Page:Pocahontas, and Other Poems.djvu/272

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FAREWELL TO EDINBURGH.

��THE shade is on thy brow, sweet land,

The shade is on thy brow, For autumn rends away the crown

That summer gave but now ; I turn me toward a greener clime,

Where loftier groves appear, But still the tear is on my cheek

For thee, Edina dear.

There may, perchance, be richer realms,

Where pride and splendour roll, But thou hast, sure, the wealth of heart,

That wins the stranger's soul; There may, perchance, be those who say

That Scotia's hills are drear, Yet tears are lingering on my cheek

For thee, Edina dear.

And when, my pilgrim-wanderings o'er, I seek my forest-land,

�� �