Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine
The following is from Blackwood's Edinburgh
Magazine:
Stanzas for the Burns' Festival
By Delta
I
Stir the beal-fire, wave the
banner,
Bid the thundering cannon
sound--
Rend the skies with acclamation,
Stun the woods and waters
round--
Till the echoes of our gathering
Turn the world's admiring gaze
To this act of duteous homage
Scotland to her poet pays.
Fill the banks and braes with
music,
Be it loud and low by turns--
This we owe the deathless glory,
That the hapless fate of Burns.
II
Born within the lowly cottage
To a destiny obscure,
Doom'd through youth's exulting
spring-time
But to labour and endure--
Yet Despair he elbow'd from him;
Nature breathed with holy joy,
In the hues of morn and evening,
On the eyelids of the boy;
And his country's Genius bound
him
Laurels for his sun-burn'd brow,
When inspired and proud she
found him,
Like Elisha, at the plough.
III
On, exulting in his magic,
Swept the gifted peasant on--
Though his feet were on the
greensward,
Light from heaven around him
shone;
At his conjuration, demons
Issued from their darkness
drear;
Hovering round on silver
pinions,
Angels stoop'd his songs to
hear;
Bow'd the Passions to his
bidding,
Terror gaunt, and Pity calm;
Like the organ pour'd his
thunder,
Like the lute his fairy psalm.
IV
Lo, when clover-swathes lay
round him,
Or his feet the furrow press'd,
He could mourn the sever'd
daisy,
Or the mouse's ruin'd nest;
Woven of gloom and glory,
visions
Haunting throng'd his twilight
hour;
Birds enthrall'd him with sweet
music,
Tempests with their tones of
power;
Eagle-wing'd his mounting spirit
Custom's rusty fetters spurn'd;
Tasso-like, for Jean he melted
Wallace-like, for Scotland
burn'd!
V
Scotland!--dear to him was
Scotland,
In her sons and in her
daughters,
In her
Highlands,--Lowlands,--Islands,--
Regal woods, and rushing
waters;--
In the glory of her story,
When her tartans fired the
field,--
Scotland! oft
betray'd--beleagur'd--
Scotland! never known to yield!
Dear to him her Doric
language,--
Thrill'd his heart-strings at
her name;--
And he left her more than
rubies,
In the riches of his fame.
VI
Sons of England!--Sons of Erin!
Ye who, journeying from afar,
Throng with us the shire of
Coila,
Led by Burns's guiding star--
Proud we greet you--ye will join
us,
As, on this triumphant day,
To the champions of his genius
Grateful thanks we duly pay--
Currie--Chambers--Lockhart--Wilson--
Carlyle--who his bones to save
From the wolfish fiend,
Detraction,
Couch'd like lions round his
grave.
VII
Daughter of the poet's mother!
Here we hail thee with delight;
Shower'd be every earthly
blessing
On thy locks of silver white!--
Sons of Burns, a hearty welcome,
Welcome home from India's
strand,
To a heart-loved land far
dearer,
Since your glorious Father's
land:--
Words are worthless--look around
you--
Labour'd tomes far less could
say
To the sons of such a father,
Than the sight of such a day!
VIII
Judge not ye, whose thoughts are
fingers,
Of the hands that witch the
lyre--
Greenland has its mountain
icebergs,
Ætna has its heart of fire;
Calculation has its plummet;
Self-control its iron rules;
Genius has its sparkling
fountains;
Dulness has its stagnant pools;
Like a halcyon on the waters,
Burns's chart disdain'd a plan--
In his soarings he was heavenly,
In his sinkings he was man.
IX
As the sun from out the orient
Pours a wider, warmer light,
Till he floods both earth and
ocean,
Blazing from the zenith's
height;
So the glory of our poet,
In its deathless power serene,
Shines--as rolling time
advances--
Warmer felt, and wider seen:
First Doon's banks and braes
contain'd it,
Then his country form'd its
span;
Now the wide world is its
empire,
And its throne the heart of man.
X
Home returning, each will carry
Proud remembrance of this day,
When exulted Scotland's bosom
Homage to her bard to pay;--
When our jubilee to brighten,
Eglinton with Wilson vied,
Wealth's regards and Rank's
distinctions
For the season set aside;
And the peasant, peer, and poet,
Each put forth an equal claim,
For the twining of his laurel
In the wreath of Burns's fame!
The Curse of Glencoe
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