Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
Scotland: Vols. VI–VIII. 1876–79.
The Fall of Foyers
By William Leighton (18411869)I
On the rude peak opposite
Where over the rocky Foyers came down
The cataract foaming white.
No song in the woods around;
A deathlike silence, broken alone
By the hollow and deep-mouthed sound
And boiling and seething below;
Now lashing the crags in its furious ire,
Now laving them in its flow.
No pause in its passionate dole,
Plaintive and awful, it found and woke
An echo within my soul!
Great in its infinite might,
It left its rocky home for my heart,
Overflowing it quite!
And, though hundreds of miles away,
As plain as I saw it that summer morn,
I can behold it to-day;
To the splash and the dash of the tide,
And can see the boiling caldron smoke
Down the cavern yawning wide!
All grandeur melting us most,
Passes into eternal possession,
And can nevermore be lost!