WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
Poems cover

Poems

Chapter 30: YARRIMORE.
Open in WeRead

Explore more books like this:

About This Book

A varied collection of lyrical and occasional poems encompassing light social verse, pastoral descriptions, travel pieces gathered from earlier fugitive publication, and personal elegies. Pieces range from tranquil nature scenes and grotto meditations to expressions of romantic longing and formal dedications; a prominent elegy mourns a beloved brother and traces grief and memory. The preface frames the poems as modest divertissements written across youth and maturity, and some material derives from the author's tours. The tone alternates between playful, reflective, and mournful, favoring accessible meters and conventional poetic imagery rather than experimental forms.

YARRIMORE.

[These Lines were written for a Lady who set them to Music.]

My poor heart flutters like the sea
    Now heaving on the sandy shore;
It seems to tell me you shall be
    Never again near Yarrimore.

Far, far beyond the waves, I bend
    Mine eyes, if I can land explore;
But o’er the waves I find no end,—
    Yet there they say’s my Yarrimore.

The hut he built is standing still,
    Deck’d with the shells he cull’d from shore;
Our bow’r is waving on the hill,
    But where, alas! is Yarrimore?

Within that bow’r I’ll sit and sigh,
    From dawn of day till day is o’er;
And, as the wild winds o’er me fly,
    I’ll call on gentle Yarrimore!