The author of these heart--touching lines is a Queenslander of Welsh derivation. Sir Herbert Warren, K. C. V. O., of the University of Oxford, had this to say of him and of the Toast: "They say that no one but an Irishman understands Ireland, that she will listen to no one but Irishman. Wales is near to her in geography and in race. I have thought she perhaps might listen to a Welsh voice, She has one today, now whispering, now ringing, across St. George's Channel. Will she heed it? Who knows?"
TIS a green isle set in a silver water,
A fairy isle where the shamrock grows,
Land of Legend, the Dream--Queen's daughter--
Out of the Fairies' hands she rose.
They touched her harp with a tender sighing,
A spirit-song from a world afar,
They touched her heart with a fire undying
To fight and follow her battle-star.
Too long, too long thro' the grey years growing
Feud and faction have swept between
The thistledown and the red rose blowing,
And the three-fold leaf of the shamrock green;
But the seal of blood, ye shall break it never:
With rifles grounded and bare of head
We drink to the dead who live forever--
A silent toast--To the Irish dead!