Up from northern Ireland
To the holy island
Of Iona, seeking
An holy habitation,
You, Feredarius,
Were chosen the chief shepherd
Of the monastery
There in the Year of Our Lord
Eight hundred and sixty-three,
A baleful time when Viking
Northmen had turned Western lands
Into a reeking inferno
Of plundering, torture,
And death. Could you see then,
Through the eye of your soul,
A thousand years thence,
When the descendants
Of those same Norsemen,
By blood and by spirit,
Would wantonly invade
The Arcadian South
To repeat their acts
Of pillage, murder,
And sacrilege?
Forced to flee
The sacred isle, like Aeneas
You took with you holy things
To save them from unholy hands,
Carrying reverently
Upon your back the bones
Of your Holy Father
In the Faith, Columba.
The destructive raids
Of Yankee Northmen
Upon belovèd Dixie
Continue unabated,
But we have no shepherd
To guard our lives and
Precious patrimony.
Stand as bulwark
Between them and us,
Father Feredarius,
Together with
The Ever-Memorable
Columba, and pray
For us, that the Lord
Would deliver us
At last from their scourges.
--
Holy Ælfred the Great, King of England, South Patron, pray for us sinners at the Souð, unworthy though we are!
Anathema to the Union!
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