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by Alfred Perceval Graves (1846 - 1931)

The foggy dew
 (Sung text for setting by C. Stanford)
 See original
Language: English 
      Oh! a wan cloud was drawn
      O'er the dim, weeping dawn,
As to Shannon's side I returned at last;
      And the heart in my breast
      For the girl I loved best
Was beating -- ah, beating, how loud and fast!
      While the doubts and the fears
      Of the long, aching years
Seemed mingling their voices with the moaning flood;
      Till full in my path,
      Like a wild water-wraith,
My true love's shadow lamenting stood.

      But the sudden sun kissed
      The cold, cruel mist
Into dancing showers of diamond dew;
      And the dark flowing stream
      Laughed back to his beam,
And the lark soared singing aloft in the blue;
      While no phantom of night,
      But a form of delight
Stood with arms outspread for her darling boy:
      And the girl I love best
      On my wild, throbbing breast
Hid her thousand treasures, with a cry of joy.

Composition:

    Set to music by Charles Villiers Stanford, Sir (1852 - 1924), "The foggy dew", published [1882?] [ voice and piano ], from Songs of Old Ireland. A Collection of Fifty Irish Melodies Unknown in England, no. 33, arrangement ; London, Boosey & Co. ; dedicated to Johannes Brahms, August 1882

Text Authorship:

  • by Alfred Perceval Graves (1846 - 1931), "The foggy dew", appears in Father O'Flynn and other Irish Lyrics, first published 1880

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Researcher for this text: Emily Ezust [Administrator]

This text was added to the website: 2011-05-16
Line count: 24
Word count: 147

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