A land of promise and of pride Unfolding, wide as life is wide.
Ah! see her helpless charge! inclosed Within himself as seems, composed; To fear of loss, and hope of gain, The strife of happiness and pain, Utterly dead! yet in the guise Of little infants, when their eyes Begin to follow to and fro
The persons that before them go, He tracks her motions, quick or slow. Her buoyant spirit can prevail
Where common cheerfulness would fail; She strikes upon him with the heat Of July suns: he feels it sweet; An animal delight, though dim! 'Tis all that now remains for him!
The more I looked, I wondered moreAnd, while I scanned them o'er and o'er, A moment gave me to espy
A trouble in her strong black eye; A remnant of uneasy light, A flash of something over bright! Nor long this mystery did detain My thoughts; she told in pensive strain That she had borne a heavy yoke, Been stricken by a twofold stroke; Ill health of body; and had pined Beneath worse ailments of the mind.
So be it!-but let praise ascend To him who is our Lord and friend! Who from disease and suffering Hath called for thee a second spring;
Repaid thee for that sore distress By no untimely joyousness;
Which makes of thine a blissful state: And cheers thy melancholy mate!
THE BROWNIE'S CELL-LOCH LOMOND
To barren heath and quaking fen, Or depth of labyrinthine glen; Or into trackless forest set
With trees, whose lofty umbrage met; World-wearied men withdrew of yore, Penance their trust, and prayer their store; And in the wilderness were bound To such apartments as they found; Or with a new ambition raised; That God might suitably be praised.
High lodged the warrior, like a bird of prey; Or where broad waters round him lay; But this wild ruin is no ghost
Of his devices-buried, lost! Within this little lonely isle There stood a consecrated pile; Where tapers burned, and mass was sung, For them whose timid spirits clung To mortal succour, though the tomb Had fixed, for ever fixed, their doom!
Upon those servants of another world When maddening Power her bolts had hurled, Their habitation shook; it fell,
And perished-save one narrow cell; Whither, at length, a wretch retired: Who neither grovelled nor aspired:
He, struggling in the net of pride, The future scorned, the past defied; Still tempering from the unguilty forge Of vain conceit, an iron scourge!
Proud remnant was he of a fearless race, Who stood and flourished face to face With their perennial hills ;-but crime Hastening the stern decrees of time, Brought low a power, which from its home Burst when repose grew wearisome; And taking impulse from the sword, And mocking its own plighted word, Had found, in ravage widely dealt, Its warfare's bourne, its travel's belt!
All, all were dispossessed, save him whose smile Shot lightning through this lonely isle! No right had he but what he made To this small spot, his leafy shade; But the ground lay within that ring To which he only dared to cling; Renouncing here, as worse than dead, The craven few who bowed the head Beneath the change, who heard a claim, How loud! yet lived in peace with shame. From year to year this shaggy mortal went (So seemed it) down a strange descent; Till they, who saw his outward frame, Fixed on him an unhallowed name; Him-free from all malicious taint, And guiding, like the Patmos saint, A pen unwearied-to indite,
In his lone isle, the dreams of night; Impassioned dreams, that strove to span The faded glories of his clan!
Suns that through blood their western harbour sought,
And stars that in their courses fought,
Towers rent, winds combating with woods
Lands deluged by unbridled floods,- And beast and bird that from the spell Of sleep took import terrible, These types mysterious (if the show Of battle and the routed foe
Had failed) would furnish an array Of matter for the dawning day!
How disappeared he?—ask the newt and toad, Inheritors of his abode;
The otter crouching undisturbed,
In her dank cleft;-but be thou curbed, O froward fancy! mid a scene
Of aspect winning and serene; For those offensive creatures shun
The inquisition of the sun!
And in this region flowers delight, And all is lovely to the sight.
Spring finds not here a melancholy breast, When she applies her annual test
To dead and living; when her breath Quickens, as now, the withered heath ;- Nor flaunting summer-when he throws His soul into the briar-rose;
Or calls the lily from her sleep; Prolonged beneath the bordering deep: Nor Autumn, when the viewless wren Is warbling near the Brownie's den. Wild relic! beauteous as the chosen spot In Nysa's isle, the embellished grot; Whither by care of Libyan Jove, High servant of paternal love,
Young Bacchus was conveyed-to lie Safe from his stepdame Rhea's eye; Where bud, and bloom, and fruitage glowed, Close crowding round the infant god, All colours, and the liveliest streak A foil to his celestial cheek!
COMPOSED AT CORRA LINN, IN SIGHT OF WALLACE'S TOWER. LORD of the vale! astounding flood! The dullest leaf in this thick wood Quakes-conscious of thy power; The caves reply with hollow moan; And vibrates to its central stone, Yon time-cemented tower!
And yet how fair the rural scene! For thou, O Clyde, hast ever been Beneficent as strong;
Pleased in refreshing dews to steep The little trembling flowers that peep Thy shelving rocks among.
Hence all who love their country, love To look on thee-delight to rove Where they thy voice can hear; And, to the patriot warrior's shade, Lord of the vale! to heroes laid In dust, that voice is dear!
Along thy banks, at dead of night Sweeps visibly the Wallace wight; Or stands in warlike vest,
Aloft, beneath the moon's pale beam, A champion worthy of the stream, Yon gray tower's living crest!
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