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The Brownie of Bodsbeck (Volume 1&2). James HoggЧитать онлайн книгу.

The Brownie of Bodsbeck (Volume 1&2) - James Hogg


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impart;

       A wilder’d and unearthly flame,

       A something that’s without a name.

      And, Lady, thou wilt never deem

       Religious tale offensive theme;

       Our creeds may differ in degree,

       But small that difference sure can be!

       As flowers which vary in their dyes,

       We all shall bloom in Paradise.

       As sire who loves his children well,

       The loveliest face he cannot tell,—

       So ’tis with us. We are the same,

       One faith, one Father, and one aim.

      And had’st thou lived where I was bred,

       Amid the scenes where martyrs bled,

       Their sufferings all to thee endear’d

       By those most honour’d and revered;

       And where the wild dark streamlet raves,

       Had’st wept above their lonely graves,

       Thou would’st have felt, I know it true,

       As I have done, and aye must do.

       And for the same exalted cause,

       For mankind’s right, and nature’s laws,

       The cause of liberty divine,

       Thy fathers bled as well as mine.

      Then be it thine, O noble Maid,

       On some still eve these tales to read;

       And thou wilt read, I know full well,

       For still thou lovest the haunted dell;

       To linger by the sainted spring,

       And trace the ancient fairy ring

       Where moonlight revels long were held

       In many a lone sequester’d field,

       By Yarrow dens and Ettrick shaw,

       And the green mounds of Carterhaugh.

      O for one kindred heart that thought

       As minstrel must, and lady ought,

       That loves like thee the whispering wood,

       And range of mountain solitude!

       Think how more wild the greenwood scene,

       If times were still as they have been;

       If fairies, at the fall of even,

       Down from the eye–brow of the heaven,

       Or some aërial land afar,

       Came on the beam of rising star;

       Their lightsome gambols to renew,

       From the green leaf to quaff the dew,

       Or dance with such a graceful tread,

       As scarce to bend the gowan’s head!

      Think if thou wert, some evening still,

       Within thy wood of green Bowhill—

       Thy native wood!—the forest’s pride!

       Lover or sister by thy side;

       In converse sweet the hour to improve

       Of things below and things above,

       Of an existence scarce begun,

       And note the stars rise one by one.

       Just then, the moon and daylight blending,

       To see the fairy bands descending,

       Wheeling and shivering as they came,

       Like glimmering shreds of human frame;

       Or sailing, ’mid the golden air,

       In skiffs of yielding gossamer.

      O, I would wander forth alone

       Where human eye hath never shone,

       Away o’er continents and isles

       A thousand and a thousand miles,

       For one such eve to sit with thee,

       Their strains to hear and forms to see!

       Absent the while all fears of harm,

       Secure in Heaven’s protecting arm;

       To list the songs such beings sung,

       And hear them speak in human tongue;

       To see in beauty, perfect, pure,

       Of human face the miniature,

       And smile of being free from sin,

       That had not death impress’d within.

       Oh, can it ever be forgot

       What Scotland had, and now has not!

      Such scenes, dear Lady, now no more

       Are given, or fitted as before,

       To eye or ear of guilty dust;

       But when it comes, as come it must,

       The time when I, from earth set free,

       Shall turn the spark I fain would be;

       If there’s a land, as grandsires tell,

       Where Brownies, Elves, and Fairies dwell,

       There my first visit shall be sped—

       Journeyer of earth, go hide thy head!

       Of all thy travelling splendour shorn,

       Though in thy golden chariot borne!

       Yon little cloud of many a hue

       That wanders o’er the solar blue,

       That curls, and rolls, and fleets away

       Beyond the very springs of day,—

       That do I challenge and engage

       To be my travelling equipage,

       Then onward, onward, far to steer,

       The breeze of Heaven my charioteer;

       The soul’s own energy my guide,

       Eternal hope my all beside.

       At such a shrine who would not bow!

       Traveller of earth, where art thou now?

      Then let me for these legends claim,

       My young, my honour’d Lady’s name;

       That honour is reward complete,

       Yet I must crave, if not unmeet,

       One little boon—delightful task

       For maid to grant, or minstrel ask!

      One day, thou may’st remember well,

       For short the time since it befel,

       When o’er thy forest–bowers of oak,

       The eddying storm in darkness broke;

       Loud sung the blast adown the dell,

       And Yarrow lent her treble swell;

       The mountain’s form grew more sublime,

       Wrapt in its wreaths of rolling rime;

       And Newark Cairn, in hoary shroud,

       Appear’d like giant o’er the cloud:

       The eve fell dark, and grimly scowl’d,

       Loud and more loud the tempest howl’d;

       Without was turmoil, waste, and din,

       The kelpie’s cry was in the linn,

       But all was love and peace within!

       And aye, between, the melting strain

       Pour’d from thy woodland harp


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