Thro’ the airy mountains stray, Chant thy welcome songs above, Full of sport and full of play, Songs of love. When the evening cloud prevails, And the sun gives way for night, When the shadows mark the vales, Return thy flight. Like the cottar or the swain, Gentle shepherd, or the herd; Rest thou till the morn again, Bonny bird! Like thee, on freedom’s airy wing, May the poet’s rapturous spark, Hail the first approach of spring, Bonny lark! p. 37Some of My Boyish Days. p. 37 Home of my boyish days, how can I call Scenes to my memory, that did befall? How can my trembling pen find power to tell The grief I experienced in bidding farewell? Can I forget the days joyously spent, That flew on so rapidly, sweet with content? Can I then quit thee, whose memory’s so dear, Home of my boyish days, without one tear? Can I look back on happy days gone by, Without one pleasant thought, without one sigh Ah, no! though never more these eyes may dwell On thee, old cottage home, I love so well: Home of my childhood! wherever I be, Thou art the nearest and dearest to me! Can I forget the songs sung by my sire, Like some prophetic bard tuning the lyre? Sweet were the notes that he taught to the young; Psalms for the Sabbath, on Sabbath were sung; And the young minstrels enraptured would come To the little lone cottage I once called my home. Can I forget the dear landscape around, Where in my boyish days I could be found, Stringing my hazel-bow, roaming the wood, Fancying myself to be bold Robin Hood? Then would my mother say—“Where is he gone? I’m waiting for shuttles that he should have ‘wun’?”— She in that cottage there, knitting her healds, And I, her young forester, roaming the fields. p. 38But the shades of the evening gather slowly around, The twilight it thickens and darkens the ground, Night’s sombre mantle is spreading the plain. And as I turn round to look on thee again, To take one fond look, one last fond adieu, By night’s envious hand thou art snatched from my view; But Oh! there’s no darkness—to me—no decay, Home of my boyhood, can chase thee away! p. 38 Ode ta Spring Sixty-four. O welcome, young princess, thou sweetest of dowters, An’ furst bloomin’ issue o’ King Sixty-four, Wi’ thi brah deck’d wi’ gems o’ the purest o’