The Gorsy Glen BETWEEN Loch-Foyle and Greenan’s ancient fort, From Derry’s famous walls a little way, There dreams a gorsy glen, in whose lone heart I mused a Sabbath day. A nameless glen, one mass of yellow gorse, That hides the sparkle of a trotting burn, Save where in dimpling pools it stays its force, Or takes a rocky turn. The sandy linnet sang, the tiny wren Poured in the burn its tiny melodies. The air was honey-laden, and the glen All murmurous with bees. A straggling crow, upon its woodward way, Might start an echo with its rusty croak; But all around the quiet Sabbath lay, Hushed from the week-day yoke. Near, yet all hidden from, the ways of men, No foot into my sanctuary stole; I wandered with my shadow in the glen,— The only living soul. Yet many more were in the glen, ’t would seem: I heard, or thought I heard, their whispered words, And knew ’t was not the bees, the babbling stream, Or carol of the birds. And sometimes through the sunniest gleams of day There passed a light intenser than the gleam,— A living soul without its grosser clay? Or but my waking dream? Who knows? who knows? The dream to-day is found A verity to-morrow. Things have been Forever with us in our daily round, Though now but newly seen. Ah! could we by a purer life refine The veil that keeps the inward from our ken, No lonely fellowship had then been mine Within the gorsy glen. |
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