XV That pure and shy retreat A Tartar would have spared, But not that lawyer cur from Inverness, Who thought its sylvan virgin loveliness Would bring him gold if rudely bared And hawked upon the street. That There children checked their race And crept on tiptoed feet, Lest they should break upon the rainbow rings Of fairies glinting through transparent wings, Or kindly wizard come to meet A maid with lovelorn face. No snow nor stinging sleet Could chill the fairies’ bath; So close the vaulting was with fir and larch Which laid deep carpets underneath their arch, That on the fairies’ silent path No blast could ever beat. p. 27Mid foam more white than fleece The waterfall rang sweet, It made each rocky cup a rippling well, It coyly dived and peeped along the dell, Then ran the rising sea to greet, And greeting found its peace. p. 27 And now the cold and heat Scourge all the glen with ire; The broken boughs have choked the sobbing stream, The silver birch is but a sodden beam, The fairies’ path is sunk in mire, The moss has left their seat. Flash sorrow and disdain For this most sordid feat, You whom Burns taught to love a daisy’s face, And Scott to love the mountains’ gloom and grace; Or say they scattered chaff for wheat, And sang their songs in vain. p. 28XVI WAITING p. 28 XVI BASED ON THE GAELIC FEAR A’ BHÀTA BASED ON THE GAELIC FEAR A’ BHÀTA The year may change its time, But still I climb The cliff above the sea, And look with eyes half dim with rain, To know if God has brought again My lover back to me. The When darkness downward glides And slowly hides The fading hills of blue, I never bar the cottage door Without one look across the moor, A look of hope for you.