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A Roadside Harp: A Book of Verses

Chapter 13: Athassel Abbey
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About This Book

This collection gathers lyrical and narrative poems that range from ballads and sonnets to short meditations. The verses move between rural and urban settings, evoking English and Irish countryside, Italian art and London streets, and blend historical, religious, and classical allusion with close natural observation. Recurring concerns include time and memory, faith and loss, friendship and artistic response; many pieces treat ruined churches, portraiture, and small domestic scenes with musical language and formal polish. Alternating narrative storytelling and reflective shorter lyrics, the work balances nostalgic melancholy with bright sensory detail and a cultivated, songlike cadence.

FOLLY and Time have fashioned
Of thee a songless reed;
O not-of-earth-impassioned!
Thy music ’s mute indeed.
Red from the chantry crannies
The orchids burn and swing,
And where the arch began is
Rest for a raven’s wing;
And up the bossy column
Quick tails of squirrels wave,
And black, prodigious, solemn,
A forest fills the nave.
Still faithfuller, still faster,
To ruin give thy heart:
Perfect before the Master
Aye as thou wert, thou art.
But I am wind that passes
In ignorant wild tears,
Uplifted from the grasses,
Blown to the void of years,
Blown to the void, yet sighing
In thee to merge and cease,
Last breath of beauty’s dying,
Of sanctity, of peace!
Tho’ use nor place forever
Unto my soul befall,
By no belovèd river
Set in a saintly wall,
Do thou by builders given
Speech of the dumb to be,
Beneath thine open heaven,
Athassel! pray for me.