LEANING upon the time-worn parapet Of this old Roman bridge, that to the bay Of Forth hath seen thee, Esk, gliding away From age to age, and spans thee gliding yet, Before me I behold thy sea-most town, Yclept in Saxon Chronicles Eske-mouthe, Its venerable roofsits spire uncouth And Pinkie's field of sorrowful renown. Scenes of my childhood, manhood, and decline Scenes that my sorrows and my joys have known, Ye saw my birth, and be my dust your own, When, as these waters mingle with the sea, To look upon the light no more is mine, And time is swallowed in eternity! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...PLEAD FOR ME by EMILY JANE BRONTE DINING-ROOM TEA by RUPERT BROOKE PARTING LOVERS by ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING GLOIRE DE DIJON by DAVID HERBERT LAWRENCE EVEN SO by DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI THE HOUSE OF LIFE: 27. HEART'S COMPASS by DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI TITA'S TEARS; A FANTASY by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH |