The horrid crags, by toppling  convent crown'd,                                        The cork-trees hoar that clothe the  shaggy steep,                                        The mountain-moss by scorching   skies imbrown'd,                                        The sunken glen, whose sunless   shrubs must weep,                                        The tender azure of the unruffled  deep,                                        The orange tints that gild the     greenest bough,                                        The torrents that from cliff to valley    leap,                                        The vine on high, the willow branch    below,                                   Mix'd in one mighty scene, with varied  beauty glow. 
                                     
                                        Then slowly climb the many-winding   way,                                        And frequent turn to linger as you   go,                                        From loftier rocks new loveliness   survey,                                        And rest ye at 'Our Lady's house of   woe;'                                        Where frugal monks their little relics  show,                                        And sundry legends to the stranger   tell:                                        Here impious men have punish'd   been, and lo!                                        Deep in yon cave Honorious long did  dwell,                                   In hope to merit Heaven by making   earth a Hell. 
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  photoaspects.com [verses XIX and XX ... no specific local application, posted in response to idiocy elsewhere  ... and perhaps, why not - as ammunition in reserve] |