Louder, louder chant the lay, Waken, lords and ladies gay! Tell them, youth and mirth and glee Run a course as well as we.
Time, stern huntsman! who can balk? Stanch as hound, and fleet as hawk: Think of this, and rise with day, Gentle lords and ladies gay.
O mariner, O mariner,
When will our gallant men
Make our cliffs and woodlands ring With their homeward hail agen?
Full fifteen paced the stately deck, And fifteen stood below,
And maidens waved them from the shore With hands more white than snow; All underneath them flash'd the wave, The sun laugh'd out aboon- Will they come bounding homeward
By the waning of yon moon?
O maid, the moon shines lovely down, The stars all brightly burn,
And they may shine till doomsday comes, Ere your true love return ;
O'er his white forehead roll the waves, The wind sighs lowne and low, And the cry the sea-fowl uttereth Is one of wail and woe;
So wail they on-I tell thee, maid, One of thy tresses dark
Is worth all the souls who perish'd In that good and gallant bark.
O mariner, O mariner,
It's whisper'd in the hall,
And sung upon the mountain side
Among our maidens all,
That the waves which fill the measure
Of that wide and fatal flood
Cannot cleanse the decks of thy good ship,
Or wash thy hands from blood; And sailors meet, and shake their heads, And, ere they sunder, say,
God keep us from Miles Colvine, On the wide and watery way!
up then spoke he, Miles Colvine, His thigh thus smiting soon, By all that's dark aneath the deep,
By all that's bright aboon,
By all that's blessed on the earth,
Or blessed on the flood,
And by my sharp and stalwart blade That revel'd in their blood,
I could not spare them; for there came My loved one's spirit nigh,
With a shriek of joy at every stroke
That doom'd her foes to die.
O mariner, O mariner,
There was a lovely dame
Went down with thee unto the deep, And left her father's hame.- His dark eyes, like a thunder cloud, Did rain and lighten fast,
And, oh! his bold and martial face All grimly grew and ghast : I loved her, and those evil men Wrong'd her as far we ranged;
But were ever woman's woes and wrongs More fearfully avenged?
Now smiling summer's balmy breeze, Soft whispering, fans the leafy trees: The linnet greets the rosy morn,
Sweet in yon fragrant flowery thorn; The bee hums round the woodbine bower, Collecting sweets from every flower; And pure the crystal streamlets run Amongst the braes of Ballahun.
O blissful days, for ever fled, When wand'ring wild as Fancy led, I ranged the bushy bosom'd glen, The scroggie shaw, the rugged linn, And mark'd each blooming hawthorn bush, Where nestling sat the speckled thrush; Or careless roaming, wandered on, Amongst the braes of Ballahun.
Why starts the tear, why bursts the sigh, When hills and dales rebound with joy? The flowery glen and lilied lea
In vain display their charms to me.
I joyless roam the heathy waste,
To soothe this sad, this troubled breast;
And seek the haunts of men to shun Amongst the braes of Ballahun.
The virgin blush of lovely youth, The angel smile of artless truth, This breast illum'd with heavenly joy, Which lyart time can ne'er destroy: O Julia dear!-the parting look, The sad farewell we sorrowing took, Still haunt me as I stray alone Among the braes of Ballahun.
Say, sweet carol! who are they Who cheerly greet the rising day! Little birds in leafy bower; Swallows twitt'ring on the tower; Larks upon the light air borne ; Hunters rous'd with shrilly horn; The woodman whistling on his way; The new-wak'd child at early play, Who barefoot prints the dewy green, Winking to the sunny sheen;
And the meek maid who binds her yellow hair, And blithely doth her daily task prepare.
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