Glashen-Glora ’T IS sweet in midnight solitude, When the voice of man lies hushed, subdued, To hear thy mountain voice so rude, Break silence, Glashen-Glora! I love to see thy foaming stream Dashed sparkling in the bright moonbeam; For then of happier days I dream, Spent near thee, Glashen-Glora! I see the holly and the yew Still shading thee, as then they grew; But there ’s a form meets not my view, As once, near Glashen-Glora. Thou gayly, brightly, sparklest on, Wreathing thy dimples round each stone; But the bright eye that on thee shone Lies quenched, wild Glashen-Glora! Still rush thee on, thou brawling brook; Though on broad rivers I may look In other lands, thy lonesome nook,— I ’ll think on Glashen-Glora! When I am low, laid in the grave, Thou still wilt sparkle, dash, and rave Seaward, till thou becom’st a wave Of ocean, Glashen-Glora! Thy course and mine alike have been Both restless, rocky, seldom green,— There rolls for me, beyond this scene, An ocean, Glashen-Glora! And when my span of life ’s gone by, O, if past spirits back can fly, I ’ll often ride the night-wind’s sigh, That ’s breathed o’er Glashen-Glora! |
English Poetry - http://eng-poetry.ru/english/index.php. E-mail eng-poetry.ru@yandex.ru |