Classic and Contemporary Poetry
THE WOOD OF CRAIGIE LEA, by ROBERT TANNAHILL Poet's Biography First Line: Thou bonny wood of craigie lea! Last Line: That I, in youth, hae spent in thee. Subject(s): Forests; Woods | ||||||||
THOU bonny wood of Craigie Lea! Thou bonny wood of Craigie Lea! Near thee I pass'd life's early day, And won my Mary's heart in thee. The broom, the brier, the birken bush, Bloom bonny o'er thy flowery lea, And a' the sweets that ane can wish Frae Nature's hand, are strew'd on thee. Far ben thy dark green plantain's shade The cushat croodles am'rously, The mavis, down thy bughted glade, Gars echo ring frae every tree. Awa', ye thoughtless, murd'ring gang, Wha tear the nestlings ere they flee! They'll sing you yet a canty sang, Then, O! in pity, let them be! When winter blaws in sleety showers Frae aff the Norlan' hills sae hie, He lightly skiffs thy bonny bowers, As laith to harm a flower in thee. Though Fate should drag me south the line, Or o'er the wide Atlantic sea; The happy hours I'll ever min' That I, in youth, hae spent in thee. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE PRINCESS WAKES IN THE WOOD by RANDALL JARRELL CHAMBER MUSIC: 20 by JAMES JOYCE ADVICE TO A FOREST by MAXWELL BODENHEIM A SOUTH CAROLINA FOREST by AMY LOWELL JOY IN THE WOODS by CLAUDE MCKAY IN BLACKWATER WOODS by MARY OLIVER THE PLACE I WANT TO GET BACK TO by MARY OLIVER BY YON BURN SIDE by ROBERT TANNAHILL |
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