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Home  »  Poems of Places An Anthology in 31 Volumes  »  The Banks o’ Glaizart

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
Scotland: Vols. VI–VIII. 1876–79.

Glaizart

The Banks o’ Glaizart

By Anonymous

NOW flowery summer comes again,

And decks my native, bonnie plain,

While feathered warblers swell the strain,

Aroun’ the banks o’ Glaizart.

Our woody, wild, romantic glens,

Our flowery groves, and fairy dens,

Form heart-enlivening, charming scenes,

Aroun’ the banks o’ Glaizart.

In childhood’s days, sweet dawn o’ life,

Unknown to sorrow, care, and strife,

Aft ha’e I roved mid pleasures rife,

Upon thy banks, sweet Glaizart.

There too, fair Jeanie, maid o’ glee,

In youthfu’ days engaged my e’e,

And first her mou’ I blythe did prie,

Upon thy banks, sweet Glaizart.

O, charming are the towering Fells,

Whare rural pleasure kindly dwells;

And lovely are the blooming bells

That grace thy banks, sweet Glaizart.

Here Nature’s han’, in days o’ yore,

That after-swains might her adore,

Bequeathed the peerless gifts, in store,

That grace thy banks, sweet Glaizart.

Yes, wi’ that bonnie Clachan Glen,

Whare birdies chant the artless strain,

Her warks she crowned, and marked her ain

The bonnie banks o’ Glaizart.

Eclipsing a’ her favors high,

She blythe proclaimed wi’ smiling eye,

“Now, never now, shall scene outvie

The bonnie banks o’ Glaizart.”