Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
Scotland: Vols. VI–VIII. 1876–79.
The Banks of the Dee
By John Tait (17481817)’T
And sweetly the nightingale sung from the tree
At the foot of a rock where the river was flowing,
I sat myself down on the banks of the Dee.
Flow on, lovely Dae, flow on, thou sweet river,
Thy banks’ purest stream shall be dear to me ever,
For there first I gained the affection and favor
Of Jamie, the glory and pride of the Dee.
To quell the proud rebels,—for valiant is he;
And, ah! there ’s no hope of his speedy returning,
To wander again on the banks of the Dee.
He ’s gone, hapless youth! o’er the rude roaring billows,
The kindest and sweetest of all the gay fellows,
And left me to wander ’mongst those once loved willows,
The loneliest maid on the banks of the Dee.
Blest peace may restore my dear shepherd to me;
And when he returns, with such care I ’ll watch o’er him,
He never shall leave the sweet banks of the Dee.
The Dee then shall flow, all its beauties displaying,
The lambs on its banks shall again be seen playing,
While I with my Jamie am carelessly straying,
And tasting again all the sweets of the Dee.