The Waterfall

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THE SONG of the water
  Doomed ever to roam,
A beautiful exile,
  Afar from its home.

The cliffs on the mountain,
  The grand and the gray,
They took the bright creature
  And hurled it away!

I heard the wild downfall,
  And knew it must spill
A passionate heart out
  All over the hill.

Oh! was it a daughter
  Of sorrow and sin,
That they threw it so madly
  Down into the lynn?
.  .  .  .  .
And listen, my Sister,
  For this is the song
The Waterfall taught me
  The ridges among:—

“Oh where are the shadows
  So cool and so sweet
And the rocks,” saith the water,
  “With the moss on their feet?

“Oh, where are my playmates
  The wind and the flowers—
The golden and purple—
  Of honey-sweet bowers,

“Mine eyes have been blinded
  Because of the sun;
And moaning and moaning
  I listlessly run.

“These hills are so flinty!—
  Ah! tell me, dark Earth,
What valley leads back to
  The place of my birth?—

“What valley leads up to
  The haunts where a child
Of the caverns I sported,
  The free and the wild?

“There lift me,”—it crieth,
  “I faint from the heat;
With a sob for the shadows
  So cool and so sweet.”

Ye rocks, that look over
  With never a tear,
I yearn for one half of
  The wasted love here!

My sister so wistful,
  You know I believe,
Like a child for the mountains
  This water doth grieve.

Ah! you with the blue eyes
  And golden-brown hair,
Come closer and closer
  And truly declare:—

Supposing a darling
  Once happened to sin,
In a passionate space,
  Would you carry her in—

If your fathers and mothers,
  The grand and the gray,
Had taken the weak one
  And hurled her away?

© Henry Kendall