BALLADE OF HIS OWN COUNTRY

By Andrew Lang

I scribbled on a fly-book's leaves

Among the shining salmon-flies;

A song for summer-time that grieves

I scribbled on a fly-book's leaves.

Between grey sea and golden sheaves,

Beneath the soft wet Morvern skies,

I scribbled on a fly-book's leaves

Among the shining salmon-flies.

Let them boast of Arabia, oppressed

By the odour of myrrh on the breeze;

In the isles of the East and the West

That are sweet with the cinnamon trees

Let the sandal-wood perfume the seas;

Give the roses to Rhodes and to Crete,

We are more than content, if you please,

With the smell of bog-myrtle and peat!

Though Dan Virgil enjoyed himself best

With the scent of the limes, when the bees

Hummed low‘ round the doves in their nest,

While the vintagers lay at their ease,

Had he sung in our northern degrees,

He'd have sought a securer retreat,

He'd have dwelt, where the heart of us flees,

With the smell of bog-myrtle and peat!

Oh, the broom has a chivalrous crest

And the daffodil's fair on the leas,

And the soul of the Southron might rest,

And be perfectly happy with these;

But we, that were nursed on the knees

Of the hills of the North, we would fleet

Where our hearts might their longing appease

With the smell of bog-myrtle and peat!

Princess, the domain of our quest

It is far from the sounds of the street,

Where the Kingdom of Galloway's blest

With the smell of bog-myrtle and peat!