poem - Dunedin From The Bay - by Thomas Bracken

Dunedin From The Bay
by Thomas Bracken

GO trav'ler, unto others boast
Of Venice and of Rome;
Of saintly Mark's majestic pile,
And Peter's lofty dome;
Of Naples and her trellised bowers;
Of Rhineland far away: -
These may be grand, but give to me
Dunedin from the Bay.

A lovely maiden seated in
A grotto by the shore;
With richest crown of purest green
That virgin ever wore;
Her snowy breast bedecked with flowers
And clustering ferns so gay, -
Go, picture this, and then you have
Dunedin from the Bay.

A fairy, round whose brilliant throne
Great towering giants stand,
As if impatient to obey
The dictates of her want;
Their helmets hidden in the clouds,
Their sandals in the spray -
Go picture this, and then you have
Dunedin from the Bay.

A priestess of the olden time
(Ere purer rites had birth)
On Nature's altar offering up
The homage of the earth;
Surrounded by grim Druids, robed
In mantles green and grey -
Go picture this, and then you have
Dunedin from the Bay.

O never till this breast grows cold
Can I forget that hour,
As standing on the vessel's deck
I watched the golden shower
Of yellow beams, that darted
From the sinking king of day,
And bathed in a mellow flood
Dunedin from the Bay.

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