Tags
John Davidson, Joy, Love, Peace, Poem, Poems, Poems on Spring, Poetry, Scottish, Scottish Poetry, Spring
About the flowerless land adventurous bees
Pickeering hum; the rooks debate, divide,
With many a hoarse aside,
In solemn conclave on the budding trees;
Larks in the skies and ploughboys o’er the leas
Carol as if winter had never been;
The very owl comes out to greet the sun;
Rivers high hearted run;
And hedges mantle with a flush of green.
The curlew calls me where the salt winds blow;
His troubled note dwells mournfully and dies;
Then the long echo cries
Deep in my heart. Ah, surely I must go!
For there the tides, moon-haunted, ebb and flow;
And there the seaboard murmurs resonant;
The waves their interwoven fugue repeat
And brooding surges beat
A slow, melodious, continual chant.