Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
Scotland: Vols. VI–VIII. 1876–79.
The Forth
By John B. GreenshieldsB
Moving to wed, fair stream, the eastern main,
Yet nobler scenes unfold,—a crowded port,
Where Commerce, sire of empire, holds his court;
The dark blue Frith, where many a whitened sail
Rests in the roads, or, pausing, courts the gale;
The isles that on its breast repose serene,
Here gray with rocks, there softening into green;
The expanse beyond, which owns no bounding line
But that where sea and sky their tints combine;
Save where, illumined by the westering ray,
The rock-walled Bass ascends, or humbler May;
And, lovelier still, the winding northern shore,
With hamlets, towns, and castles, brightened o’er,
Adorned with fields from waste by culture won,
That gently swell to meet the summer sun;
While o’er their heads the giant Lomonds rise,—
Proud sons of earth that threaten yet the skies.