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TO Rathlin’s Isle I chanced to sail, |
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When summer breezes softly blew, |
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And there I heard so sweet a tale, |
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That oft I wished it could be true. |
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They said, at eve, when rude winds sleep, |
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And hushed is every turbid swell, |
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A mermaid rises from the deep, |
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And sweetly tunes her magic shell. |
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And while she plays, rock, dell, and cave |
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In dying falls the sound retain, |
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As if some choral spirits gave |
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Their aid to swell her witching strain. |
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Then summoned by that dulcet note, |
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Uprising to the admiring view, |
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A fairy island seems to float |
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With tints of many a gorgeous hue. |
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And glittering fanes and lofty towers |
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All on this fairy isle are seen; |
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And waving trees and shady bowers, |
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With more than mortal verdure green. |
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And as it moves, the western sky |
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Glows with a thousand varying rays; |
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And the calm sea, tinged with each dye, |
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Seems like a golden flood of blaze. |
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They also say, if earth or stone |
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From verdant Erin’s hallowed land |
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Were on this magic island thrown, |
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Forever fixed it then would stand. |
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But when for this some little boat |
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In silence ventures from the shore, |
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The mermaid sinks, hushed is the note, |
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The fairy isle is seen no more. |