Miscellaneous Poems. (ARRANGED IN CHRONOLOGICAL ORDER.) The stones made liquid as the huge And beauteous tints, serve to display recoils, While Etna thundering from the bottom boils. man, Whose life's comprised within a span, To him his homage raise. We often praise the evening clouds, Who tinged these clouds with gold' THE VIOLET. (1797.) THE violet in her greenwood bower, Where birchen boughs with hazels iningle, May boast itself the fairest flower In glen, or copse, or forest dingle. Though fair her gems of azure hue, Beneath the dewdrop's weight reclining; I've seen an eye of lovelier blue, More sweet through wat'ry lustre shining. The summer sun that dew shall dry, Ere yet the day be past its morrow; Nor longer in my false love's eye Remain'd the tear of parting sorrow. TO A LADY WITH FLOWERS FROM THE ROMAN TAKE these flowers which, purple waving, On the ruin'd rampart grew, Where, the sons of freedom braving, Rome's imperial standards flew. Warriors from the breach of danger Pluck no longer laurels there; They but yield the passing stranger Wild-flower wreaths for Beauty's hair. BOTHWELL'S SISTERS THREE. A FRAGMENT. (1799.) WHEN fruitful Clydesdale's applebowers Are mellowing in the noon, When sighs round Pembroke's ruin'd towers The sultry breath of June, When Clyde, despite his sheltering wood, Must leave his channel dry, If chance by Bothwell's lovely braes Thy pilgrim step hath staid, Where Bothwell's towers, in ruin piled O'erlook the verdant glade, And many a tale of love and fear And Bothwell's bonny Jean O, if with rugged minstrel lays And thou of deeds of other days Then all beneath the spreading beech, Wight Wallace stood on Deckmont head, He blew his bugle round, Saint George's cross, o'er Bothwell hung, Was waving far and wide, And from the lofty turret flung Its crimson blaze on Clyde ; And rising at the bugle blast That marked the Scottish foe, Tall in the midst Sir Aylmer rose, THE COVENANTER'S FATE. (1799.) And ne'er but once, my son, he says, Was yon sad cavern trod, In persecution's iron days, When the land was left by God. From Bewlie bog, with slaughter red, A wanderer hither drew, And oft he stopt and turn'd his head, As by fits the night wind blew; For trampling round by Cheviot edge Were heard the troopers keen, And frequent from the Whitelaw ridge The death-shot flash'd between. The moonbeams through the misty shower On yon dark cavern fell; Through the cloudy night the snow "Yon spell-bound den, as the aged tell, Was hewn by demon's hands; But I had lourd melle with the fiends of hell Than with Clavers and his band.' He heard the deep-mouth'd bloodhound bark, He heard the horses neigh, He plunged him in the cavern dark, And downward sped his way. Now faintly down the winding path Came the cry of the faulting hound, And the mutter'd oath of baulked wrath Was lost in hollow sound. He threw him on the flinted floor, 'O bare thine arm, thou battling Lord, For Scotland's wandering band; Dash from the oppressor's grasp the sword, And sweep him from the land! 'Forget not thou thy people's groans From dark Dunnotter's tower, Mix'd with the seafowl's shrilly moans, And ocean's bursting roar ! O, in fell Clavers' hour of pride, Even in his mightiest day, As bold he strides through conquest's tide, O stretch him on the clay ! His widow and his little ones, O from their tower of trust Remove its strong foundation stones, And crush them in the dust!' 'Sweet prayers to me!' a voice replied; 'Thrice welcome, guest of mine!' And glimmering on the cavern side A light was seen to shine. In every stall of that endless hall Lay stretch'd a stalwart knight. In each mail'd hand was a naked brand; As they lay on the black bull's hide, Each visage stern did upwards turn, With eyeballs fix'd and wide. A launcegay strong, full twelve ells long, By every warrior hung; At each pommel there, for battle yare, A Jedwood axe was slung. The casque hung near each cavalier; Through the hall of gramarye. The ruddy beam of the torches' gleam That glared the warriors on, Reflected light from armour bright, In noontide splendour shone. And onward seen in lustre sheen, Still lengthening on the sight, Through the boundless hall stood steeds in stall, And by each lay a sable knight. Still as the dead lay each horseman dread, And moved nor limb nor tongue; Each steed stood stiff as an earthfast cliff, Nor hoof nor bridle rung. No sounds through all the spacious hall The deadly still divide, Save where echoes aloof from the vaulted roof To the wanderer's step replied. At length before his wondering eyes, On an iron column borne, Of antique shape, and giant size, Appear'd a sword and horn. 'Now choose thee here,' quoth his leader, 'Thy venturous fortune try; Thy woe and weal, thy boot and bale, In yon brand and bugle lie.' To the fatal brand he mounted his hand, But his soul did quiver and quail; The life-blood did start to his shuddering heart, And left him wan and pale. The brand he forsook, and the horn he took To 'say a gentle sound; But so wild a blast from the bugle brast, That the Cheviot rock'd around. From Forth to Tees, from seas to seas, The awful bugle rung; On Carlisle wall, and Berwick withal, To arms the warders sprung. With clank and clang the cavern rang, The steeds did stamp and neigh; And loud was the yell as each warrior fell Sterte up with hoop and cry. 'Woe, woe,' they cried, thou caitiff coward, 'That ever thou wert born! Why drew ye not the knightly sword Before ye blew the horn?' The morning on the mountain shone, The mangled wretch was found. And still beneath the cavern dread, A shapeless stone with lichens spread |