Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
Switzerland and Austria: Vol. XVI. 1876–79.
On the Righi
By Josiah Gilbert Holland (18191881)O
Lovely Floribel and I,
While the morning’s crimson flood
Streamed along the eastern sky.
Reddened every mountain peak
Into rose, from twilight dun;
But the blush upon her cheek
Was not lighted by the sun!
Lovely Floribel and I,
Plucking bluebells for her hat
From a mound that blossomed nigh.
“We are near to heaven,” she sighed,
While her raven lashes fell.
“Nearer,” softly I replied,
“Than the mountain’s height may tell.”
Lovely Floribel and I,
But her morning blush had fled,
And the bluebells all were dry.
Of the height the dream was born;
Of the lower air it died;
And the passion of the morn
Flagged and fell at eventide.
Lovely Floribel and I
Saw the brand of sunset burn
On the Righi Kulm, and die.
And we wondered, gazing thus,
If our dream would still remain
On the height, and wait for us
Till we climb to heaven again!