Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
Germany: Vols. XVII–XVIII. 1876–79.
The Rhine
By Bryan Waller Procter (17871874)W
Where the wild waves fret and quiver,
And we ’ve down the Danube been,
The dark, deep, thundering river!
We ’ve threaded the Elbe and Rhone,
The Tiber and blood-dyed Seine,
And have watched where the blue Garonne
Goes laughing to meet the main:
But what is so lovely, what is so grand,
As the river that runs through Rhine-land?
Midst its flowers and famous wines,
And we know that our country’s morn
With a treble-sweet aspect shines.
Let other lands boast their flowers,
Let other men dream wild dreams,
Let them hope they ’ve a land like ours,
And a stream, like our stream of streams:
Yet what is half so bright or so grand
As the river that runs through Rhine-land?
That fell on our tender youth?
Do we, coward-like, shrink and shun
The thought-telling touch of Truth?
On our heads be the sin, then, set!
We ’ll bear all the shame divine:
But we ’ll never disown the debt
That we owe to our noble Rhine!
O, the Rhine! the Rhine! the broad and the grand,
Is the river that runs through Rhine-land!