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John Struthers (Джон Страдерз) The Vale of Clyde ADMIRING nature’s simple charms, I left my humble home, Awhile my country’s peaceful plain With pilgrim step to roam: I marked the leafy summer wave On flowing Irvine’s side, But richer far ’s the robe she wears Within the vale of Clyde. I roamed the braes of bonnie Doon, The winding banks of Ayr, Where flutters many a small bird gay, Blooms many a floweret fair; But dearer far to me the stem That once was Calder’s pride, And blossoms now, the fairest flower, Within the vale of Clyde. Avaunt! thou life-repressing north! Ye withering east-winds too! But come, thou all-reviving west, Breathe soft thy genial dew; Until at length, in peaceful age, This lovely floweret shed Its last green leaf upon my tomb, Within the vale of Clyde. John Struthers's other poems:
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