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Lyrical Poems

By Francis Turner Palgrave

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BRECON BRIDGE
  
  
  
  
  
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99

BRECON BRIDGE

Brecon, placed where the Honddu joins the Usk, has hence its native name, Aberhonddu (pronounced Aberhonddy). Llewellyn, the last independent Prince of Wales, was killed in Breconshire.

Low to himself beneath the sun
While soft his dusky waters run,
With ripple calm as infant's breath,
An ancient song Usk murmureth
By the bridge of Aberhonddu.
'Tis not of deeds of old, the song,
Llewellyn's fate, or Gwalia's wrong:
But how, while we have each our day
And then are not, he runs for aye.
He sees the baby dip its feet
Within his limpid waters sweet:
And hears when youth and passion speak
What strikes to flame the maiden's cheek.

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Then, manhood's colours tamed to gray,
With his fair child the father gay:
And then Old Age, who creeps to view
The stream his feet in boyhood knew.
From days before the iron cry
Of Roman legions rent the sky,
Since man with wolf held brutish strife,
Usk sees the flow and ebb of life.
As mimic whirlpools on his face
Orb after orb, each other chase,
And gleam and intersect and die,
Our little circles eddy by.
But those fair waters run for aye
While to himself, Where'er they stray,
All footsteps lead at last to Death,
His ancient song, Usk murmureth
By the bridge of Aberhonddu.