The Isles of Loch Awe and Other Poems of my Youth With Sixteen Illustrations. By Philip Gilbert Hamerton |
THE BATH. |
The Isles of Loch Awe and Other Poems of my Youth | ||
251
THE BATH.
Upon a daisied sward I sank
And slept. There mingled in my dream
The music of a flowing stream,
And hum of bees upon the bank.
And slept. There mingled in my dream
The music of a flowing stream,
And hum of bees upon the bank.
A voice upon my fancies broke;
A dripping figure at my side
Disturbed me, and my tongue replied
Before my sleeping brain awoke.
A dripping figure at my side
Disturbed me, and my tongue replied
Before my sleeping brain awoke.
“Leave me alone, and let me rest;
My couch is in a shady spot,
The stream is low, the sun is hot,
My heart is languid in my breast.”
My couch is in a shady spot,
The stream is low, the sun is hot,
My heart is languid in my breast.”
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He railed at me for childish fears;
I stripped and dived in boyish pride,
I saw the pebbles magnified,
The water sounded in my ears.
I stripped and dived in boyish pride,
I saw the pebbles magnified,
The water sounded in my ears.
Then springing up by him unseen—
My limbs renewed in strength and life,—
I clasped him in athletic strife,
And laughed and wrestled on the green.
My limbs renewed in strength and life,—
I clasped him in athletic strife,
And laughed and wrestled on the green.
The Isles of Loch Awe and Other Poems of my Youth | ||