Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
Scotland: Vols. VI–VIII. 1876–79.
The Banks of Tay
By Robert CarmichaelB
Whose rocky summits skirt the sky,
Wild rolls the queen of Scotia’s floods,
Adorned by Athole’s ancient woods:
Along their winding walks in spring,
How sweet to hear the wild birds sing;
At peep of dawn, how sweet to stray
Adown the bonnie banks of Tay!
Gilds mountain-tops, the woods, the streams;
Before his early, piercing ray,
The wreaths of white mist wheel away,
Revealing all the lovely scene,—
The woods, thick clothed in foliage green,
High waving o’er the wild rocks gray
Upon the bonnie banks of Tay!
To fancy’s eye, fresh, blooming, new,—
The flowing river, mountain, strath,
The winding of each woodland path;
And dearer still, fond friendship’s ties,
And true love’s flame that never dies;
All these were mine: now far away
I mourn the bonnie banks of Tay!