'rMmmBmmm^. UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT LOS ANGELES fJ| |||EXLlBRIS l_ J \ ^^ y GLEN DESSERAY AND OTHER POEMS By J. C. SHAIRP O FOR truth-brcath6d music ! soul-like lays ! Not of vain-glory born, nor love of praise, But welling purely from profound heart-springs, That lie deep down amid the life of things. And singing on, heedless though mortal ear Should never their lone murmur overhear ! GLEN DESSERAY AND OTHER POEMS LYRICAL AND ELEGIAC BY JOHN CAMPBELL SHAIRP LL.D., LATE PRINXIPAL OF THE UNITED COLLEGE, ST. ANDREWS, AND PROFESSOR OF POETRY IN THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD EDITED BY FRANCIS T. PALGRAVE LL.D. EDINBURGH Eontioii ACMILLAN AND CO. AND NEW YORK 1888 All rights rcso^fed t J 4 a 53^9 se ^ •5 TO THE author's EARLY FRIENDS a WHO HAVE SURVIVED HIM : U TO THE FRIENDS OF LATER YEARS ; ^ AND TO ALL WHO MISS HIS PRESENCE, 0> AND WHO VALUE HIS THOUGHTS, IN PROSE AND VERSE : ec THESE POEMS ^ ARE, FOR HIS SAKE, DEDICATED BY E. S. CO 410793 PREFACE In carrying out the labour of Io\e entrusted to me by those most nearly connected with this much- honoured and regretted Friend, my wish has been to present such a selection from his published and manuscript verse as shall do justice to one of the most sincere and high-minded poets of our century. Nothing, as the verdict of Time constantly but vainly proves, is more insecure than contemporary' judgments upon contemporary work in art and literature. In- deed, " Fame herself," as a great critic observes, even when she seems firmly established, "has but a short memory." I shall therefore attempt no forecasting or estimate of what Shairp's place in our poetry may prove, beyond this, which can be safely hazarded ; — that in the following poems no sensitive mind can fail, to find the note of what his friend Matthew Arnold has excellently described as distinction j — the note of a pure, refined, modest originality. It is be- yond question a voice, not an echo, which we hear. Even in his ballad- songs, easily as that form invites to imitation, Shairp preserves an individual quality ; viii PREFACE nor, devoted as he was to Wordsworth, do we trace in the lyrics more than a few shght reminiscences of his manner. In a (larland hke this, chosen, unhappily, from the silent treasury of the dead, where but little cer- tainty can be felt which pieces might have seemed to the writer worthy preservation, my endeavour in selecting has been to follow the only safe rule — admit such poems alone as fairly seem on a level with the poet's best work. A choice thus made is difficult, and can hardly hope to satisfy every one. If, there- fore, any readers — Scottish readers in particular — find omissions to regret, let me ask their pardon on the plea that I have tried to do what is most loyal to Shairp's memory, and would far rather bear the blame of bad taste on my own account, than follow those deplorable e.xamples of exhaustive publication by which a mistaken " Love of Letters " has too often Swampt the sacred poets with themselves, — sweeping -in the rejected fragments of the artist's studio, and irreverently alloying with inferior ore the pure gold of genius. Although some short lyrics from the volume pub- lished by Shairp in 1864 (under the title of the nar- rative poem, Kilwahoc, which fills the larger portion of it) have been included, yet the present book con- PREFACE IX tains in general the writer's maturer work, selected either from the papers in the hands of his family, or from pieces which have hitherto had only a magazine publication. These latter I have regarded as bearing-, on the whole, the seal of Shairp's approval. But his own corrected copies, where possible, are here fol- lowed ; whilst, in case of the manuscripts, which have not always received the last touches of the writer, I have ventured to omit a very few lines. For the notes, glossarial and illustrative, I am mainly indebted to the Rev. T. Sinton, Minister of Glengarry, and to Mr. Bayne of Helensburgh. My wish, at first, was to ask Mr. Sinton for a transliteration into English sounds of the many Gaelic place-names which occur. But a few specimens proved that this would be well-nigh practically impossible in the case of languages differing so deeply in their intonation. And it may be feared that the ignorant indifference, descending sometimes into stupid hostility, with which the beautiful Celtic dialects yet surviving in our islands are regarded by almost all except those to whom they are mother-tongues, would have rendered translation of the sound and the significance of these relics of the past an almost useless and un- valued labour. It is also probable that some readers — in Scotland especially — may find the foot-notes over numerous. X rUKFACK Here I would plead that Poetry, in this age of facile prose, requires every assistance to attract and hold its audience. Better that fifty should find an explan- ation superfluous, than one find a difficulty unsolved. As the narrative of I^rincipal Shairp's life is in other and more competent hands, it remains for me now only to offer some brief words on the aim and character of these poems, on their sentiment and style. Such critical notes, it is almost a truism to say, can never really be adequate. As it is with the special perfume of rose or lily, so the quality by which the melody of Mozart differs from that of Beethoven, the charm with which the childless Reynolds rendered the children of his canvas ; — Vergilian magic, even when interpreted by the master-hand of Cardinal New- man ; — Shakespearean felicity; — of all these things the essence is indefinable, the secret inscrutable. Through much of the Palace of Art our guides may lead us ; but to the " inmost enchanted fountain " — the mystery of the Maker — we never penetrate. And stars of a lesser magnitude, if only they be stars, shining with light of their own, each has also a quality peculiar to itself, an influence not rained from any other. This premised, let me take some of the following poems, and try if I can put into words some slight shadow of this influence, of PREFACE xi this essence, so that those readers may enter into them with greater facihty, to whom Shairp has been hitherto unknown. And although a poet in the end is his own best interpreter, yet in this case there is the further reason for a short introduction, that the ways and thoughts of the Highland peasantry, remote and alien from most of us, — so far as the remorseless wheels of the car of civilization have yet spared them, — were my Friend's special care, and form everywhere the moral atmosphere with which the wild landscape of his native land is suffused and invested. Glen Desseray is a little Epic, an Epyllion, as the ancients said, of the Highlands. Into this poem, his most sustained attempt, Shairp has thrown his deepest feeling on the western mountain regions, — "the Visions of the hills, And Souls of lonely places": — throughout connecting the landscape, as it unfolds itself, with the human interests of the story. The narrative covers some sixty or seventy years from the middle of the eighteenth century, setting before us, as its principal theme, the romantic wanderings of Prince Charles Edward, whilst passing through that cloud of danger and defeat, when the noble and gallant elements of his character shone forth most brilliantly ; — contrasted with the scene of a Chief's return from exile ; followed by a second gathering of clansmen for foreign service, and, finally, by a glance at that "clearing of the b xii PREFACE glens " .which, during the last hundred years, has so changed even the ver>' landscape of the Highlands: — whilst incidental pictures of Gaelic life, manners, and character add animation to the long and varied tapestry which the poet has embroidered for us. Since Walter Scott, who practically revealed, whilst he in some sense created, the Highlands for his countrymen, has any one — any poet, at least — put them before us with such vividness, such charm, such inner truth, as Shairp ? Skill in devising plot has not at any time been common among our poets ; their genius turns much more to sentiment, character, or description ; and it is in these elements that the strength of Glen Desscray will be found. The narrative wanders discursively down the stream of Time, whilst tracing the incidents of the tale through the long glens of North-Western Scotland. It has something of the labyrinthine aspect of wild Nature, of her apparent aimlessness. But throughout is felt one intense fervour of interest in the land of the Gael and its romantic natives ; one pure and lofty passion of patriotism. It has the unity of sentiment, the unity of heart. It may be noticed, as a fine stroke of art, that in Shairp's first version of this poem a love-episode was given in Cantos V and \T, but rejected in favour of the more pathetic and unusual picture of Muriel's PREFACE xiii sisterly devotion and the noble fervour of friendship between Angus and Ronald ; which we may liken to the similar groups of Chaucer's Palamon and Arcite, the Amis and Ami! of the beautiful ancient French legend, or the love between David and Jonathan, of which the poet himself reminds us. Description of nature forms a large portion of Shairp's work. His landscape is indicated by brief characteristic features, calling up in succession clear images before the mind ; but there is little realistic detail, no attempt at " word-painting " for its own sake. And at e\ery instant the scene is connected with human life or human feeling. It thus suggests a picture, yet could not be reproduced on canvas. Shairp, in a word, has followed that eternal aesthetic canon of appropriateness, which demands that each of the Fine Arts shall render its subject solely through the method peculiar to itself If we turn from the manner to the matter of Shairp's landscape, in two marked features it seems to differ from that of Wordsworth, asserting in these its own originality, or, as we might also say, its ad- herence to the actual facts. The narrow area of the English Lake district contrasts with the wild Highland regions by a finished beauty, a soft richness of effect, an amenity, to put it in one significant word, which can hardly be found elsewhere, I think, nearer than xiv rKKKACt: the mountain lakes, — ie, Lari mnxumc, — and those others, which are the charm of North-West Italy. It was the wildness, tlic vast loca pastorum deserfa, the asperity of desolation, the glory touched with gloom of the Highland world, by which Shairp was pene- trated. This aspect of the soul of Nature he has characterized in his fine essay on Keble, when speak- ing of "her infinite and unhuman side, which yields no symbols to soothe man's yearnings." Nowhere, he writes, is this "so borne in on man as in the midst of the vast deserts of the earth, or in the presence of the mountains, which seem so impassive and unchange- able. Their strength and permanence so contrast with man — of few years and full of trouble ; they are so indifferent to his feelings or his destiny. He may smile or weep, he may live or die ; they care not. They are the same in all their ongoings, happen what will to him. They respond to the sunrises and the sunsets, but not to his sympathies. All the same they fulfil their mighty functions, careless though no human eye should ever look on them." How different is this tone from that habitual with Wordsworth ! To him, the sympathy between the outer world and the inner world of man, the echo and the lessons with which the landscape almost consciously responds to the human heart, the pene- tration of all Nature by the PREFACE XV Being that is in the clouds and air, are the central ideas and convictions of his soul. But the note struck in the words above quoted from Shairp is dominant in his own landscape-work, and it corresponds with the human sentiment which, — as must always be found in true landscape, whether painted in words or in colours, — atmo- spheres every picture. The disappearance of the old Highland life ; of the clans, not indeed as they were in the lawless years of old, but in their later pastoral phase ; the clearing of the glens under a long train of circumstances which I can only note without discussion, — all these features of human activity and joy and desolation seem to supply a soul to his deline- ation of scenery, in harmony with its innermost char- acter. What the memorj' of the lost friend was to Tennyson in his great lyrical elegy, the warmth of tender sympathy, of chastened enthusiasm for the Gael, is in the poems before us. We have here the second point of difference from Wordsworth. For that great poet, we know, more or less saw his own heart, his own thoughts and emotions, mirrored for him in Nature ; not, indeed, in that mood of a somewhat morbid sadness which, also, has lent a charm and interest of its own to some splendid poetry of the latter days, — a Childe Harold or an Alastor, — but with a sanity and breadth of view which lifts his landscape above mere " subject- xvi PREFACE i\e " imaginings. Wordsworth, speaking for and from himself, speaks most often for humanity in general ; he has, we might perhaps say, an impersonal personality. He learned much, doubtless, from his simple-hearted neighbours : but they are rarely part of his landscape. Vox hominein sonat j " Men, as they are men within themselves," so far as his experience went, — not the men of Westmoreland, were Wordsworth's real theme. There are passages, of course, in which Shairp's own feeling for nature, his own deep and large-hearted religious faith, reveal themselves. Such is the strik- ing reflection in Glen Desseray (C. iii, 5), where he touches on the blankness felt, when, in some scene to which we have eagerly come, filled with the remem- brance of a glorious Past, we find no trace of human sentiment or human deed surviving ; in the Return to Nature; or the profoundly -imagined Wilderness. So, again, in those poems where a peculiar tenderness of personal sympathy gives its tone to the landscape ; as in the Three Friends in Yarrow, the Spring, 1876, and the lovely Bush aboon Traquair, — distinguished above all Shairp's early lyrics by such gracious exquisiteness of sentiment and melody, that it should singly be enough to ensure him an abiding place in that unique and delightful company, — the song- writers of Scotland. Yet, in his poems of this class, self is never the leading note ; and, on a survey PREFACE xvii of his whole work, it must be felt that, within the measure of his faculty, Shairp ranks in the great army, — the greater army (I should venture to call it), — of " objective " poets. To this sphere, at any rate, conclusively belong many of the latter pieces in this volume. The very few brief songs it presents, which, if not strictly ballads, have sprung from the ballad, and are its fine flower in a more condensed and lyrical form, — the Cailleach, the Devorgidlla (despite its trochaic metre, with the peculiar difficulties of which Shairp, like Wordsworth before him, seems to me to contend in vain), the graceful Hairst Rig, — all " found " (to follow a convenient Scottish usage) on reality ; all have an underground, not of mere sentiment, the common de- fect in such songs, but of true individuality. But as the most noteworthy specimen of Shairp's power in this field we may rank the dialogue Lost on Schihallion. This has a tragic pathos, a holy simplicity and grandeur as of Nature herself, which make it a fit companion picture to Lady Anne Lindsay's well-known masterpiece. The power shown in these little lyrics, — and, under a different guise, in the ode on the Battle of the Alma, — may make us regret that Shairp did not write more upon such directly " objective " subjects. In them he has not that flash and movement of life wherein Scott is well-nigh alone amongst our nine- xviii PREFACE tccnlh century poets. Vet these ballad-verses (to which the Dyeing and Weaving of the Plaid, in the Fifth Canto of Glen Desscray, may be added), display a measure of Scott's Homeric simplicity and down- right current of narration ; a truly Greek abstinence from decoration for decoration's sake. The poet's eye is on his object, and his object alone ; the verse has the peculiar charm of disinterestedness; a quality which, I think, can only be imparted to his work by a soul completely freed and purified from egotism. It is the presence of such a soul, — to touch here a deeper note, — that we feel in those strains of higher mood which close the book ; although, as with poetry of this order is inevitable, the voice comes from the inner world of personal thought and the heart's deep- est feelings. In these poems Shairp, I think, had often before his mind the words or writings of our highly loved and admired Arthur Clough. Shairp, indeed, enjoyed a healthy happiness of faith, which, in the beautiful verse left us by Clough, — "too cruelly distraught," and dying too soon, — may be less per- ceptible ; but they both pii Vales et Phoebo digna locuti, upon every line of their "soul-songs" have set the same stamp of an absolute sincerity. These large-hearted poems, however, are best left to speak for themselves. Clough's name carries us PREFACE xix to that remaining section of Shairp's work, in which, again, he may claim a field of his own, little laboured by recent English writers. The large simplicity of his style, his strongly- marked "objective" habit of mind, are nowhere better seen than in the Character Pieces, as I have ventured to entitle them. Many readers in England will recognize the skill of por- traiture in the Balliol Scholars; to the faithfulness of which, having myself been privileged not long after to enter the same gifted company, I can bear witness. It is, truly, a group drawn with the gracious insight of a judgment evenly poised between discernment and sympathy; — the love of truthfulness, and the truthfulness that only comes of love. Those, doubtless, who knew the Highland Studeiits whom Shairp taught and commemorated, would find in his three monumental elegies the same sympathetic fidelity. None of his work seems to me more ori- ginal, more entirely his own, than this little series ; and in the management of that most difficult of all our metres— the blank verse — it is eminently successful. Wordsworth's magnificent Michael must, indeed, have been in his mind when he framed these clear-cut and tender memorials ; but the disciple was worthy of the master. Returning now for a moment to the leading poem : — It will, I think, be felt that Glen Desseray is eminently XX PREFACE characteristic both of Shairp's own "aspects of poetry," and of his own work as a poet. In the beautiful volume of Lectures given from the Chair in which, non passibus aequis, it has been my sad honour to follow the Friend too early summoned to the Life Unseen, he has defined the qualities which, to his mind, were central in Poetry : — " One of the first characteristics of the genuine and healthy poetic nature is this — it is rooted rather in the heart than in the head. Human-heartedness is the soil from which all its other gifts originally grow, and are continually fed. The true poet is not an eccentric creature, not a mere artist living only for art, not a dreamer or a dilettante, sipping the nectar of existence while he keeps aloof from its deeper interests. He is, above all things, a man among his fellow-men, with a heart that beats in sympathy with theirs, only larger, more open, more sensitive, more intense." And again : " Whenever the soul comes vividly in contact with any fact, truth, or existence, whenever it realises and takes them home to itself with more than common intensity, out of that meeting of the soul and its object there arises a thrill of joy, a glow of emotion ; and the expression of that glow, that thrill, is poetry." In a similar train of thought, putting always the natural expression of the heart as his first and last PREFACE XXI requirement, Shairp elsewhere draws a decided line, — a line which I venture to think too decided, — be- tween what he speaks of as the "pure" and the " ornate " styles in Poetry, — epithets which, indeed, in accordance with the passages just quoted, reveal the style that he loved and practised, but by which the knot of the question is rather cut than loosened. Hence it may, I think, be said of Shairp that his bias rendered him in some degree unwilling or unable to recognize, with all its due force, that Poetry, in Florizel's phrase, Is an art Which does mend Nature, — change it rather ; but The art itself is nature. It was doubtless due in some degree to this deep- seated mode of regarding poetry that in Shairp's work we may at times find an apparent carelessness in the choice of words, a want of finish in style, an absence of that evenness in metrical flow which the ear demands. Truly might he have said of himself, with Dante, while still on the Mount of Probation — Id mi son un che, quando Amore spira, noto, ed a quel modo Ch' ei detta dentro, vo significando. These little lapses, — these proofs of natural freshness xxii PREFACE and freedom, we might also better say, — are perhaps seen most in his carHer verse ; in regard to the later, we must recollect that the chords of the harp were broken, before the minstrel could complete his melody. Qui mai piu no ; ma rivedrenne altrove. F. T. P. / But and ben, cottage kitchen and parlour. THE BUSH ABOON TRAQUAIR i8i And then they wan ^ a rest, The lownest - and the best, I' Traquair kirkyard when a' was dune. Now the birks to dust may rot, Names o' luvers be forgot, Nae lads and lasses there ony mair convene ; But the blithe lilt o' yon air Keeps the bush aboon Ti-aquair, And the luve that ance was there, aye fresh and green. This and the five following poems were published in 1864. 1 IVan, won. - Lownest, calmest. IS2 thrip:ve castle^ Whence should ye o'er gentle spirits Such o'ermastering power achieve ? Workers of high-handed outrage ! Making king and people grieve, O the lawless Lords of Galloway ! O the bloody towers of Thrieve ! Is it that this time- scarred visage From behind five centuries dim, Doomed to death, yet death-defying, Glares the very look of him, Who first laid these strong foundations. Mighty Archibald the Grim ? Impress of those hands is on them, That beat Southron foemen down — Iron hands, that grasped a truncheon Weightier than the kingly crown — Stalwart Earls, broad-browed, black-bearded, Pinnacled on power o'ergrown. 1 See Note at end. THRIEVE CASTLE 183 These were they, lone-thoughted builders Of yon grim keep, massy-piled. Triple-walled, and triple-moated, In Dee Island triply isled, O'er the waste of dun morasses, Eyeing Cairnsmore mountains wild Power gat pride, pride unforgiveness — Whoso crossed the moats of Thrieve, Captive serf, or lordly foeman, Though a monarch begged reprieve, Had they wronged the Lord of Douglas, Living ne'er these gates might leave. Downward ! rust in yon dark dungeon Rings that once held fettered thrall. High in air, — the grooved stone gallows Ghastly juts from yonder wall. Where once swung the corse of Bombie, Prelude of the Douglas' fall. Never since from thy scathed forehead Hath it passed, the bodeful gloom Gathered there the hour thy haughtiest Lord rode forth, defying doom. To the monarch's perjured poignard, And the deathly banquet room. i84 THRIEVE CASTLK Outcast now from human uses, Both by war and peace disowned, All thy high ambitions broken, All thy dark deeds unatoned, Still thou wear'st no meaner aspect, Than a despot King dethroned. Frost and rain, and storm and thunder — Time's strong wedges — let them cleave Breaches through thy solid gables, Thou wilt neither blench nor grieve ; Thou who gav'st, wilt ask, no pity, Unrelenting Castle Thrieve ! 1 85 DEVORGUILLA^ OR THE ABBEY OF THE SWEET HEART In grey Crififel's lap of granite Lies the Abbey, saintly fair ! Well the heart, that first did plan it, Finds her earthly resting there : Who from out an age of wildness. Lawless force, unbridled crime, Reached forth wise hands in mildness Helpful to the coming time. The rude Galloway chieftain's daughter — Memory of her Norman 'knight. And long widowed sorrow taught her To make good deeds her delight. Long ere now their names had perished. Had not those wise halls, ^ she reared By the southern Isis, cherished Them for Founders' names revered. 1 See Note at end. - Those wise halls, Balliol College, Oxford. '86 DEVORGUILLA While these arches o'er Nitli river, Thron^red by daily passers, still Witness here her pure endeavour To complete her dear lord's will. liut for human use or learnin'^ Good works done, could they appease Her long heartache ? that lone vearninf^ Other medicine asked than these. So she spake, " Rise, page, and ride in Haste, this grief will not be calmed, Til! thou from the land he died in Bear my dead lord's heart embalmed." Ivory casket closing round it, With enamelled silver, fair As deft hands could frame, he bound it, And with fleet hoofs homeward bare : Generous heart that once so truly W^ith young love for her had beat, Bore he to her home, and duly Laid before the lady's feet. One whole day her passionate sorrow Inly brooded, dark and dumb. But in silence shaped, the morrow Clear as light her words did come. DEVORGUILLA 187 " Build me here, high-towered and solemn, Abbey-church in fairest style, — Pointed arch, and fluted column, Ranged down transept, nave, and aisle." There the dear heart laid in holy Place, the altar-steps before, Down she knelt herself in lowly Adoration on that floor. Thither day by day she wended, On that same spot knelt and prayed ; There at last, when all was ended, With the heart she loved was laid. In that place of ivied ruin She hath taken, since the close Of her life of full well-doing. Six long centuries' repose. Meek one ! who, 'mid proud men violent, A pure builder unreproved. Lived and laboured for the silent Kingdom that shall ne'er be moved. 1 88 THEN AND NOW A TIME there was, W^hen this hill-pass, ^ With castle, keep, and peel.^ Stood iron-teethed, Like warrior sheathed In mail from head to heel. Friend or foe. No man might go. Out to the English Border, Nor any ride To Forth or Clyde, Unchallenged of the Warder. At the baron's 'hest The trooper spurred. And brought the traveller Before his lord. To be dungeon-mured, Dark, damp, and lone, ^ Peel, small square tower in the Border counties. THEN AND NOW 189 Till death had cured His weary moan. But time has pulled the teeth From those fierce fangs, Spread his sward of heath O'er the riever ^ gangs ; Hushed their castles proud, As grave-yards still. And streamed life loud Through mart and mill. Embowered among green ashes, The grey towers sigh, Alas ! As the loud train crashes Down the rock-ribbed pass. They come and go Morn and eve, Bear friend and foe. And ask no leave. While the towers look forth From their gaunt decay On an altered earth, A strange new day ; When mechanics pale ^ Riever, robber. • 90 TIIF.N AND NOW Oust feudal lords, With wheel and rail, Not blood-red swords And the horny hands That delve iron-ore, (irasp mighty lands. Chiefs ruled of yore. 191 THE BLUE BELLS Again the bonny blue bells Wave all o'er our dear land, Or scattered single, here and there, Or a numerous sister band. How many a last leave-taking Hath darkened over youthful faces, Since the hour ye last were here ! Now in all your wonted places. From long wintry sleep awaking, Blithe ye reappear. The same ye meet us, be we joyful. Or bowed down by heavy loads. On the thatch of auld clay biggins, ^ Shedding grace o'er poor abodes, Or from dykes - of greensward gleaming, Hard by unfrequented roads. O'er the linns of dark Clyde water Ye are trembling, from the steep, ^ Biggi'is, cottages. - Dykes, hedge-banks. 192 Till-: liLUH IJKLLS And afar on dusky moorlands, Where the shepherd wears • his sheep, 15y the hoary headstone waving O'er the Covenanter's sleep. Ye come ere laverocks - cease their singing, And abide through sun and rain, Till our harvest-homes are ended, And the barn-yards stored with grain ; Then ye pass, when flock the plover To warm lands beyond the main. In your old haunts, O happy blue bells 1 Ye, when we are gone, shall wave, And as living we have loved you. Dead, one service would we crave. Come, and in the west winds swinging. Prank the sward that folds our grave. 1 Wears, leads cautiously to shelter. - Laverocks, larks. 193 THE HAIRST RIG^ O HOW my heart lap - to her Upon the blithe hairst rig ! Ilk 3 morning comin' owre the fur ^ Sae gracefu', tall, and trig. Chorus — O the blithe hairst rig ! The blithe hairst rig ; Fair fa' the lads and lasses met On the blithe hairst rig ! 'o At twal' 5 hours aft we sat aloof, Aneth ^ the bielding stook, " And tentlyS frae her bonny loof^ The thistle thorns I took. When hairst was dune and neebors met To haud the canty kirn, i° Sae fain ^^ we twa to steal awa' And daunder up the burn. 1 Hairst Rig, harvest field at reaping-time. - Lap, leapt. 3 Ilk, each. ^ Fur, furrow. ^ Twal', noon. ® Aneth, beneath. " Bielding stook, sheltering sheaves set up against each other. » Xently, deftly. ^ Loof, open hand. ^" Haud the canty kirn, keep the cheerful harvest home. •'I Fain, longing. O 194 Tin; IIAIRST KKI The lammies white as new-fa'en drift, Lay quiet on the hills, The clouds aboon i' the deep blue lift,i Lay whiter, purer still. Ay, pearly white, the clouds that night Shone marled - to the moon, But nought like you, my bonny doo ! All earth or heaven aboon. The burnie whimpering siller^ clear, It made a pleasant tune ; But O ! there murmured in my ear A sweeter holier soun'. Lang, lang we cracked,'* and went and came, And daundered, laith ^ to part ; But the ae thing I daured na name Was that lay neist my heart. Fareweel cam' owre and owre again. And yet we could na sever, Till words were spake in that dear glen, That made us ane forever. ^ Lift, sky. - Marled, chequered. ^ Siller, silver, * Cracked, chatted. ' Laith, loath. 195 MANOR WATER I Doth Yarrow flow endeared by dream And chaunt of Bard and Poet ? As fair to sight flows Manors stream, And only shepherds know it : — In autumn time when thistle down Upon the breeze is sailing, And from high clouds the shadows brown Go o'er the mountains trailing. 3 The streams of Yarrow do not range By greener holm or meadow, Nor win a sweeter interchang-e Of sunshine and of shadow. '&* 4 And when along these heights serene Go days of autumn weather, How splendid then the grassy sheen With bracken blent and heather. 196 MANOR WATKR 5 When from yon liill across the glen The Harvest moon doth wander, She lingers o'er no strath or Ben With sweeter looks and fonder. Then what hath Yarrow, that famed stream By hundred Poets chaunted, To win the glory and the dream This dale hath wholly wanted ? 7 It is not beauty, nor rich store Of braver deeds and older : Down all this water Peel towers hoar Of stem old warriors moulder. 8 O'er these hills rode beneath the moon With his Bride, Lord William^ flying ; At this wan water they lighted down, The stream his life blood dyeing. 1 Lord William, see "The Douglas Tragedy," in Scott's Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border. MANOR WATER 197 9 Whence then did Yarrow win her claim To such poetic favour ? She kept the old melodious name, The old Celtic people gave her. 10 And when upon her banks befell Some love-pain, or deep sorrow, Some Bard was nigh to sing it well, To the magic chime of Yarrow. Written about 1867. ■ 98 SONG OF THE SOUTH COUNTREE O THE Border Hills sae green r the South Countree ! With the heather streaked between In the South Countree ! Sae blythe as I hae been, Sic sights as I hae seen, Wide wandering morn to e'en In the South Countree ! And it's all enchanted ground I' the South Countree ; Fairy knowe and moated mound On hill, and holm, and lea ; Grey stannin ^ stane and barrow Of old chiefs by Tweed and Yarrow r the South Countree. ^ Stannin, standing. SONG OF THE SOUTH COUNTREE 199 ■3 When gloamin' grey comes down r the South Countree, And the hills look weird and brown r the South Countree, High up the grey mists sail, And, beneath, the river pale Winds lonely down the dale, r the South Countree. 4 At foot of hope 1 and glen. In the South Countree Moulder Peels 2 of stalwart men r the South Countree ; But quenched their day of pride When they warned the water ^ wide, 'Gainst their foes to rise and ride Frae the South Countree. 5 And looks of beauty rare r the South Countree, 1 Hope, sloping valley between mountain-ridges. - Peels, Border-towers. 3 Warned the water, summoned allies along the river. 200 SONG OF Till-: SOUTH rorXTKKl, Went smiling up the stair III tlie South Countree, When Mary, \:\nnw's flower, Looked forth through shine and shower From Di7hope's lonely Tower In the South Countree. Yet though the towers down fa' r the South Countree, There arc winsome flowers that blaw r the South Countree I O sae happy would I be With her that's dear to me, There to live, and there to dee, r the South Countree. Written 1867. 201 THREE FRIENDS^ IN YARROW ADDRESSED TO E. L. LUSHINGTON O MANY a year is gone, since in life's fresh dawn, The bonny forest over, Morn to eve I wandered wide, as blithe as ever bride To meet her faithful lover. From Newark's birchen bower, to Dryhope's hoaiy Tower, Peel and Keep I traced and numbered ; And sought o'er muir and brae, by cairn and crom- lech grey, The graves where old warriors slumbered. 3 Where'er on hope or dale has lingered some faint trail Of song or minstrel gloiy, ^ See Note at end. 202 TIIREF. 1KII:NI)S IN YARROW There I drank deep draughts at will, but could never drink my fill, Of the ancient Border story. 4 O fond and foolish time, when to ballad and old rhyme Every throb of my pulse was beating ! As if old world things like these could minister heart-ease, Or the soul's deep want be meeting ! * * * * * 1 5 Now when gone is summer prime, and the mellow autumn time Of the year and of life has found us, With Thee, O gentle friend, how sweet one hour to spend. With the beauty of Yarrow all around us I With him too for a guide, the Poet of Tweedside, Our steps 'mong the braes to order, Who still doth prolong the fervour, torrent-strong ; The old spirit of the Border. ^ So asterisked in MS. THREE FRIENDS IN YARROW 203 Heaven's calm autumnal grey on holm and hillside lay, With here and there a gleaming ; As the glints of sunny sheen down Herman's ^ slopes of green O'er St. Mary's Lake came dreaming. 8 There on Dryhope's Tower forlorn we marked the rowan, born From the rents of roofless ruin ; And heard the [bridal] tale of the Flower of Yarrow Vale,2 And her old romantic wooing. 9 And then we wandered higher, where once St. Mar^f's quire O'er the still Lake watch was keeping : But nothing now is seen save the lonely hillocks green, Where the Shepherds of Yarrow are sleeping. ^ Hcrma7i Law, hill marking the watershed between Yarrow and Moffat waters. - See Note at end. 204 TIIREK FRIENDS IX YARROW lO And we stood by the stone where I'iers Cockburn ^ rests alone, With his Bride in their dwelling narrow ; And thou heard'st their tale of dool, and the wail of sorrow full, The saddest ever wailed on Yarrow. II Thou didst listen, while thine eye all lovingly did lie On the green braes spread around thee ; But I knew by the deep rapt quiet thou didst keep, That the power of Yarrow had bound thee. 12 O well that Yarrow should put on her sweetest mood To meet thy gentle being ; For of both the native mien and the fortunes ye have seen, Respond with a strange agreeing. 13 There was beauty here before sorrow swept the Forest oer Its beauty more meek to render : — ^ See Note at end. THREE FRIENDS IN YARROW 205 Thou wert gentle from thy birth, and the toils and cares of earth Have but made thee more wisely tender. 14 High souls have come and gone, and on these braes have thrown The light of their glorious fancies, And left their words to dwell and mingle with the spell Of a thousand old romances. 15 And who more fit to find, [than] thou, in soul and mind All akm to great bards departed, — The high thoughts here they breathed, the boon they have bequeathed To all the tender hearted t 16 And we who did partake, by still St. Mary's Lake, Those hours of renewed communion, Shall feel when far apart, the remembrance at our heart Keeps alive our foregone soul-union. 206 THRKE FRIENDS 1\ NARROW 17 From this world of eye and ear soon we must dis- appear ; But our after-life may borrow From these scenes some tone and hue, when all things arc made new In a fairer land than Yarrow. Written September 1878. CHARACTER PIECES 209 BALLIOL SCHOLARS 1840-1843 A REMEMBRANCE Within the ancient College-gate I passed, Looked round once more upon the well-known square : Change had been busy since I saw it last, Replacing crumbled walls by new and fair ; The old chapel gone — a roof of statelier show Soared high — I wondered if it sees below As pure heart-worship, as confiding prayer. But though walls, chapel, garden, all are changed, And through these courts quick generations fleet, There are whom still I see round table ranged, In chapel snowy-stoled for matins meet ; P 210 BALLIOL SCHOLARS Though many faces since have come and gone, Changeless in memory these still live on, A Scholar brotherhood, high-souled, complete. 3 From old foundations where the nation rears Her darlings, came that flower of England's youth And here in latest teens, or riper years, Stood drinking in all nobleness and truth. By streams of Isis 'twas a fer\'id time. When zeal and young devotion held their prime. Whereof not unreceptive these in sooth. 4 The voice that weekly from St. Mary's spake,^ As from the unseen world oracular, Strong as another Wesley, to re-wake The sluggish heart of England, near and far, Voice so intense to win men, or repel, Piercing yet tender, on these spirits fell, Making them other, higher than they were. 5 Foremost one stood, with forehead high and broad,- — Sculptor ne'er moulded grander dome of thought, — Beneath it, eyes dark-lustred rolled and glowed, 1 J. H. (Cardinal) Newman. - Arthur H. Clough. BALLIOL SCHOLARS 211 Deep wells of feeling where the full soul wrought ; Yet lithe of limb,, and strong as shepherdboy, He roamed the wastes and drank the mountain joy, To cool a heart too cruelly distraught. 6 The voice that from St. Mary's thrilled the hour. He could not choose but let it in, though loath ; Yet a far other voice with earlier power ^ Had touched his soul and won his first heart-troth, In school-days heard, not far from Avon's stream : - Anon there dawned on him a wilder dream. Opening strange tracts of thought remote from both. 7 All travail pangs of thought too soon he knew. All currents felt, that shake these anxious years. Striving to walk to tender conscience true. And bear his load alone, nor vex his peers. From these, alas ! too soon he moved apart ; Sorrowing they saw him go, with loyal heart. Such heart as greatly loves, but more reveres. Away o'er Highland Bens and glens, away He roamed, rejoicing without let or bound. ^ Dr. Arnold. 2 Rugby. 212 liAI.LIOL SCHOLARS And, yearning still to vast America, A simpler life, more freedom, sought, not found. Now the world listens to his lone soul-songs ; But he, for all its miseries and wrongs Sad no more, sleeps beneath Italian ground. Beside that elder scholar one there stpod,^ On Sunday mornings 'mid the band whitestoled, As deep of thought, but chastened more of mood, Devout, affectionate, and humble-souled. There, as he stood in chapel, week by week, Lines of deep feeling furrowing down his cheek Lent him, even then, an aspect strangely old. lo Not from the great foundations of the land, But from a wise and learned father's roof, His place he won amid that scholar band, Where finest gifts of mind were put to proof ; And if some things he missed which great schools teach. More precious traits he kept, beyond their reach, — Shy traits that rougher world had scared aloof. ^ Rev. Constantine Prichard. BALLIOL SCHOLARS 213 1 1 Him early prophet souls of Oriel A boy-companion to their converse drew, And yet his thought was free, and pondered well All sides of truth, and gave to each its due, O pure wise heart, and guileless as a child ! In thee, all jarring discords reconciled. Knowledge and reverence undivided grew. 12 Ah me ! we dreamed it had been his to lead The world by power of deeply-pondered books, And lure a rash and hasty age to heed Old truths set forth with fresh and winsome looks ; But he those heights forsook for the low vale And sober shades, where dwells misfortune pale. And sorrow pines in unremembered nooks. Where'er a lone one lay and had no friend, A son of consolation there was he ; And all life long there was no pain to tend. No grief to solace, but his heart was free ; And then, his years of pastoral service done. And his long suffering meekly borne, he won A grave of peace by England's southern sea. 214 BALLIOL SCHOLARS M More than all arguments in deep books stored, Than any preacher's penetrative tone, More than all music by rapt poet poured, To have seen thy life, thy converse to have known, Was witness for thy Lord — that thus to be Humble, and true, and loving, like to thee — This was worth living for, and this alone. IS Fair-haired and tall, slim, but of stately mien,i Inheritor of a high poetic name, Another, in the bright bloom of nineteen. Fresh from the pleasant fields of Eton came : Whate'er of beautiful or poet sung. Or statesman uttered, round his memory clung ; Before him shone resplendent heights of fame. i6 With friends around the board, no wit so fine To wing the jest, the sparkling tale to tell ; Yet ofttimes listening in St. Mary's shrine, Profounder moods upon his spirit fell : We heard him then, England has heard him since, 1 J. D. (Lord) Coleridge. BALLIOL SCHOLARS 215 Uphold the fallen, make the guilty wince, And the hushed Senate hav^e confessed the spell. 17 There too was one, broad-browed, with open face,^ And frame for toil compacted — him with pride A school of Devon ^ from a rural place Had sent to stand these chosen ones beside ; From childhood trained all hardness to endure, To love the things that noble are, and pure. And think and do the truth, whate'er betide, 18 With strength for labour, " as the strength of ten," To ceaseless toil he girt him night and day ; A native king and ruler among men. Ploughman or Premier, born to bear true sway ; Small or great duty never known to shirk. He bounded joyously to sternest work, — Less buoyant others turn to sport and play. 19 Comes brightly back one day — he had performed Within the Schools some more than looked-for feat, And friends and brother scholars round him swarmed ^ Frederick Temple (Bishop of London). - Tiverton School. 2l6 I5ATJ.IOL SCHOLARS To give the day to gladness that was meet : Forth to the fields \vc fared, — among the young Green leaves and grass, his laugh the loudest rung ; Beyond the rest his bound flew far and fleet. 20 All afternoon o'er Shotover's breezy heath We ranged, through bush and brake instinct with spring, The vernal dream-lights o'er the plains beneath Trailed, overhead the skylarks carolling ; Then home through evening-shadowed fields we went, And filled our College rooms with merriment, — Pure joys, whose memory contains no sting. And thou wast there that day, my earliest friend ' In Oxford ! sharer of that joy the while ! Ah me, with what delightsome memories blend " Thy pale calm face, thy strangely-soothing smile ;" What hours come back, when, pacing College walks. New knowledge dawned on us, or friendly talks Inserted, long night-labours would beguile. ^ J. Rillingsly Seymour. BALLIOL SCHOLARS 217 What strolls through meadows mown of fragrant hay, On summer evenings by smooth Cherwell stream, When Homer's song, or chaunt from Shelley's lay, Added new splendour to the sunset gleam : Or how, on calm of Sunday afternoon, Keble's low sweet voice to devout commune, And heavenward musings, would the hours redeem. But when on crimson creeper o'er the wall Autumn his finger beautifully impressed, And came, the third time at October's call. Cheerily trooping to their rooms the rest, Filling them with glad greetings and young glee, His room alone was empty — henceforth we By his sweet fellowship no more were blest. 24 Too soon, too quickly from our longing sight, Fading he passed, and left us to deplore From all our Oxford day a lovely light Gone, which no after morning could restore. Through his own meadows Cherwell still wound on. And Thames by Eton fields as glorious shone — He who so loved them would come back no more. 2i8 15ALLI0L SCHOLARS Amon<; that scholar band the youngest pair ^ In hall and chapel side by side were seen, Each of high hopes and noble promise heir, But far in thought apart — a world between. The one wide-welcomed for a father's fame, Entered with free bold step that seemed to claim Fame for himself, nor on another lean. 26 So full of power, yet blithe and debonair, Rallying his friends with pleasant banter gay. Or half a-dream chaunting with jaunty air Great words of Goethe, catch of B^ranger. We see the banter sparkle in his prose. But knew not then the undertone that flows. So calmly sad, through all his stately lay. 27 The other of an ancient name, erst dear To Border Hills, though thence too long exiled, In lore of Hellas scholar without peer, Reared in grey halls on banks of Severn piled : Reserved he was, of few words and slow speech, 1 Matthew Arnold and James Riddell. BALLIOL SCHOLARS 219 But dwelt strange power, that beyond words could reach, In that sweet face by no rude thought defiled. 28 Oft at the hour when round the board at wine, Friends met, and others' talk flowed fast and free, His listening silence and grave look benign More than all speech made sweet society. But when the rowers, on their rivals gaining, Close on the goal bent, every sinew straining — Then who more stout, more resolute than he ? 29 With that dear memory come back most of all Calm days in Holy Week together spent ; Then brightness of the Easter Festival O'er all things streaming, as a-field we went Up Hincksey vale, where gleamed the young primroses, And happy children gathered them in posies, Of that glad season meet accompaniment. Of that bright band already more than half Have passed beyond earth's longing and regret ; The remnant, for grave thought or pleasant laugh. 220 BALLIOL SCHOLARS Can meet no longer as of old they met : Yet, O pure souls ! there arc who still retain Deep in their hearts the high ideal strain They heard with you, and never can forget. 31 To have passed with them the threshold of young life, Where the man meets, not yet absqrbs the boy, And, ere descending to the dusty strife. Gazed from clear heights of intellectual joy, That an undying image left enshrined, A sense of nobleness in human kind, Experience cannot dim, nor time destroy. 32 Since then, through all the jars of life's routine, All that down-drags the spirit's loftier mood, I have been soothed by fellowship serene Of single souls with heaven's own light endued. But look where'er I may — before, behind — I have not found, nor now expect to find, Another such high-hearted brotherhood. 'o' Published March 1873. 221 DEAN STANLEY AT ST. ANDREWS Guest ! but no stranger, — many a time before Thy feet had turned with fervour all thine own, To pace our lost Cathedral's grass-grown floor. Through skeleton walls and altars overthrown ; To trace dim graves where saint and martyr sleep, Or wander where wild moor and sea-washed keep Saw mitred heads, by bloody hands struck down. Long lay these memories blank to common eyes, Waiting their Poet : — thy voice ringing clear. Pealed through our halls — the buried shades arise. The strifes of former centuries re-appear. And mighty names historic, in long line. Starting to life, before our vision shine. Majestic, as they moved in presence here. Passed soon that thrilling hour : and we too pass But that fine strain of wisdom shall not flee Transient as shadows over summer grass. But dwell, we trust, in many a heart, and be A power benign, for good that shall endure, 222 DEAN STANLEY AT ST. ANDREWS A spring of aspiration high and pure, Of large forbearance and sweet courtesy. Those stirring tones, their every rise and fall, — That vivid countenance, that winning mien, Some youth to listening ears shall yet recall In far days on, when we no more are seen ; *' Stanley's voice long ago, like trumpet call, I heard it thrill St. Andrews' antique hall, — None other such have heard through all the years between." St. Salvator's College, St. Andrews, 19th April 1875. THE DEATH OF PRINCE ALBERT These hoary, dialed, belfry Towers Have counted many centuries' hours, But never tolled so doleful chime. As that slow, solemn knell to-day They pealed for him just passed away, The Prince laid low in manhood's prime. It thrills through every tower and town, From where the cliffs of Dover frown. To far Orcadian headlands rolled. Saddening the people, high and low, From hall to humblest hut, as though In every home one heart were cold. All mourn with her who wears the crown. Bowed in a lonelier sorrow down. Than any mourner in the land. Weeping above his darkened dust. To whom she leaned in love and trust, The strong stay of her sceptred hand. 224 Tin-: DEATH OK rRIN'ClC ALBERT Well may she mourn, so humbly great He stood beside her, unelate, Lending the might true wisdom lends, Far-reaching thought, truth-tempered will, And upward aim, yet calm and still To guide the State to noble ends. How lofty and benign his course ! From vain self-seeking, harmful force. And splendid idlesse, all removed 1 Pure in himself, and toward the pure Serene things, that alone endure. Still labouring, stedfast, unreproved. But that cold voice ! — through palace gate It passed, unchallenged, guards that wait Around those portals night and day ; Passed on, unheard, by page and groom. Pierced to that stately, silent room. And coldly whispered, " come away." We start, as though noon-day, that shone A moment since, were quenched and gone ; Falls dim eclipse the land athwart. And, only now thy head is low. These islands in their sorrow know The all thou wert, O princely heart ! St. Andrews, December 1861. 225 ON THE DEATH OF SIR JAMES SIMPSON, Bart. M.D. Hath then that Hfe-long combatant with death, He who so oft the tyrant foiled, Who stayed for many, a while, their fleeting breath, Sunk of his might despoiled ? Ah ! Yes ! that native strength of nerve and brain Wrested from powers till then unknown The marvellous anodyne ^ for others' pain. But found none for his own. Thousands in every land beneath the sun Will hear that word, and, hearing, grieve. The head is low that for the sufferer won So gracious a reprieve. Hath God then sat behind the clouds and heard The helpless generations groan Through all those ages, by no pity stirred, How much soe'er they moan — 1 Chloroform. Q 226 ON THE DEATH OF SHi JAMES SIMPSON He, Who by one small fiat of His will, One move of His Almighty hand, Could bid all human agony be still, And sorrow countermand ? Is man so pitiful, our God so hard, Doth the weak labour to relieve Weak fellow-man, the strong have no regard, How much soe'er they grieve ? In the great fountain whence that pity came. The thought that filled that mortal mind, Is there not, unexhausted, of the same Large residue behind ? Not coldly contemplating human pain In highest Heaven He sits aloof. But stoops Himself to bear the stress and strain, And puts His Love to proof For He the winepress red with anguish trod, And let the Father's heart shine through As not impassive — but a suffering God, With whom we have to do. To combat with our spiritual foes He from the height of heaven descends. ON THE DEATH OF SIR JAMES SIMPSON 227 Down to the lowest depth, and counts Who will to follow, Friends. And not alone for those few human years He underwent our load of ill, But all the days of old He bore, and bears The whole world's burden still. O mystery of evil ! Whence it came What thought can fathom, — yet we know He strives man's desolation to reclaim, And counterwork our woe. And they, throughout all time, who have wrought in love For human kind, form one great band Of brother workers, in forefront of which. Chief worker, Christ doth stand. 'J Written 1870. 228 SPRING. 1876 No softer south than this did ever fall, The calmed heavens no gentler look e'er cast, On wakening earth through any spring time, all The generations past. This is the season that through Chaucer's veins 'Mid England's woods, a thrill of gladness sent ; The same with Wordsworth's most ethereal strains 'Mid his own mountains blent. Yet all spring-melodies of bards have voiced How small a moiety of the mighty sum. Wherewith, in past Springs, countless hearts rejoiced In gladness deep, though dumb. SPRING, 1S76 229 4 Season of hope they named thee — fondly dreamed Thou wert the pledge of fairer hours to be — Hath any summer e'er that pledge redeemed To poor humanity ? 5 And we whose hearts erewhiie when Spring came round With hearts of friends for joy were wont to leap, Think how to-day Spring touches many a mound, 'Neath which those loved ones sleep ! One 1 rests, ah dearest ! by Tay's lucent wave, Under a great crag's overshadowing brow, To Christ unseen his pure strong life he gave — We trust he sees Him now. 7 And One,- — beneath roars factory, forge, and mart ! Above — the still green fell, and boyhood's glen, — There rests o'erwearied that large human heart, That brother man of men. 1 Henry Alexander Douglas: - Norman Macleod : — See Note at end. 230 STRING, 1876 8 Can we, for whom the face of earth is filled So full of graves, on Spring look any more, And entertain the vernal hopes that thrilled Our hearts in springs of yore ? 9 Therefore we will not take these vernal moods For promise of sure earthly good to be ; We will not go to cull through budding woods The frail anemone. 10 Rather to us shall all this floral sheen, That breadth of wood so fresh, so lustrous-leaved, Hint of a beauty that no eye hath seen, No human heart conceived. 2^1 HIGHLAND STUDENTS^ Beyond the bay, beyond the gleaming sands, This Sabbath eve, that sunset from the bank Of clouds down-breaking on yon Highland hills Is gilding there, I wot, the new-made grave Of one we knew and loved. But two days gone, In an old mountain kirk-yard, underneath The great Schihallion, by a full-flowing stream, They happed the green sward o'er his noble head ; And that was all of him. Five years agone. When the chill autumn, by the waning birks And the wa-gang ^ o' the swallow, warned us down From summering on the hills to winter work. In the clachan •* by the loch-side came to us A Highland matron, gentle, tall, and pale ; And in sweet Celtic tone spake of her son. " Her only boy, her Duncan, he was bound 1 See Note at end. ^ Duncan Campbell. 2 Wa-gang, departure. ^ Clachan, village. 23^ IlKilll.ANI) STLDKNTS In a lew weeks for college. He had been An cidcnl ' karner in the village school, Much honoincil Ijy the teacher. To themselves Kind son he was, and alway dutiful ; Sparing himself no labour, so he might Lighten their burden. Now his heart was set On finding better learning, they would do Their best to help him through his student years." And then she ceased, commending him to me. Soon as November opened college doors. Young Duncan entered : tall and strong, like one Who had seen hardness, and was fit for more. His countenance and mien bespoke a heart True to llic core as sturdiest Lowlander's, \'ct sweetened more than Lowland manners are l')y the fine courtesy of the ancient (lael. Each winter morn I saw him in his place. Between two students of the same clan-name : One, scion of a house renowned of old ; The other humbler. As he sat and heard The lore of Rome unrolled, his listening mind Drank, and expanded as the daisied bank Spreads to the sun in May-time. When spring brought Once more the early swallows, home he hied ' Eident, diligent. HIGHLAND STUDENTS 233 To his own mountains, bearing back withal A good report, and a fair scholar's name. That summer tide on a bleak mountain edge I found my student ; he had doffed the gown For the rough mason's gear, to labour there A-dyking with his father. All day long They built those dry-stone walls that miles and miles Cross ridgy backs of hills, to part sheep farms Or lands of neighbouring lairds. In that lone place How cheery was his greeting ! while he told How there he wrought the solid day, and saved What margin might be won from morn or eve For book-work. Something of his history more That time I learnt, 'mid his own people — how In a sequestered place, where no school was. An old clay cottage he had made his school, And taught the children of the shepherds with Those of poor crofters. If a shepherd lad In all that country wished to mend his lore, He had recourse to Duncan. I have talked Upon the autumn braes with youths whose thought For clearness made me marvel, and I found That they had Ijeen with him. In every home. From high Brae-Lyon all down Tummel, he For his well-doing had an honoured name. Three following winters he returned, and gleaned What lore our college yields, and from all hearts, 234 IIIf.HI.AND STUDENTS Both those who taught and tliosc who learned with him, Earned not less honour than on Rannochside. But neither learning nor esteem of men Aught changed his nature's strong simplicity. How oft o' nights, when nor'-winds from the sea Howled round our gables, hath he sat and cheered Our hearth with legends from the hills ! — wild tales Of ghostly voices heard up Doirie-vhor, And wandering people from their senses frayed, By the weird lochan.^ Sometimes would he bring Snatches of ancient song, in summer gleaned From hoary men — wild Celtic melodies — In long Glen Lyon, or by lone Loch Treig, For ages sung, but now, like morning mists, From the glens disappearing. When the time Had come that he must crown with a degree His four years' toil, the struggle was severe, — But the end was honour, and a good reward. And then the goal that he had looked to long — The Christian ministry — seemed almost won. But God had willed he should not touch that goal. Scarce had he entered on the untried field Of Hebrew learning, when or toils foregone, ' Lochan, diminutive of loch. HIGHLAND STUDENTS 235 Or new work underta'en for self-support, Or for the old folk at home, so wore him that He other seemed than the Duncan that we knew. Last yule came bitter chill, and fierce-fanged winds Seized his strong frame, and with joint-racking rheums Stretched him on bed of pain for many days. With Spring we saw him creeping out once more, But with sunk cheek and feeble ; yet we said Summer on his own mountains meeting him Will breathe the health back Winter hath brought low. But he had other warnings, — chilling faints That said these hopes were vain ; and yet through all He bore a cheerful heart. But that last morn Just ere he left the old collegiate town, He grasped his best friend by the hand, and said, " I know that I return no more." The day He journeyed home was cold, a biting wind Smote him, and when he entered the old home It only was to lay him down and die. Through weary weeks of struggle that remained, Mother and one sole sister tended him Their best — did what poor human love will do ; But ere the longest day came, that dear life — Joy of their hearts, their one sole hope on earth — • Faded before them into eternity. And now Schihallion's shadow on his grave Rests, and morn smites and night pavilions there 236 IIKilll.AM) STUDENTS High overhead, and ilic river roars beneath. But what to liiin tlicse mountain pageantries ? And what to them, poor hearts ! that pine hard by, Whom spring or summer can make glad no more ? Yet, O ye mourners ! though ye needs must go Lorn for him all your days — a little while In faith hold on, and ye shall see him, where For them found faithful in a few things here There yet remain the many things of God ! Published 1867, IP The mighty shadow which Schihallion flings To nor'ward, falls athwart a hillock green, A steep green knoll, with one sole elm-tree crowned, And a forsaken place of burial. Thither, — before the turf on Duncan's grave, Yonder, the other side of Tummel stream, Had knit itself with green, — a student-friend Was carried to his last lone resting-place. Climb we the knoll so steep and green, to see The small kirkyard, along the smooth top spread. Its roofless long-abandoned chapelry, And mossed wall crumbling round it. There they lie, Under rough mountain slabs, without a name, ^ Ewan Cameron. HIGHLAND STUDENTS 237 By tall weeds overgrown, the old Rannoch men, Stewarts, Macgregors, Camerons. On one side, Beneath the spread of that great elm-tree's boughs, A headstone gleams more than the rest adorned, That marks the grave of Ewan Cameron. Here sit we down upon the lichened wall, The while I tell thee all the brief sad tale, Brief, but not sad, of the young sleeper there. Natives of this same strath these lads were born. To the same college student-friends they came. Yonder their homes lie, scarce a mile between, Duncan's within the clachan by the loch, Ewan's, that farmstead 'neath the bielding hill, In trees half-hid. Now half a mile apart Lie their two graves, the river flowing between. Poor was his farm, not numerous the flock That Ewan's father on that mountain fed, And only with sore struggle he prevailed 'Gainst pressure of hard times to hold his own, And rear his children, sheltering from toil The tender youth of Ewan, eldest born. His parents, grave and serious, held the faith Of a small remnant of religious men. Living in households sprinkled near and far Among the glens. In dawn of life from these, Their strict home ways, their Sabbath pieties, Ewan had drunk a stern and fervid faith, 238 HIGHLAND STUDENTS Yet tempered well by native gentleness. For very gentle he was, with open heart To kindly nature. In the village school On the same bench by Duncan's side he sat, Was taught by the same master. School hours o'er. They took the Braes together, ranged at will The ample folds of broad Benchualach, Cuddling ^ for trouts far up the mountain bums, And gathering wortles and ripe blaeberries. High on the heights where the red gor-cock crowed. Against the scarlet clouds by sunset flamed Back from Ben Aulder and the peaks that crowd Far westward to Ben Nevis, That free life Had mellowed whatsoe'er austerity Might else have been engendered. When he came With Duncan to the old collegiate town. Beneath the college archway ne'er had passed A comelier lad. His tall and shapely form And easy carriage showed him strange to toil, But on his thoughtful brow and clear pale cheek Rested a shadow, as of pain foregone. Whene'er you spoke to him, you were aware Of a calm dignity and natural grace, Brought whence you knew not, that was finer far Than any gathered in the polished world. When he conversed with men, his manners wore ^ Cuddling, groping. HIGHLAND STUDENTS 239 A mild reserve ; but soon as he addressed A lady, through his mien and words there shone A high-born courtesy, had well beseemed The gentle Cameron of the " Forty-five." Two winters he abode with us. Even now I seem to see him in the college room, In his appointed place, with intense look, Quick to respond to aught of higher mood As a hill-lochan on a serene day To take the gleams and shadows. To that seat How many faces since have come and gone, But none of all so filled with repressed fire, And reverent thought, and grave sweet purity. A shorter space Ewan remained with us Than Duncan did ; and his health less robust And shyer spirit made him more withdraw From the outer world, and shelter him within A smaller circle. But on these his friends He turned a side of winning gentleness, Which they gave back with a peculiar love. Hence he passed southward to an English hall, Where his own people reared their ministers ; And then, his years of preparation done. Came forth a preacher, not in his own glens To native Celtic clansmen, but far south, 240 IIKillLAXI) STUDKNTS In low, dull flats, beside the streams of Don, 'Mid Yorkshire factory folk to minister, A stranger amid strangers. lUn few weeks Passed, ere the warm thrill of a living faith. Streamed through his Celtic fervour eloquent, Had touched the tough but honest \'orkshire hearts And drawn them all towards him. It befell. One sultry day in the midsummer tide. When he had made a tiysting to addrfess The people gathered 'neath the open sky. And speak of things divine, he missed the train. And five miles ran afoot to keep his tryst. Then a long hour, o'er-heated, on a mound He stood bare-headed, pleading earnestly — So very earnestly — for eternal things, He heeded not the accidents of time. Next morn strong fever had him in its grasp, And a short space sufficed to bring him low, So low that they who watched said, " We write To call your mother hither." — " No," he said, " A few days more and I shall gather strength, Then I am going home." And home he went. But to another home than Rannoch side. Then those kind factory people of themselves Chose certain men, who, at their charges, bore His body back to this his native glen. And placed it down within his father's door. HIGHLAND STUDENTS 241 Upon the coffin was a lid of glass, Placed there by these same kind and careful hands, That parents, sisters, brothers, might once more Look on that face ere dust was strewn on it For ever. Then they gathered — all his kin. His friends in youth, those strangers from afar. And bore him from that farm, and laid him down Here in this sweet and solitary grave. And over it the same kind strangers reared That head-stone, with his name and these few words. That tell how fervently he sought their good, How his sweet manners, gentle purity. Won them, and that for their great love to him, They carried him that long road that he might rest Amid his kindred's dust — and he rests well. But none of his own kindred any more Shall come to sleep beside him. They are all gone To find new homes and graves in virgin earth Beyond Missouri River. None the less Here he sleeps well, as Duncan over there, Two student-friends, the flower of Rannoch youth. Each in his early grave, with Tummel stream Between them, and Schihallion over all. Their earthly lore they took from us awhile. But now they learn the heavenly, and have seen The secret things that we still wait to know. Published 1872. R 242 HIGHLAND STUDENTS UP But one more grave, and that completes the tale Of Student lads from Rannoch. Twenty years And more have vanished, since from yonder farm, The other side the valley, passed two youths, Clad in grey hodden, from their own sheep spun. To the ancient College - by the Eastern sea. Reared amid mountain lonelinesses, where. Save the shy curlew's call, or wild glead's scream. No living voices come, they had beheld, Winter by winter, o'er Schihallion climb The late cold mom, as they went forth to toil, Beside their father, in his swampy fields, About the base of Ben-a-choualach, — Broad Ben-a-choualach, that stands to guard The north side of the vale over against Schihallion, its great brother-sentinel. There, with all Nature's grandeurs round them shed, And blending with their daily thoughts and toil. Their boyhood grew ; yet from work out of doors Leisure of nights and stormy days was saved For learning ; and the village teacher lent His kindly aid, till, ere the elder saw His eighteenth summer, they were fit to essay ^ John Macgregor. - University of St. Andrews. HIGHLAND STUDENTS 243 The Student life at College. Forth they fared, Those simple-hearted lads, — a slender stock Of home provisions, a few well-worn books, A father's blessing and a mother's prayers. All their equipment, as they set their face Toward that new Student world. How hard it is To climb the hill of Learning, when young souls Have early felt the chill of poverty, And stress of numbing toil, through all their powers ! The elder, Ian, was a climber strong. In body and mind, to breast the steep himself, And with a ready hand of help to spare For his less valiant brother. Many a time. When I had taught them lore of ancient Rome Till past noon-tide, ere winter afternoons In darkness closed, Ian would come and be My teacher in the language of the Gael. Strange, old-world names of mountains, corries, burns. On the smooth side of Loch Rannoch, or the rough, We conned their meaning o'er. And he would tell. Of dim, old battles, where his outlawed clan. Along the dusky skirts of Rannoch Moor Had clashed 'gainst wild Macdonalds of Glencoe, And gallant Stewarts from Appin. Or he told Of black bloodhounds let loose by Campbell foes. From corrie and cairn to hunt his clansmen down Through long Glen Lyon ; and the frantic leap 244 men LAND STUDENTS Over the rock-pent chasm and foaming flood, And the lorn coronach by his widow wailed O'er fall'n Macgregor of Rozo. None the less, But more for these brief Celtic interludes, He plied the midnight hours, till four full years Of strenuous study, by the longed-for hope, A good Degree, were crowned ; and by his aid The younger brother the same goal attained. A few more years of poor and patient toil. Within another seat of learning, gave To each the full rank of Physician. Then They took — the brothers took — their separate ways. Early the younger on the world's high road Fainted, — the battle was too sore for him ; He sank ere noon of day, and found a grave Far from his own Schihallion. Strong of frame, Well proved in Netley wards, the elder sailed Physician to a regiment Eastward-bound. There beneath Indian suns plying his art, Faithful and kindly, he from comrades won Liking and much regard, and good repute With those set over him. Step by step he climbed. Till he attained an ofifice high in trust. In old Benares. Then the first to feel The kind glow of his bettered fortunes were His parents, whom he summoned to lay down Their toiling days for comfortable ease, HIGHLAND STUDENTS 245 And the cold Rannoch braeside for the warm, Well-wooded Vale of Tay. A home therein He had provided them — a sheltered home — With a green croft behind, and bright out-look O'er the clear river to the southern noon. While there they passed the evening of their days In quiet, month by month he gladdened them By letters quaintly writ in Gaelic tongue. English was but the instrument wherewith He trafficked with the world ; the Gaelic was The language of his heart, the only key That could unlock its secrets. When he met A Gael on Indian ground, he greeted him In the dear language ; if he answered well, That was at once a bond of brotherhood. And when at length he made himself a home, To the young prattlers round his knee he told The mountain legends his own childhood loved, With Gaelic intermingled. Then he took And blew the big pipe, till the echoes rang, Through old Benares by the Ganges stream, With the wild pibrochs of the Highland hills. While all things seemed with him to prosper most. Strangely and suddenly there fell on him A deep, fond yearning for his native land, — Longing intense to be at home once more. Just then it chanced that, sore by sickness pressed, 246 HIGHLAND STUDENTS The old man, his fatlicr, to the Rannoch farm Had wandered back, and laid him down to die. This hcarinj^, homeward Ian set his face In haste, and reached his native roof in time Only to hear his father's blessing breathed From lips already cold. A bleak grey noon Of May 'twas when they bore the old man forth Across the vale, and laid him in his rest Beneath Schihallion, among kindred dead. There, while his son stood by the open grave. Bareheaded, the chill east wind through and through Smote him, enfeebled by the Indian clime. A few weeks more, and by the self-same road Him, too, the mourners bore across the vale. To lay him down close by his father's side. In that old kirk-yard on the hillock green. Where is the grave of Ewan Cameron. Strange by what instinct led, they two alike, Father and son, sought the old home to die ! And so they rest, all that is mortal rests, Of those three Students, in their native vale ; Two on this side the Rannoch river, one Beyond it ; and above them evermore Schihallion's shadow lying, and his peak Kindling aloft in the first light of dawn. Written 1881. VARIA 249 THE BATTLE OF THE ALMA Once more the peaceful years From their long slumber leap, And British guns and British cheers Are thundering by the Pontic deep. There the mighty of the West, On Humanity's behest, France's bravest, England's best, Are marshalling on the far Sarmatian shore. Through that chill dawning grey No bugle muster sung, All noiseless to their war array From the damp earth the warriors sprung. Fair the autumn morning shines On the red and azure lines. Sweeping o'er the long declines Between Crimean uplands and the main. Lo ! where that mountain flank Down toward ocean runs, Legions of Russia, rank o'er rank, Stand ready by their yawning guns. 250 Tin: BATTLE OK TIIK ALMA Yonder France to battle springs, Cloud on cloud, her Zouaves flings Up the crags, as borne on wings ; While great broadsides are bellowing on the shore. Full on our British front The loud hill cannonades, As full against that awful brunt Yon Chieftain cheers his brave Brigades. Forward, gallant Fusileers ! Forward, where your Chief appears. Young in heart, though blanched with years ; Who would not follow w-here he leads the way ? Breast-deep the stream they ford, The thundering hill-side scale, While down their close ranks, like a sword, Shears the broad sheet of iron hail. Though the foremost files are low, Clutch the colours, upward go, Breast to breast against the foe. And silence those death-breathing guns. They are silenced — Fusileers ! Stern work ye had to do, Mowed down in front of all your peers. To Duty and your Countr)' true : THE BATTLE OF THE ALMA 251 Still from yonder mountain-crown Dark the battle-front doth frown, Massive squares are moving down The current of the conflict back to roll. Ho ! Guardsmen, with your bold Battalions to the van I Charge, Clans of Scotland ! as of old, With level bayonets, man to man. There the Guards, black-helmed and tall Solid as a rock-hewn wall, 'Gainst the storm of shell and ball In firm battalions up the mountain move. And there the Mountaineers, How terribly they come ! With bayonets down and ringing cheers Campbells and Camerons charging home. O to have heard their Highland shout ! Bursting past the dread Redoubt, When the foemen rolled in rout, Shrank from the onset of the plaided Clans. Thou, Leader Chief of all ! Who, battle-days long gone. Hast stood, while thousands round did fall. By the right hand of Wellington, 252 THE i;attle of the alma Say, for thou canst witness yield, Hast thou looked on siege or field. E'er by braver life-blood sealed. Than that which consecrateth Alma's hills ? Aye I Britain's standard waves O'er Alma's uplands bare, But all its path lies strewn with graves Of them who died to plant it there ! Gently warrior hands have spread Green turf o'er their brothers' head ; Leave them there, our noble dead, Their dust to that far land, — their souls to God. Written 1854. 253 GRASMERE Since our long summer in yon blissful nook, Six years, not changeless, intervene ; Those friends all scattered, I return and look Down on this peace serene. O happy vision I depth of spirit-balm ! For hearts that have too deeply yearned. This still lake holding his majestic calm 'Mid his green hills inurned. There dwell, repeated the clear depths among, Hills more aerial, skies of fairier cloud, Hard by, yon homestead, where the summer long Our laughters once were loud. Still gleam the birch-trees down that pass as fair. Nor less melodious breaks The Rotha murmuring down his rocky lair, Between his sister lakes. With the six following poems, published in 1864. 254 PARTING O DOOMED to go to sunnier climes, With the wa'-gang o' the swallow, Thee prayers, far-borne from happier times And earnest friendship, follow. Thou leav'st us, ere from moorlands wild The plover-flocks have flown, For lands that have their winters mild, As summer in thine own. Sadly we watch that vessel's track O'er the wan autumnal sea. For spring that brings the swallow back Will bring no word of thee. Thy " wound is deep,"' earth's balmiest breeze Can breathe no healing now : Those eyes must close on lands and seas. To ope, ah ! where, and how ? PARTING 255 O breathe on him, thou better breath ! That can the soul-sick heal, And as the mortal languisheth, The immortal life reveal. 256 POETIC TRUTH O FOR truth-breathM music ! soul-like lays I Not of vain-glory born, nor love of praise, But welling purely from profound heart-springs, That lie deep down amid the life of things. And singing on, heedless though mortal ear Should never their lone murmur overhear. When through the world shall voice of poet shine, Alike true to the human and divine ? Full of the heart of man, yet fuller fed At the o'erflow of that divine well-head, From which, as tiny drops, to earth is brought Whate'er is pure of love, and true in thought, To which all spirits, in the flesh that be, Are as scant rillets to the infinite sea. 257 PRAYER Ye tell us prayer is vain — that the divine plan Disowns it, and as waves in-driven from mid-seas Break on the headlands, Nature's strong decrees Dash back his weakness on the heart of man. Against the universe who can prevail ? Will a voice cleave the everlasting bars ? The heart's poor sigh o'er-soar the loftiest stars And through all laws to a Divine Will scale ? Too oft will the perplexed soul question thus, And yet these great laws that encompass us Of the meanest things on earth consult the weal, Are very pitiful to the worms and weeds. Turn they a deaf ear when the warm heart pleads ? He who did plant that heart, will He not feel ? 258 RELIEF Who seeketh finds : what shall be his relief Who hath no power to seek, no heart to pray, No sense of God, but bears as best he may, A lonely incommunicable grief? What shall he do ? One only thing he knows, That his life flits a frail uneasy spark In the great vast of universal dark. And that the grave may not be all repose. Be still, sad soul I lift thou no passionate cry, But spread the desert of thy being bare To the full searching of the All-seeing eye : Wait — and through dark misgiving, blank despair, God will come down in pity, and fill the dry Dead place with light, and life, and vernal air. 259 MEMORIES As the far seen peaks of Alpine ranges In their robe of virgin snow endure, High o'er Europe plains and earthborn changes, Calmly and imperishably pure ; Thus, e'en thus, so lofty and so holy, O'er our poor life's ordinary moods High aloof, yet very loving and lowly, Shine the blessed Christ's Beatitudes. Near them Paul's pure charity eternal Dwelling keeps, above earth's cloudy clime, Beckoning worn hearts upward by its vernal Brightness from these murky flats of time. And from off those summits do not voices, All divine, yet very human, come ? Hearing which awe-struck the soul rejoices. As at echoes from a long-lost home. 26o MEMORIES Deem not these are young earth's hymeneal Chaunts, no after age can e'er repeat ; Something all at variance with the real World that meets us in the field and street. Doth not memory from the past recover Some who near us once did move and breathe, Names, that as we read those high words over, Fitly might be written underneath ? Blessed gifts of God, that our poor weakness Might not only hear, but soothly see, What of truth and love, what might of meekness, In our flesh in very deed might be. While they here sojourned their presence drew us By the sweetness of their human love. Day by day good thoughts of them renew us. Like fresh tidings from the world above ; Coming, like the stars at gloamin' glinting Through the western clouds, when loud winds cease. Silently of that calm country hinting, Where they with the angels are at peace. Not their own, ah I not from earth was flowing That high strain to which their souls were tuned. MEMORIES 261 Year by year we saw them inly growing Liker Him with Whom their hearts communed. Then to Him they passed ; but still unbroken, Age to age, lasts on that goodly line. Whose pure lives are, more than all words spoken, Earth's best witness to the life divine. Subtlest thought shall fail, and learning falter, Churches change, forms perish, systems go, But our human needs, they will not alter, Christ no after age shall e'er outgrow. Yea, amen ! O changeless One, Thou only Art life's guide and spiritual goal. Thou the Light across the dark vale lonely, — Thou the eternal haven of the soul ! 262 HIDDEN LIFE Ay, true it is, our dearest, best beloved, Of us unknowing, are by us unkr^pwn, That from our outward survey far removed, Deep down they dwell, unfathomed and alone. We gaze on their loved faces, hear their speech, The heart's most earnest utterance, — yet we feel Something beyond, nor they nor we can reach. Something they never can on earth reveal. Dearly they loved us, we returned our best. They passed from earth, and we divined them not, As though the centre of each human breast Were a sealed chamber of unuttered thought. r Hidden from others do we know ourselves ? Albeit the surface takes the common light ; Who hath not felt that this our being shelves Down to abysses, dark and infinite ? HIDDEN LIFE 263 As to the sunlight some basaltic isle Upheaves a scanty plain, far out from shore, But downward plungeth sheer walls many a mile, 'Neath the unsunned ocean floor. So some small light of consciousness doth play On the surface of our being, but the broad And permanent foundations every way Pass into mystery, are hid in God. The last outgoings of our wills are ours ; What moulded them, and fashioned down below, And gave the bias to our nascent powers, We cannot grasp nor know. O Thou on Whom our blind foundations lean, In Whose hand our wills' primal fountains be, We cannot — but Thou canst — O make them clean ! We cast ourselves on Thee. From the foundations of our being breathe Up all their darkened pores pure light of Thine, Till, in that light transfigured from beneath. We in Thy countenance shine. 264 I HAVE a life with Christ to live, But, ere I live it, must I wait Till learning can clear answer give Of this and that book's date ? I have a life in Christ to live, I have a death in Christ to die ; — And must I wait, till science give All doubts a full reply ? Nay rather, while the sea of doubt Is raging wildly round about. Questioning of life and death and sin, Let me but creep within Thy fold, O Christ, and at Thy feet Take but the lowest seat, And hear Thine awful voice repeat In gentlest accents, heavenly sweet. Come unto Me, and rest : Believe Me, and be blest. Written 1868. 265 'TwiXT gleams of joy and clouds of doubt Our feelings come and go ; Our best estate is tossed about In ceaseless ebb and flow. No mood of feeling, form of thought, Is constant for a day ; But Thou, O Lord ! Thou changest not ; The same Thou art alway. I grasp Thy strength, make it mine own, My heart with peace is blest ; I lose my hold, and then comes down Darkness and cold unrest. Let me no more my comfort draw From my frail hold of Thee, — In this alone rejoice with awe ; Thy mighty grasp of me. 266 Out of that weak unquiet drift That comes but to depart, To that pure Heaven my spirit lift Where Thou unchanging art. Lay hold of me with Thy strong grasp, Let Thy Almighty arm In its embrace my weakness clasp, And I shall fear no harm. Thy purpose of eternal good Let me but surely know ; On this I'll lean, let changing mood And feeling come or go ; Glad when Thy sunshine fills my soul ; Not lorn when clouds o'ercast ; Since Thou within Thy sure control Of love dost hold me fast. Written 1871. ILLUSTRATIVE NOTES 269 ILLUSTRATIVE NOTES Page 3. Glen Desseray appeared in The Celtic Magazine, 1877, preceded by the note subjoined : — " The following poem attempts to reproduce facts heard, and impressions received, during the wanderings of several successive summers among the scenes which are here de- scribed. Whatever view political economists may take of these events, it can hardly be denied that the form of human society, and the phase of human suffering, here attempted to be described, deserve at least some record. If the lesser incidents of the poem are not all literally exact, of the main outlines and leading events of the simple story it may well be said, ' It's an ower true tale.' " The story is supposed to be told by a grandson of the Ewen Cameron, and a nephew of the Angus Cameron of the poem — one who, as a boy, had seen and shared in the removal of the people from his native glen." The scene is laid in the two great glens which open towards Loch Arkaig on the north. This Poem is printed from a Text which had the Author's own corrections attached to it, and a few omissions have now been made, for the purpose of carrying out wishes more than once expressed by him. Page 13. Shinty fray. — A game in which bats, somewhat resembling golf-clubs, are used. There are two goals called "hails"; the object of each party being to drive the ball beyond their opponent's hail. — -Jainieson. Page 15. Loop.—Th.Q English word "loop" is used as, perhaps, the best to represent the far more expressive Gaelic word Itiib, which is applied to windings or bends of rivers. — J. C. S. 270 ILLUSTRATIVE NOTES Page 35. Never 'ivhile I hreatlic shall mortal Grasp this hand which touched the Prince: — This is literally true of Hugh Chisholni, one of the seven men who sheltered the Prince, on his way north, in the Cave of Corombian. Chisholm went afterwards to reside in Edinburgh, where many called on him out of curiosity, to see one who had been such a devoted adherent of Prince Charlie. Chisholm received money from several of these admirers, and in return, while thanking them, he always offered them a shake of his left hand, excusing himself for not giving the right, by saying that since Jie had shaken hands with the bonnie Prince at parting, he resolved never to give his right hand to any man, until he saw the Prince again. Page 60. I las-wool. — See Burns's song, " I coft a stane o' haslock woo'." " Haslock, or hauselock wool is the softest and finest of the fleece, and is shorn from the throats of sheep in summer heat, to give them air and keep them cool." — Allan Citiniinj^hatn : — J. C. S. Page 88. The Mountain Walk. — In his " Mountain Walk " Shairp was accompanied by an intelligent old Highlander from Kilmallie, whose forefathers had resided for many generations among the glens at the head of Loch Arkaig. The country which they traversed forms the western portion of the mainland of Inverness-shire. It is of vast extent, and from the inaccessibleness of its situation, the wildness of its scenery, and the sparseness of its population, it is emphatically denominated throughout the Highlands as, Na Garbh-chriochan — i.e. The Rough Bounds. Among the corries and caves of this remote region. Prince Charles Edward and some of his most distinguished followers sought conceal- ment after Culloden. In the wanderings of the young Prince, Shairp was deeply interested. Throughout his life he re- tained a very vivid recollection of the scenery described in this poem. Writing a few years ago to an old St. Andrews student, who resided near Loch Arkaig, he made minute inquiries as ILLUSTRATIVE NOTES 271 to the route the Prince had taken when on a certain occasion he was closely surrounded by troops. In the course of his letter he described the scene, giving the local names, and expressing an opinion as to a particular " pass " through which he supposed the escape to have been effected. This poem should be read in connection with Glen Desseray. Page 98. Glen-Sallach. — Near Kildalloig in Argj'le, the home of the author's mother. He was taken there as a young child, and the impression left on him by the glen was never effaced. Page 106. SW-Gaoil. — The legend is of the death of Diarmid, founder of the Clan Campbell. He slew, at Torintuirc, West Loch Tarbert, Argyleshire, a poisonous boar that had long infested the district, and while measuring it had one of his hands pierced with a bristle. As he was bleeding to death from the wound, he wished to be taken to where he could see the Sliabh (Sleeav), and looking towards it he said : — that is, Sliabh mo gaol, sliabh mo gaol s' mo chaisd, Cha deide misse suas go brach, S' cha chairren usa anuas am' feist. Mountain of my love, mountain of my love, and my darling, I will not go up — for ever, And thou wilt not come down — ever. Sli' [i.e. Sliabh) Gaoil is a lofty mountain near Kilberry. Page no. Caillcach Bein-y-Vreich (Beinn-a'-Bhric). — The Cailleacli was a beanshith or fairy that often appeared to hunters in the gloaming of summer evenings, gathering and milking the hinds on a hillside, while she sang some wild air, such as dairy-maids still use to soothe the cow while she is being milked. She was very tall, and wore on her head a spotted kerchief, and her long grey locks waved over her shoulders. Sometimes she wore hose, but often she was seen with no covering below the ankle. She always wore a yellow robe about her. In winter she was often seen by women, driving her herd of deer to the 272 ILLUSTRATIVE NOTES shore ; and tlicy said llial wlion slie took the form of a grey (leer, their kailyards suflered. She denies this in her song, however. If any hunter saw the Cailleach,' he knew well it was useless for him to roam the forest that day. One time, in spite of her having been seen, a Lochaber hunter went to the hill in search of deer. When he had spent the whole day in wanderinii,', without coming upon any deer, and he was engaged lighting a fire, and singing the verses accompanying an air which he composed as he went on, suddenly, when he looked up, after the fifth verse was completed, he saw the Cailleacli, wIkj continued the song from the fifth verse to the end.— .SV/// Gorm (p. ill) appears to be a poetic name : Setil, gem : Gorm, blue — The Blue Jewel. Page 121. The wild kerne. — Irish troops in the army of Edward I in the campaign of 1298. Sir Neil. — The places here referred to are to be found in the Pass of Brander, near Oban. This was the scene of many sanguinary conflicts. — See Introduction and Notes to Scott's llii^hland IVidaiv. The following is from The Statistical Account of Scot- land : — " MacPhaidan, an Irishman, who was serviceable to Edward I when engaged in his attempt to subvert the in- dependence of Scotland, and to whom that monarch, in 1297, made a grant for his services of the lordship of Argyle and Lorn, was attacked by Sir William Wallace, and defeated A. D. 1300, at the north-east side of Ben Cruachan, near to the Pass of Brainder. Wallace on his way to Argyleshire was met in Glendochart by Sir Neil Campbell, knight of Lochaw, with 300 men. They found MacPhaidan posted at Ben Cruachan. The onset is said to have been keen. Many hundreds of MacPhaidan's followers were driven to the lake and drowned ; and though he himself, with fifteen men, fled to a neigiibouring cave in the face of Craig-an- Araidh, his retreat was discovered and he was there slain." Sir Neil Campbell was an ancestor of J. C. Shairp through the Campbells of Auchinbreck. Page 1 24. Duncan Ban Maclntyre. — An excellent sketch of his life and account of his poetry, with specimens trans- lated by Shairp, will be found in his Aspects of Poetry, chap, x: Oxford, 1881. ILLUSTRATIVE NOTES 273 Page 1 30. Glen Torridon. — It is situated in the north-west of Ross-shire, in the peninsula between Loch Carron and Loch Torridon. Page 134. Loch Torridon. — This poem and Loch Ericlit, p. 159, appear never to have received the writer's final touches. Page 162. October. — The neighbourhood of Cuil-a-luinn, Aberfeldy, on the Tay, Shairp's Highland home in summer and autumn, is described in this playful imitation of the delightful English Autumn scene by Keats. Page 164. Garth Castle. — Alexander Stuart, son of King Robert II., commonly known, for his ferocity, as the Wolf of Badenoch, burnt the cathedral and town of Elgin, owing to a quarrel with the bishop. He is said to have built Garth Castle, and to have founded the family of the Stuarts of Garth, who possessed it till recent times. His tomb, surmounted by a marble effig)% is still to be seen in the cathedral of Dunkeld.— J. C. S. Page 172. Drnmiiachdar. — Thisballad from the Badenoch country is given as a specimen of Shairp's translations from the Gaelic. The incident upon which the eleg)' is founded, according to a writer in The Celtic Ufagazine for May 1887, (who gives the original words), must have occurred in the last century. " The cattle, at Blargie, in Upper Bade- noch, being let loose on a sunny day in early spring, became frantic with delight of their novel and unexpectedly-acquired freedom, and betook themselves to the hills, heedless of consequences. The herd — a young man named Macdonald — followed them as far as Drumuachdar, which extends between Dalwhinnie and Dalnacardoch. While he traversed that solitary and sterile tract, the weather, then proverbially fickle, changed terribly. A blinding snowstorm set in ; and the unfortunate lad never more found his way home."' The elegy is said to have been poured forth by Macdonald's True-love, who joined in the search for him. The Rev. T. Sinton of Glengarry states that the copy of the Gaelic original with which he supplied Shairp was fragmentar}'. 274 II.LUSTKATIX !•: NOTES Page 174. A'i7/i.— Ml. Siiiton writes: — "A kiln for hardening corn pre])aratory to grinding was to be found in connection with every /cr7c'>i. The actual kiln was situated at one end of a house to which it gave its name. It was in this building that the body of the dead herd was laid — much to the grief of his friends. For the kiln was reckoned a place of evil omen. Generally it was the scene of all the unca)iiiy events of the (mvit. Therefore it was that when Cluny — the leading man of the country — arrived, he im- mediately ordered Macdonald's body to be removed from the kiln. Until quite recently Highland gentlemen attended the humblest funerals in their neighbourhood ; and the people always expected their presence at the scene of any untoward event such as that which forms the theme of this ballad." Page 182. Thricve Castle. — This is the ancient seat of the Douglases, in Kirkcudbright, on an island in the Dee. William, eighth Earl of Douglas, who defied James II, imprisoned in Thrieve Castle, in 1452, Maclellan, guardian of Lord Bombie, the ancestor of the Earls of Kirkcudbright. When James sent Sir Patrick Gray with a letter requesting the release of the prisoner, William insisted on his visiter dining before business, and meanwhile had Maclellan be- headed in the castle court. After dinner he read the King's letter, and then, in professed deference to his injunctions, offered Gray the body, saying that he had possessed himself of the head some time before. This haughty act led to Douglas's own death soon afterwards. Page 185. Devorgiiilla. — New, or Sweetheart Abbey, is pleasantly situated eight miles south of Dumfries. It was erected in 1275 by Devorguilla, in memory of her hus- band, John P.aliol. She had had his heart embalmed and placed in an ornamented ivory case ; and when she died this was laid on her bosom, and buried with her, in accord- ance with her own instructions. Thus originated the romantic name of the Abbey. Page 201. Three Friends in Yarrffiu. — Edmund Lushing- ton, some time Professor of Greek in Glasgow, — Professor ILLUSTRATIVE NOTES . 275 Veitch, — and the Author. — Pie7-s Cockburn ; see "Lament of tlie Border Widow," in The Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border. The Editor has put than for as in stanza 1 5 : but Shairp uses as for than elsewhere. Page 203. The F/ozver of Yarroiv Vale. — The reference is to Mary Scott, daughter of John Scott of Dryhope. She was called " The Flower of Yarrow," and was married in 1576 to Walter Scott of Harden, afterwards known as " Auld Wat," a famous man on the Borders. According to the tradition, Dryhope was to keep Harden in man's meat and horse's meat for a year and a day, and, after the marriage, five barons engaged that Harden should remove from Dry- hope Tower at the expiry of the stipulated period. Harden, on his part, was to give Dryhope the fraits of the first raid under the Michaelmas moon. Under the marriage contract Harden endows his bride with certain of his lands, and Dryhope engages to give his daughter 400 merks Scots, " at the time of the said Walter and Marion's passing to their ' awin hous.'" — The Author of the poem was a lineal descendant of Mary Scott of Dryhope. Page 228. Spriui;, 1876: Stanza 6. — Mr. T. Bayne writes : " Henry Alexander Douglas, brother-in-law of Prin- cipal Shairp, had been one of his earliest friends at Glasgow University. He was a distinguished English churchman, and became Bishop of Bombay. He died in 1875, and his burial-place is under Weem Craig, near the River Tay." Stanza 7. — These lines refer to Dr. Norman Macleod (Barony Church, Glasgow), one of the most widely-known Scotsmen of the nineteenth century. The lifelong friendship between Macleod and Shairp be- gan in 1837, at Glasgow University, where they constantly met, reading often together, with intense enjoyment, Words- worth's Poems, and having many common sympathies. Dr. Macleod's grave is at Campsie, in Stirlingshire, his early home. " On the one side are the hum of business and the houses of toiling humanity. On the other green pastoral hills and the silence of Highland solitudes." See Memoirs of Dr. N'orman Macleod, by his brother. Incumbent of Park Church, Glasgow. 276 ILLUSTRATIVE NOTES Page 231. Ilii^hland Students. — Duncan Camplx:!!, M.A., St. Andrews: died at Bridgend, Rannoch, nth June 1867, aged 23 years. Rev. Ewan Cameron, Pastor of Baptist Churcli. (^uarmby Oaks, Yorkshire: died 6th July 1867. John .Macgregor entered the Bengal Medical Service : died at Drumglass, Rannoch, 22d June 18S1, aged 39 years. All were students at St. Andrews whilst J. C. Shairp held the post of Professor of Humanity. 277 INDEX OF FIRST LINES A bowshot from the loch aloof Again the bonny blue bells As the far seen peaks of Alpine ranges A time there was .... Ay, true it is, our dearest, best-beloved Beyond the bay, beyond the gleaming sands . By the wee birchen corries lie patches of green Child of the far-off ocean flood Darhng Flowers ! at last I've found you . Days on days, the East wind blowing Doth Yarrow flow endeared by dream Down to Loch Nevish went the day Early young Angus rose to meet Eighty years have come and gone . From beaten paths and common tasks reprieved Garth Castle, he hath borne the brunt Guest ! but no stranger, — many a time before . Ha ! there he comes, the headlong Highland River Hath then that life-long combatant with death PAGE 191 188 262 231 112 167 19s 36 45 3 164 221 144 225 J78 INDEX OF FIRST LINES I have a life with Christ to hvc In grey Criffel's lap of granite In this bare treeless forest lone I watched the sun fall down with prone descent 264 '85 106 128 Land of bens and glens and corries 114 N'o softer south than this did ever fall 228 October misty bright, the touch is thine . , . O doomed to go to sunnier climes . O'er the dreary moor of Rannoch . O for truth-breathed music ! soul-like lays ■ O how my heart lap to her .... Oh wherefore cam ye here, Ailie O many a year is gone, since in life's fresh dawn O marvellous Glen of Torridon O mountain stream ! so old, yet ever young Once more by mighty Cruachan, and once more Once more the peaceful years .... On the braes around Glenfinnan O the Border Hills sae green .... O wae on Loch Laggan ! . . . . 162 254 100 256 193 146 201 130 170 119 249 108 198 172 Seven Summers long had fired the glens . Since our long summer in yon blissful nook Soon as the kindling dawn had tipt Still let me dive the glens among 68 253 53 157 That summer glen is far away ..... 98 The homes long are gone, but enchantment still lingers . 124 The showers are over, the skiffing showers . . 149 The spray may drive, the rain may pour .... 104 These hoary, dialed, belfry Towers .... 223 'Twi.\t gleams of joy and clouds of doubt . 265 INDEX OF FIRST LINES Up the long corrie, through the screetan rents . Weird wife of Bein-y-Vreich ! horo ! horo Whence should ye o'er gentle spirits When early morning o'er the mountains high When from copse, and craig, and summit Who seeketh finds : what shall be his relief Will ye gang \vi' me and fare . Within the ancient College-gate I passed Ye tell us prayer is vain — that the divine plan . 279 PAGE 140 no 182 22 179 209 THE END Printed by R. & R. Clark, Edinburgh. UNrVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT LOS ANGELES THE UNIVERSITY LIBRARY This book is DUE on the last date stamped below JUL 29 1^1^^ RECTO kWwi DEC 3 1964 Form L-0 30m-l,*42