Ballad.

She’s up and gone, the graceless girl,

And robb’d my failing years!

My blood before was thin and cold

But now ’tis turn’d to tears; —

My shadow falls upon my grave,

So near the brink I stand,

She might have stay’d a little yet,

And led me by the hand!

Aye, call her on the barren moor,

And call her on the hill:

’Tis nothing but the heron’s cry,

And plover’s answer shrill;

My child is flown on wilder wings

Than they have ever spread,

And I may even walk a waste

That widen’d when she fled.

Full many a thankless child has been,

But never one like mine;

Her meat was served on plates of gold,

Her drink was rosy wine;

But now she’ll share the robin’s food,

And sup the common rill,

Before her feet will turn again

To meet her father’s will!