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The Hungry Grass

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Hungry Grass

A shiver runs up my spine
As stories I recall
Of people dead in times gone by
I was told of when I was small.
Of famine dead who to the workhouse went
Dropped dead as they our gate did pass
And the ground on which they fell
Became known as the hungry grass.

For should one walk upon it
Even though they did just eat
The hunger gnawing would strike them
Till they were quick upon their feet
And nothing would quench the hunger
So the story's said
Bar milk and break hand torn
The only sustenance of those now dead.

You could eat meat untill full
At any other time be you would
But this time the hunger only by bread
Hand torn, washed by milk would
Quench the hunger of the dead
Who outside our gate died
Not so terribly long ago
Who to survive tried

But the Lord in mercy took them
Though grain was exported at the time
And people died for want of bread...
Oh the shame for Britain of the crime!
Some people don't believe the story
When I tell of the Hungry Grass
Should I go there I tell you
On the other side of the road I'll pass!

"The Hungry Grass" was where famine dead collapsed and breathed their last, and the ground on which they fell, should you walk on it, you would be overcome with a terrible hunger, that could not be sadisfied by the best of food, but only by tearing a loaf in your hands and eating the bread only with water or milk, as people did during the famine...
 
There was a spot outside the gate of Willie Carty's in Aughagreagh that was said to be of it, and an event of when he was a boy where a neighbour bust into the house demanding bread after standing on it... which was very bad etiquette in the peasent housholds, where a routine of denying hospitality and only accepting it under protest due to their belief that you "never left a house poorer than when you entered".


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