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Home  »  Poems of Places An Anthology in 31 Volumes  »  Song of Ben Cruachan

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

Ben Cruachan

Song of Ben Cruachan

By John Stuart Blackie (1809–1895)

BEN CRUACHAN is king of the mountains

That gird in the lovely Loch Awe;

Loch Ettive is fed from his fountains,

By the streams of the dark-rushing Awe.

With his peak so high

He cleaves the sky

That smiles on his old gray crown,

While the mantle green,

On his shoulders seen,

In many a fold flows down.

He looks to the north, and he renders

A greeting to Nevis Ben;

And Nevis, in white snowy splendors,

Gives Cruachan greeting again.

O’er dread Glencoe

The greeting doth go,

And where Ettive winds fair in the glen;

And he hears the call

In his steep north wall,

“God bless thee, old Cruachan Ben.”

When the north winds their forces muster,

And ruin rides high on the storm,

All calm, in the midst of their bluster,

He stands with his forehead enorm.

When block on block,

With thundering shock,

Comes hurtled confusedly down,

No whit recks he,

But laughs to shake free

The dust from his old gray crown.

And while torrents on torrents are pouring

Down his sides with a wild, savage glee,

And when louder the loud Awe is roaring,

And the soft lake swells to a sea,

He smiles through the storm,

And his heart grows warm

As he thinks how his streams feed the plains,

And the brave old Ben

Grows young again,

And swells with his lusty veins.

For Cruachan is king of the mountains

That gird in the lovely Loch Awe;

Loch Ettive is fed from his fountains,

By the streams of the dark-rushing Awe.

Ere Adam was made

He reared his head

Sublime o’er the green winding glen;

And when flame wraps the sphere,

O’er earth’s ashes shall peer

The peak of the old granite Ben.