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<h1>Our Little Irish Cousin</h1>
By<br/>
Mary Hazelton Wade<br/>
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<h2>Preface</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">You</span> have often heard people speak of the
Emerald Isle. When you have asked where
it is and why it is so called, you have been
told it is only another name for that small
island to the northwest of the continent of
Europe called Ireland.</p>
<p>The rains there fall so often, and the sun
shines so warmly afterward, that Mother Nature
is able to dress herself in the brightest
and loveliest of colours. The people there
are cheerful and good-natured. They are
always ready to smile through their tears and
see the funny side of every hardship.</p>
<p>And, alas! many things have happened to
cause their tears to flow. They have suffered
from poverty and hunger. Thousands of
them have been forced to leave parents and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_vi_2" id="Page_vi_2">[vi]</SPAN></span>
friends, and seek a living within the kindly
shores of America.</p>
<p>America is great, America is kind, they may
think, but oh! for one look at the beautiful
lakes of Killarney; oh! for a walk over the
green fields and hills of the Emerald Isle.
And oh! for the chance to gather a cluster
of shamrock, the emblem of dear old Erin.</p>
<p>The little Irish cousin, who has never left
her native land, may be poor, and sometimes
ragged, but her heart is warm and tender, and
she loves her country and her people with
a love that will never change, no matter
where she may travel or what fortune may
befall her.</p>
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