},
  address 	 = {Dublin and London},
  date 	 = {1910},
  note 	 = {363—364}
}
Encoding description
Project description: CELT: Corpus of Electronic Texts
Editorial declarations
Correction: Text has been proof-read twice and parsed.
Normalization: The electronic text represents the edited text.
Quotation: There is no direct speech.
Hyphenation: Soft hyphens are silently removed. When a hyphenated word (and subsequent punctuation mark) crosses a page-break, this break is marked after the completion of the word (and punctuation mark).
Segmentation: div0=the poem. Page-breaks are marked pb n="".
Standard values: Dates are standardized in the ISO form yyyy-mm-dd.
Interpretation: Names of persons, places or organisations are not tagged.
Profile description
Creation: by Thomas Davis
Date: 1844
Language usage
- The text is in English. (en)
Keywords: literary; poetry; 19c
Revision description
(Most recent first)
- 2012-05-08: Header created; file proofed (2), file parsed; SGML and HTML files created. (ed. Beatrix Färber)
- 2012-05-03: File proofed (1); basic structural markup applied. (ed. Olan Daly)
- 1996: Text captured by scanning. (ed. Audrey Murphy)