Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
Scotland: Vols. VI–VIII. 1876–79.
The Broom of the Cowdenknows
By John Crawford (18161873)W
Sing their successful loves;
Around the ewes and lambkins feed,
And music fills the groves.
So fair on Cowdenknows;
For sure so sweet, so soft a bloom
Elsewhere there never grows.
And won my yielding heart;
No shepherd e’er that played on Tweed
Could play with half such art.
The hills and dales all round,
Of Leader-haughs and Leader side,—
O, how I blessed the sound!
So fair on Cowdenknows;
For sure so fresh, so bright a bloom
Elsewhere there never grows.
May with this broom compare;
Not Yarrow banks in flowery May,
Nor the bush aboon Traguair.
My peaceful happy home,
Where I was wont to milk my ewes,
At eve among the broom.
Where Tweed with Teviot flows,
Convey me to the best of swains,
And my loved Cowdenknows.