Poems, &c. (1790) - Wherein It Is Attempted To Describe Certain Views Of Nature And Of Rustic Manners; And Also, To Point Out, In Some Instances, The Different Influence Which The Same Circumstances Produce On Different Characters by Joanna Baillie
page 100 of 105 (95%)
page 100 of 105 (95%)
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Long is this song of the night, and I feel not the strength of my youth.
ALLEN. Then let us go on our way: let us go by the way of the heath. For it is the fair light of the morning which thou see'st on the far bounding waves. Slowly it grows in its beauty, and promises good to the traveller. Red are the small broken clouds that hang on the skirts of the heavens. Deep glows the clear open sky with the light of the yet hidden sun, Save where the dark narrow cloud hath stretched its vast length o'er the heavens; And the clear ruddy brightness behind it looks fair thro' its blue streaming lines. A bloom like the far distant heath is dark on the wide roving clouds. The broad wavy breast of the ocean is grand in the beauty of morning. Thick rests the white settled mist on the deep rugged clifts of the shore; And the grey rocks look dimly between, like the high distant isles in a calm. But grim low'r the walks of Arthula; the light of the morn is behind them. LATHMOR. Dark low'rs the tow'r of Arthula: the time of its glory is past. The valiant have ceas'd from its hall; and the son of the stranger is there. The works of the mighty remain, but they are the vapour of morning. A MOTHER TO HER WAKING INFANT. |
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