Somber lie the hills o'er which my Sally flies. Darkness clothes the mills, and creeps by every corner. Crimson fills the springs, where once children drank -- like them, I choke and struggle to speak, and I sit in the company of pleasant nature. I watch bitterly as the trees grow: they know nothing of my sorrow, nor how I have toiled.
Taunting, their gaze peers down at me from above, and the crest of every wave, lit by the dawn. Oh, if I could be with her: my pride, my love! Contently I would spend my days abroad. But since she is lost, I fear, and the cruel wind kisses me in her stead, I wish at least to return to my native land, so dear, where among those quiet meadows I would rest my head.
Updated 2/3/2018.
This was my first poem published here. I was inspired to write it after listening to the Irish song 'Ardai Chuain'.