Page:The Domestic Affections, and Other Poems.pdf/93

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85


How blest! there ever to remain,
And warble still th' untutor'd strain,
        Blow, mountain-breeze!

In rich festoons, the mantling vine,
    Embow'ring, o'er its casement waves;
And bloomy clusters dangling, shine,
    Thro' tendrils and luxuriant leaves—
While, as I train each wayward spray,
I carol still the artless lay,
        Blow, mountain-breeze!

Mine is the breath of zephyr pure,
    The Alpine sweet that scents the gale;
The slumber light, the life secure,
    The boundless range of hill and dale!
Fearless I rove, exploring, free,
Spirit of air! all wild like thee,
        Blow, mountain-breeze!