My
feet
are
here
on
Broadway
This
blessed
harvest
morn,
But
oh!
the
ache
that's
in
my
heart
For
the
spot
where
I
was
born.
My
weary
hands
are
blistered
Through
work
in
cold
and
heat!
And
oh!
to
swing
a
scythe
once
more
Through
a
field
of
Irish
wheat.
Had
I
the
chance
to
wander
back,
Or
own
a
king's
abode.
I'd
sooner
see
the
hawthorn
tree
By
the
Old
Bog
Road.
When
I
was
young
and
restless
My
mind
was
ill
at
ease,
Through
dreaming
of
America,
And
the
gold
beyond
the
seas.
Oh,
sorrow
rake
their
money,
`Tis
hard
to
find
the
same,
And
what's
the
world
to
any
man
If
no
one
speaks
his
name.
I've
had
my
day
and
here
I am
A-building
bricks
per
load.
A
long
three
thousand
miles
away
From
the
Old
Bog
Road.
My
mother
died
last
springtime,
When
Erin's
fields
were
green.
The
neighbours
said
her
waking
Was
the
finest
ever
seen.
There
were
snowdrops
and
primroses
Piled
high
above
her
bed,
And
Ferns
Church
was
crowded
When
her
funeral
Mass
was
read.
And
here
was
I on
Broadway
A-building
bricks
per
load.
When
they
carried
out
her
coffin
Down
the
old
Bog
Road.
There
was
a
decent
girl
at
home
Who
used
to
walk
with
me.
Her
eyes
were
soft
and
sorrowful
Like
moonlight
o'er
the
sea.
Her
name
was
Mary
Dwyer,
But
that
was
long
ago.
The
ways
of
God
are
wiser
Than
the
things
that
man
might
know.
She
died
the
day
I
left
her,
A-building
bricks
per
load
I'd
best
forget
the
days
I've
spent
On
the
old
Bog
Road.
Ah!
Life's
a
weary
puzzle,
Past
finding
out
by
man,
I'll
take
the
day
for
what
it's
worth
And
do
the
best
I
can.
Since
no
one
cares
a
rush
for
me
What
need
is
there
to
moan,
I'll
go
my
way
and
draw
my
pay
And
smoke
my
pipe
alone
Each
human
heart
must
bear
its
grief
Though
bitter
be
the
`bode
So
God
be
with
you,
Ireland,