The Icelander's Song Of Home Poem by Josias Homely

The Icelander's Song Of Home



I've heard the stranger lightly speak
Of thee my native land ;
A gloom, he said, o'er-cast thy sky.
Rough billows beat thy strand—
But his was like the peterel's flight,.
Across the stormy sea,
He breath'd but once thy mountain breeze,
And then was far away.
Oh ! had he lingered on thy strand,
He must have loved thee—native land.

My native land—-upon thy hills,
There rest eternal snows ;
A crest of foam is on each sui'ge,
On thy bleak shore which flows.
There may be fairer lands I own,
There may be calmer seas ;
There may be fields where flowers fade not,
Where fragrance loads the breeze.
But all who linger on thy strand,
Must surely love thee—native land.

Wednesday, October 29, 2014
Topic(s) of this poem: home
POET'S NOTES ABOUT THE POEM
*The Song was suggested by the following remark which occured
in the letter of an old friend and correspondent.
'I thought I should have died with laughing when at Kirkwall ;
'an Icelander, to whom I owned that I had been at the foot of
'Hecla once, often told me that had I made up ray mind to live in
'bis country he was sure I should have loved it.
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