The Book of Scottish Song/Connel and Flora

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2262972The Book of Scottish Song — Connel and Flora1843

Connel and Flora.

[Written by Alexander Wilson of Paisley, the great American ornithologist. Music arranged by J. Roberston.]

Dark lowers the night o'er the wide stormy main,
Till mild rosy morning rise cheerful again;
Alas! morn returns to revisit the shore;
But Connel returns to his Flora no more.

For see, on yon mountain, the dark cloud of death,
O'er Connel's lone cottage, lies low on the heath;
While bloody and pale, on a far distant shore,
He lies to return to his Flora no more.

Ye light fleeting spirits that glide o'er the steep,
O would you but waft me across the wild deep!
There fearless I'd mix in the battle's loud roar,
I'd die with my Connel, and leave him no more.