Public Domain Poetry And Stories - My Mary by James Whitcomb Riley
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My Mary

    By James Whitcomb Riley



    My Mary, O my Mary!
    The simmer-skies are blue;
    The dawnin' brings the dazzle,
    An' the gloamin' brings the dew, -
    The mirk o' nicht the glory
    O' the moon, an' kindles, too,
    The stars that shift aboon the lift. -
    But nae thing brings me you!

    Where is it, O my Mary,
    Ye are biding a' the while?
    I ha' wended by your window -
    I ha' waited by the stile,
    An' up an' down the river
    I ha' won for mony a mile,
    Yet never found, adrift or drown'd,
    Your lang-belated smile.

    Is it forgot, my Mary,
    How glad we used to be? -
    The simmer-time when bonny bloomed
    The auld trysting-tree, -
    How there I carved the name for you,
    An' you the name for me;
    An' the gloamin' kenned it only
    When we kissed sae tenderly.

    Speek ance to me, my Mary! -
    But whisper in my ear
    As light as ony sleeper's breath,
    An' a' my soul will hear;
    My heart shall stap its beating
    An' the soughing atmosphere
    Be hushed the while I leaning smile
    An' listen to you, dear!

    My Mary, O my Mary!
    The blossoms bring the bees;
    The sunshine brings the blossoms,
    An' the leaves on a' the trees;
    The simmer brings the sunshine
    An' the fragrance o' the breeze, -
    But O wi'out you, Mary,
    I care nae thing for these!

    We were sae happy, Mary!
    O think how ance we said -
    Wad ane o' us gae fickle,
    Or ane o' us lie dead, -
    To feel anither's kisses
    We wad feign the auld instead,
    An' ken the ither's footsteps
    In the green grass owerhead.

    My Mary, O my Mary!
    Are ye daughter o' the air,
    That ye vanish aye before me
    As I follow everywhere? -
    Or is it ye are only
    But a mortal, wan wi' care? -
    Syne I search through a' the kirkyird
    An' I dinna find ye there!



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