Songs, Ballads, and Other Poems by the late Thomas Haynes Bayly; Edited by his Widow. With A Memoir of the Author. In Two Volumes |
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Songs, Ballads, and Other Poems | ||
174
THE DARGLE.
I
Forget not the dargle, forget not the shade,Where we varied the day with dance, music, and song;
Where the trees o'er our heads a green canopy made,
And the sun never shone on us all the day long.
II
Look forth from our shady retreat, on the hillsSloping down to the rivulet gushing below;
And own, that such valleys, green alleys, and rills,
Will be worth recollecting wherever you go.
III
The leaves seem to slumber, and nothing is heardSave the murmurs delightfully breathing around;
The bleatings of sheep, and the songs of a bird,
And the river's perpetual lullaby sound.
IV
And see the Gilt Spear in the sun-beams is bright,The mists from its summit have melted away;
It soars, like an eagle, to bask in the light
Of evening's last tint, and morn's earliest ray.
V
Look down on the waters, how brightly they runFrom their beautiful cradle, the depths of Loch Bray;
Now lost in the copse-wood, and now in the sun
Shining forth with a ripple, and gliding away.
Songs, Ballads, and Other Poems | ||