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<h2> CANTO THIRD. </h2>
<h3> The Gathering. </h3>
<p>I.<br/>
<br/>
Time rolls his ceaseless course. The race of yore,<br/>
Who danced our infancy upon their knee,<br/>
And told our marvelling boyhood legends store<br/>
Of their strange ventures happed by land or sea,<br/>
How are they blotted from the things that be!<br/>
How few, all weak and withered of their force,<br/>
Wait on the verge of dark eternity,<br/>
Like stranded wrecks, the tide returning hoarse,<br/>
To sweep them from out sight! Time rolls his ceaseless course.<br/>
<br/>
Yet live there still who can remember well,<br/>
How, when a mountain chief his bugle blew,<br/>
Both field and forest, dingle, cliff; and dell,<br/>
And solitary heath, the signal knew;<br/>
And fast the faithful clan around him drew.<br/>
What time the warning note was keenly wound,<br/>
What time aloft their kindred banner flew,<br/>
While clamorous war-pipes yelled the gathering sound,<br/>
And while the Fiery Cross glanced like a meteor, round.<br/></p>
<p>II.<br/>
<br/>
The Summer dawn's reflected hue<br/>
To purple changed Loch Katrine blue;<br/>
Mildly and soft the western breeze<br/>
Just kissed the lake, just stirred the trees,<br/>
And the pleased lake, like maiden coy,<br/>
Trembled but dimpled not for joy<br/>
The mountain-shadows on her breast<br/>
Were neither broken nor at rest;<br/>
In bright uncertainty they lie,<br/>
Like future joys to Fancy's eye.<br/>
The water-lily to the light<br/>
Her chalice reared of silver bright;<br/>
The doe awoke, and to the lawn,<br/>
Begemmed with dew-drops, led her fawn;<br/>
The gray mist left the mountain-side,<br/>
The torrent showed its glistening pride;<br/>
Invisible in flecked sky The lark sent clown her revelry:<br/>
The blackbird and the speckled thrush<br/>
Good-morrow gave from brake and bush;<br/>
In answer cooed the cushat dove<br/>
Her notes of peace and rest and love.<br/></p>
<p>III.<br/>
<br/>
No thought of peace, no thought of rest,<br/>
Assuaged the storm in Roderick's breast.<br/>
With sheathed broadsword in his hand,<br/>
Abrupt he paced the islet strand,<br/>
And eyed the rising sun, and laid<br/>
His hand on his impatient blade.<br/>
Beneath a rock, his vassals' care<br/>
Was prompt the ritual to prepare,<br/>
With deep and deathful meaning fraught;<br/>
For such Antiquity had taught<br/>
Was preface meet, ere yet abroad<br/>
The Cross of Fire should take its road.<br/>
The shrinking band stood oft aghast<br/>
At the impatient glance he cast;—<br/>
Such glance the mountain eagle threw,<br/>
As, from the cliffs of Benvenue,<br/>
She spread her dark sails on the wind,<br/>
And, high in middle heaven reclined,<br/>
With her broad shadow on the lake,<br/>
Silenced the warblers of the brake.<br/></p>
<p>IV.<br/>
<br/>
A heap of withered boughs was piled,<br/>
Of juniper and rowan wild,<br/>
Mingled with shivers from the oak,<br/>
Rent by the lightning's recent stroke.<br/>
Brian the Hermit by it stood,<br/>
Barefooted, in his frock and hood.<br/>
His grizzled beard and matted hair<br/>
Obscured a visage of despair;<br/>
His naked arms and legs, seamed o'er,<br/>
The scars of frantic penance bore.<br/>
That monk, of savage form and face<br/>
The impending danger of his race<br/>
Had drawn from deepest solitude<br/>
Far in Benharrow's bosom rude.<br/>
Not his the mien of Christian priest,<br/>
But Druid's, from the grave released<br/>
Whose hardened heart and eye might brook<br/>
On human sacrifice to look;<br/>
And much, 't was said, of heathen lore<br/>
Mixed in the charms he muttered o'er.<br/>
The hallowed creed gave only worse<br/>
And deadlier emphasis of curse.<br/>
No peasant sought that Hermit's prayer<br/>
His cave the pilgrim shunned with care,<br/>
The eager huntsman knew his bound<br/>
And in mid chase called off his hound;'<br/>
Or if, in lonely glen or strath,<br/>
The desert-dweller met his path<br/>
He prayed, and signed the cross between,<br/>
While terror took devotion's mien.<br/></p>
<p>V.<br/>
<br/>
Of Brian's birth strange tales were told.<br/>
His mother watched a midnight fold,<br/>
Built deep within a dreary glen,<br/>
Where scattered lay the bones of men<br/>
In some forgotten battle slain,<br/>
And bleached by drifting wind and rain.<br/>
It might have tamed a warrior's heart<br/>
To view such mockery of his art!<br/>
The knot-grass fettered there the hand<br/>
Which once could burst an iron band;<br/>
Beneath the broad and ample bone,<br/>
That bucklered heart to fear unknown,<br/>
A feeble and a timorous guest,<br/>
The fieldfare framed her lowly nest;<br/>
There the slow blindworm left his slime<br/>
On the fleet limbs that mocked at time;<br/>
And there, too, lay the leader's skull<br/>
Still wreathed with chaplet, flushed and full,<br/>
For heath-bell with her purple bloom<br/>
Supplied the bonnet and the plume.<br/>
All night, in this sad glen the maid<br/>
Sat shrouded in her mantle's shade:<br/>
She said no shepherd sought her side,<br/>
No hunter's hand her snood untied.<br/>
Yet ne'er again to braid her hair<br/>
The virgin snood did Alive wear;<br/>
Gone was her maiden glee and sport,<br/>
Her maiden girdle all too short,<br/>
Nor sought she, from that fatal night,<br/>
Or holy church or blessed rite<br/>
But locked her secret in her breast,<br/>
And died in travail, unconfessed.<br/></p>
<p>VI.<br/>
<br/>
Alone, among his young compeers,<br/>
Was Brian from his infant years;<br/>
A moody and heart-broken boy,<br/>
Estranged from sympathy and joy<br/>
Bearing each taunt which careless tongue<br/>
On his mysterious lineage flung.<br/>
Whole nights he spent by moonlight pale<br/>
To wood and stream his teal, to wail,<br/>
Till, frantic, he as truth received<br/>
What of his birth the crowd believed,<br/>
And sought, in mist and meteor fire,<br/>
To meet and know his Phantom Sire!<br/>
In vain, to soothe his wayward fate,<br/>
The cloister oped her pitying gate;<br/>
In vain the learning of the age<br/>
Unclasped the sable-lettered page;<br/>
Even in its treasures he could find<br/>
Food for the fever of his mind.<br/>
Eager he read whatever tells<br/>
Of magic, cabala, and spells,<br/>
And every dark pursuit allied<br/>
To curious and presumptuous pride;<br/>
Till with fired brain and nerves o'erstrung,<br/>
And heart with mystic horrors wrung,<br/>
Desperate he sought Benharrow's den,<br/>
And hid him from the haunts of men.<br/></p>
<p>VII.<br/>
<br/>
The desert gave him visions wild,<br/>
Such as might suit the spectre's child.<br/>
Where with black cliffs the torrents toil,<br/>
He watched the wheeling eddies boil,<br/>
Jill from their foam his dazzled eyes<br/>
Beheld the River Demon rise:<br/>
The mountain mist took form and limb<br/>
Of noontide hag or goblin grim;<br/>
The midnight wind came wild and dread,<br/>
Swelled with the voices of the dead;<br/>
Far on the future battle-heath<br/>
His eye beheld the ranks of death:<br/>
Thus the lone Seer, from mankind hurled,<br/>
Shaped forth a disembodied world.<br/>
One lingering sympathy of mind<br/>
Still bound him to the mortal kind;<br/>
The only parent he could claim<br/>
Of ancient Alpine's lineage came.<br/>
Late had he heard, in prophet's dream,<br/>
The fatal Ben-Shie's boding scream;<br/>
Sounds, too, had come in midnight blast<br/>
Of charging steeds, careering fast<br/>
Along Benharrow's shingly side,<br/>
Where mortal horseman ne'er might ride;<br/>
The thunderbolt had split the pine,—<br/>
All augured ill to Alpine's line.<br/>
He girt his loins, and came to show<br/>
The signals of impending woe,<br/>
And now stood prompt to bless or ban,<br/>
As bade the Chieftain of his clan.<br/></p>
<p>VIII.<br/>
<br/>
'T was all prepared;—and from the rock<br/>
A goat, the patriarch of the flock,<br/>
Before the kindling pile was laid,<br/>
And pierced by Roderick's ready blade.<br/>
Patient the sickening victim eyed<br/>
The life-blood ebb in crimson tide<br/>
Down his clogged beard and shaggy limb,<br/>
Till darkness glazed his eyeballs dim.<br/>
The grisly priest, with murmuring prayer,<br/>
A slender crosslet framed with care,<br/>
A cubit's length in measure due;<br/>
The shaft and limbs were rods of yew,<br/>
Whose parents in Inch-Cailliach wave<br/>
Their shadows o'er Clan-Alpine's grave,<br/>
And, answering Lomond's breezes deep,<br/>
Soothe many a chieftain's endless sleep.<br/>
The Cross thus formed he held on high,<br/>
With wasted hand and haggard eye,<br/>
And strange and mingled feelings woke,<br/>
While his anathema he spoke:—<br/></p>
<p>IX.<br/>
<br/>
'Woe to the clansman who shall view<br/>
This symbol of sepulchral yew,<br/>
Forgetful that its branches grew<br/>
Where weep the heavens their holiest dew<br/>
On Alpine's dwelling low!<br/>
Deserter of his Chieftain's trust,<br/>
He ne'er shall mingle with their dust,<br/>
But, from his sires and kindred thrust,<br/>
Each clansman's execration just<br/>
Shall doom him wrath and woe.'<br/>
He paused;—the word the vassals took,<br/>
With forward step and fiery look,<br/>
On high their naked brands they shook,<br/>
Their clattering targets wildly strook;<br/>
And first in murmur low,<br/>
Then like the billow in his course,<br/>
That far to seaward finds his source,<br/>
And flings to shore his mustered force,<br/>
Burst with loud roar their answer hoarse,<br/>
'Woe to the traitor, woe!'<br/>
Ben-an's gray scalp the accents knew,<br/>
The joyous wolf from covert drew,<br/>
The exulting eagle screamed afar,—<br/>
They knew the voice of Alpine's war.<br/></p>
<p>X.<br/>
<br/>
The shout was hushed on lake and fell,<br/>
The Monk resumed his muttered spell:<br/>
Dismal and low its accents came,<br/>
The while he scathed the Cross with flame;<br/>
And the few words that reached the air,<br/>
Although the holiest name was there,<br/>
Had more of blasphemy than prayer.<br/>
But when he shook above the crowd<br/>
Its kindled points, he spoke aloud:—<br/>
'Woe to the wretch who fails to rear<br/>
At this dread sign the ready spear!<br/>
For, as the flames this symbol sear,<br/>
His home, the refuge of his fear,<br/>
A kindred fate shall know;<br/>
Far o'er its roof the volumed flame<br/>
Clan-Alpine's vengeance shall proclaim,<br/>
While maids and matrons on his name<br/>
Shall call down wretchedness and shame,<br/>
And infamy and woe.'<br/>
Then rose the cry of females, shrill<br/>
As goshawk's whistle on the hill,<br/>
Denouncing misery and ill,<br/>
Mingled with childhood's babbling trill<br/>
Of curses stammered slow;<br/>
Answering with imprecation dread,<br/>
'Sunk be his home in embers red!<br/>
And cursed be the meanest shed<br/>
That o'er shall hide the houseless head<br/>
We doom to want and woe!'<br/>
A sharp and shrieking echo gave,<br/>
Coir-Uriskin, thy goblin cave!<br/>
And the gray pass where birches wave<br/>
On Beala-nam-bo.<br/></p>
<p>XI.<br/>
<br/>
Then deeper paused the priest anew,<br/>
And hard his laboring breath he drew,<br/>
While, with set teeth and clenched hand,<br/>
And eyes that glowed like fiery brand,<br/>
He meditated curse more dread,<br/>
And deadlier, on the clansman's head<br/>
Who, summoned to his chieftain's aid,<br/>
The signal saw and disobeyed.<br/>
The crosslet's points of sparkling wood<br/>
He quenched among the bubbling blood.<br/>
And, as again the sign he reared,<br/>
Hollow and hoarse his voice was heard:<br/>
'When flits this Cross from man to man,<br/>
Vich-Alpine's summons to his clan,<br/>
Burst be the ear that fails to heed!<br/>
Palsied the foot that shuns to speed!<br/>
May ravens tear the careless eyes,<br/>
Wolves make the coward heart their prize!<br/>
As sinks that blood-stream in the earth,<br/>
So may his heart's-blood drench his hearth!<br/>
As dies in hissing gore the spark,<br/>
Quench thou his light, Destruction dark!<br/>
And be the grace to him denied,<br/>
Bought by this sign to all beside!<br/>
He ceased; no echo gave again<br/>
The murmur of the deep Amen.<br/></p>
<p>XII.<br/>
<br/>
Then Roderick with impatient look<br/>
From Brian's hand the symbol took:<br/>
'Speed, Malise, speed' he said, and gave<br/>
The crosslet to his henchman brave.<br/>
'The muster-place be Lanrick mead—<br/>
Instant the time—-speed, Malise, speed!'<br/>
Like heath-bird, when the hawks pursue,<br/>
A barge across Loch Katrine flew:<br/>
High stood the henchman on the prow;<br/>
So rapidly the barge-mall row,<br/>
The bubbles, where they launched the boat,<br/>
Were all unbroken and afloat,<br/>
Dancing in foam and ripple still,<br/>
When it had neared the mainland hill;<br/>
And from the silver beach's side<br/>
Still was the prow three fathom wide,<br/>
When lightly bounded to the land<br/>
The messenger of blood and brand.<br/></p>
<p>XIII.<br/>
<br/>
Speed, Malise, speed! the dun deer's hide<br/>
On fleeter foot was never tied.<br/>
Speed, Malise, speed! such cause of haste<br/>
Thine active sinews never braced.<br/>
Bend 'gainst the steepy hill thy breast,<br/>
Burst down like torrent from its crest;<br/>
With short and springing footstep pass<br/>
The trembling bog and false morass;<br/>
Across the brook like roebuck bound,<br/>
And thread the brake like questing hound;<br/>
The crag is high, the scaur is deep,<br/>
Yet shrink not from the desperate leap:<br/>
Parched are thy burning lips and brow,<br/>
Yet by the fountain pause not now;<br/>
Herald of battle, fate, and fear,<br/>
Stretch onward in thy fleet career!<br/>
The wounded hind thou track'st not now,<br/>
Pursuest not maid through greenwood bough,<br/>
Nor priest thou now thy flying pace<br/>
With rivals in the mountain race;<br/>
But danger, death, and warrior deed<br/>
Are in thy course—speed, Malise, speed!<br/></p>
<p>XIV.<br/>
<br/>
Fast as the fatal symbol flies,<br/>
In arms the huts and hamlets rise;<br/>
From winding glen, from upland brown,<br/>
They poured each hardy tenant down.<br/>
Nor slacked the messenger his pace;<br/>
He showed the sign, he named the place,<br/>
And, pressing forward like the wind,<br/>
Left clamor and surprise behind.<br/>
The fisherman forsook the strand,<br/>
The swarthy smith took dirk and brand;<br/>
With changed cheer, the mower blithe<br/>
Left in the half-cut swath his scythe;<br/>
The herds without a keeper strayed,<br/>
The plough was in mid-furrow staved,<br/>
The falconer tossed his hawk away,<br/>
The hunter left the stag at hay;<br/>
Prompt at the signal of alarms,<br/>
Each son of Alpine rushed to arms;<br/>
So swept the tumult and affray<br/>
Along the margin of Achray.<br/>
Alas, thou lovely lake! that e'er<br/>
Thy banks should echo sounds of fear!<br/>
The rocks, the bosky thickets, sleep<br/>
So stilly on thy bosom deep,<br/>
The lark's blithe carol from the cloud<br/>
Seems for the scene too gayly loud.<br/></p>
<p>XV.<br/>
<br/>
Speed, Malise, speed! The lake is past,<br/>
Duncraggan's huts appear at last,<br/>
And peep, like moss-grown rocks, half seen<br/>
Half hidden in the copse so green;<br/>
There mayst thou rest, thy labor done,<br/>
Their lord shall speed the signal on.—<br/>
As stoops the hawk upon his prey,<br/>
The henchman shot him down the way.<br/>
What woful accents load the gale?<br/>
The funeral yell, the female wail!<br/>
A gallant hunter's sport is o'er,<br/>
A valiant warrior fights no more.<br/>
Who, in the battle or the chase,<br/>
At Roderick's side shall fill his place!—<br/>
Within the hall, where torch's ray<br/>
Supplies the excluded beams of day,<br/>
Lies Duncan on his lowly bier,<br/>
And o'er him streams his widow's tear.<br/>
His stripling son stands mournful by,<br/>
His youngest weeps, but knows not why;<br/>
The village maids and matrons round<br/>
The dismal coronach resound.<br/></p>
<p>XVI.<br/>
<br/>
Coronach.<br/>
<br/>
He is gone on the mountain,<br/>
He is lost to the forest,<br/>
Like a summer-dried fountain,<br/>
When our need was the sorest.<br/>
The font, reappearing,<br/>
From the rain-drops shall borrow,<br/>
But to us comes no cheering,<br/>
To Duncan no morrow!<br/>
<br/>
The hand of the reaper<br/>
Takes the ears that are hoary,<br/>
But the voice of the weeper<br/>
Wails manhood in glory.<br/>
The autumn winds rushing<br/>
Waft the leaves that are searest,<br/>
But our flower was in flushing,<br/>
When blighting was nearest.<br/>
<br/>
Fleet foot on the correi,<br/>
Sage counsel in cumber,<br/>
Red hand in the foray,<br/>
How sound is thy slumber!<br/>
Like the dew on the mountain,<br/>
Like the foam on the river,<br/>
Like the bubble on the fountain,<br/>
Thou art gone, and forever!<br/></p>
<p>XVII.<br/>
<br/>
See Stumah, who, the bier beside<br/>
His master's corpse with wonder eyed,<br/>
Poor Stumah! whom his least halloo<br/>
Could send like lightning o'er the dew,<br/>
Bristles his crest, and points his ears,<br/>
As if some stranger step he hears.<br/>
'T is not a mourner's muffled tread,<br/>
Who comes to sorrow o'er the dead,<br/>
But headlong haste or deadly fear<br/>
Urge the precipitate career.<br/>
All stand aghast:—unheeding all,<br/>
The henchman bursts into the hall;<br/>
Before the dead man's bier he stood,<br/>
Held forth the Cross besmeared with blood;<br/>
'The muster-place is Lanrick mead;<br/>
Speed forth the signal! clansmen, speed!'<br/></p>
<p>XVIII,<br/>
<br/>
Angus, the heir of Duncan's line,<br/>
Sprung forth and seized the fatal sign.<br/>
In haste the stripling to his side<br/>
His father's dirk and broadsword tied;<br/>
But when he saw his mother's eye<br/>
Watch him in speechless agony,<br/>
Back to her opened arms he flew<br/>
Pressed on her lips a fond adieu,—<br/>
'Alas' she sobbed,—'and yet be gone,<br/>
And speed thee forth, like Duncan's son!'<br/>
One look he cast upon the bier,<br/>
Dashed from his eye the gathering tear,<br/>
Breathed deep to clear his laboring breast,<br/>
And tossed aloft his bonnet crest,<br/>
Then, like the high-bred colt when, freed,<br/>
First he essays his fire and speed,<br/>
He vanished, and o'er moor and moss<br/>
Sped forward with the Fiery Cross.<br/>
Suspended was the widow's tear<br/>
While yet his footsteps she could hear;<br/>
And when she marked the henchman's eye<br/>
Wet with unwonted sympathy,<br/>
'Kinsman,' she said, 'his race is run<br/>
That should have sped thine errand on.<br/>
The oak teas fallen?—the sapling bough Is all<br/>
Duncraggan's shelter now<br/>
Yet trust I well, his duty done,<br/>
The orphan's God will guard my son.—<br/>
And you, in many a danger true<br/>
At Duncan's hest your blades that drew,<br/>
To arms, and guard that orphan's head!<br/>
Let babes and women wail the dead.'<br/>
Then weapon-clang and martial call<br/>
Resounded through the funeral hall,<br/>
While from the walls the attendant band<br/>
Snatched sword and targe with hurried hand;<br/>
And short and flitting energy<br/>
Glanced from the mourner's sunken eye,<br/>
As if the sounds to warrior dear<br/>
Might rouse her Duncan from his bier.<br/>
But faded soon that borrowed force;<br/>
Grief claimed his right, and tears their course.<br/></p>
<p>XIX.<br/>
<br/>
Benledi saw the Cross of Fire,<br/>
It glanced like lightning up Strath-Ire.<br/>
O'er dale and hill the summons flew,<br/>
Nor rest nor pause young Angus knew;<br/>
The tear that gathered in his eye<br/>
He deft the mountain-breeze to dry;<br/>
Until, where Teith's young waters roll<br/>
Betwixt him and a wooded knoll<br/>
That graced the sable strath with green,<br/>
The chapel of Saint Bride was seen.<br/>
Swoln was the stream, remote the bridge,<br/>
But Angus paused not on the edge;<br/>
Though the clerk waves danced dizzily,<br/>
Though reeled his sympathetic eye,<br/>
He dashed amid the torrent's roar:<br/>
His right hand high the crosslet bore,<br/>
His left the pole-axe grasped, to guide<br/>
And stay his footing in the tide.<br/>
He stumbled twice,—the foam splashed high,<br/>
With hoarser swell the stream raced by;<br/>
And had he fallen,—forever there,<br/>
Farewell Duncraggan's orphan heir!<br/>
But still, as if in parting life,<br/>
Firmer he grasped the Cross of strife,<br/>
Until the opposing bank he gained,<br/>
And up the chapel pathway strained.<br/>
A blithesome rout that morning-tide<br/>
Had sought the chapel of Saint Bride.<br/>
Her troth Tombea's Mary gave<br/>
To Norman, heir of Armandave,<br/>
And, issuing from the Gothic arch,<br/>
The bridal now resumed their march.<br/>
In rude but glad procession came<br/>
Bonneted sire and coif-clad dame;<br/>
And plaided youth, with jest and jeer<br/>
Which snooded maiden would not hear:<br/>
And children, that, unwitting why,<br/>
Lent the gay shout their shrilly cry;<br/>
And minstrels, that in measures vied<br/>
Before the young and bonny bride,<br/>
Whose downcast eye and cheek disclose<br/>
The tear and blush of morning rose.<br/>
With virgin step and bashful hand<br/>
She held the kerchief's snowy band.<br/>
The gallant bridegroom by her side<br/>
Beheld his prize with victor's pride.<br/>
And the glad mother in her ear<br/>
Was closely whispering word of cheer.<br/></p>
<p>XXI.<br/>
<br/>
Who meets them at the churchyard gate?<br/>
The messenger of fear and fate!<br/>
Haste in his hurried accent lies,<br/>
And grief is swimming in his eyes.<br/>
All dripping from the recent flood,<br/>
Panting and travel-soiled he stood,<br/>
The fatal sign of fire and sword<br/>
Held forth, and spoke the appointed word:<br/>
'The muster-place is Lanrick mead;<br/>
Speed forth the signal! Norman, speed!'<br/>
And must he change so soon the hand<br/>
Just linked to his by holy band,<br/>
For the fell Cross of blood and brand?<br/>
And must the day so blithe that rose,<br/>
And promised rapture in the close,<br/>
Before its setting hour, divide<br/>
The bridegroom from the plighted bride?<br/>
O fatal doom'—it must! it must!<br/>
Clan-Alpine's cause, her Chieftain's trust,<br/>
Her summons dread, brook no delay;<br/>
Stretch to the race,—away! away!<br/></p>
<p>XXII.<br/>
<br/>
Yet slow he laid his plaid aside,<br/>
And lingering eyed his lovely bride,<br/>
Until he saw the starting tear<br/>
Speak woe he might not stop to cheer:<br/>
Then, trusting not a second look,<br/>
In haste he sped hind up the brook,<br/>
Nor backward glanced till on the heath<br/>
Where Lubnaig's lake supplies the Teith,—<br/>
What in the racer's bosom stirred?<br/>
The sickening pang of hope deferred,<br/>
And memory with a torturing train<br/>
Of all his morning visions vain.<br/>
Mingled with love's impatience, came<br/>
The manly thirst for martial fame;<br/>
The stormy joy of mountaineers<br/>
Ere yet they rush upon the spears;<br/>
And zeal for Clan and Chieftain burning,<br/>
And hope, from well-fought field returning,<br/>
With war's red honors on his crest,<br/>
To clasp his Mary to his breast.<br/>
Stung by such thoughts, o'er bank and brae,<br/>
Like fire from flint he glanced away,<br/>
While high resolve and feeling strong<br/>
Burst into voluntary song.<br/></p>
<p>XXIII.<br/>
<br/>
Song.<br/>
<br/>
The heath this night must be my bed,<br/>
The bracken curtain for my head,<br/>
My lullaby the warder's tread,<br/>
Far, far, from love and thee, Mary;<br/>
To-morrow eve, more stilly laid,<br/>
My couch may be my bloody plaid,<br/>
My vesper song thy wail, sweet maid!<br/>
It will not waken me, Mary!<br/>
<br/>
I may not, dare not, fancy now<br/>
The grief that clouds thy lovely brow,<br/>
I dare not think upon thy vow,<br/>
And all it promised me, Mary.<br/>
No fond regret must Norman know;<br/>
When bursts Clan-Alpine on the foe,<br/>
His heart must be like bended bow,<br/>
His foot like arrow free, Mary.<br/>
<br/>
A time will come with feeling fraught,<br/>
For, if I fall in battle fought,<br/>
Thy hapless lover's dying thought<br/>
Shall be a thought on thee, Mary.<br/>
And if returned from conquered foes,<br/>
How blithely will the evening close,<br/>
How sweet the linnet sing repose,<br/>
To my young bride and me, Mary!<br/></p>
<p>XXIV.<br/>
<br/>
Not faster o'er thy heathery braes<br/>
Balquidder, speeds the midnight blaze,<br/>
Rushing in conflagration strong<br/>
Thy deep ravines and dells along,<br/>
Wrapping thy cliffs in purple glow,<br/>
And reddening the dark lakes below;<br/>
Nor faster speeds it, nor so far,<br/>
As o'er thy heaths the voice of war.<br/>
The signal roused to martial coil<br/>
The sullen margin of Loch Voil,<br/>
Waked still Loch Doine, and to the source<br/>
Alarmed, Balvaig, thy swampy course;<br/>
Thence southward turned its rapid road<br/>
Adown Strath-Gartney's valley broad<br/>
Till rose in arms each man might claim<br/>
A portion in Clan-Alpine's name,<br/>
From the gray sire, whose trembling hand<br/>
Could hardly buckle on his brand,<br/>
To the raw boy, whose shaft and bow<br/>
Were yet scarce terror to the crow.<br/>
Each valley, each sequestered glen,<br/>
Mustered its little horde of men<br/>
That met as torrents from the height<br/>
In Highland dales their streams unite<br/>
Still gathering, as they pour along,<br/>
A voice more loud, a tide more strong,<br/>
Till at the rendezvous they stood<br/>
By hundreds prompt for blows and blood,<br/>
Each trained to arms since life began,<br/>
Owning no tie but to his clan,<br/>
No oath but by his chieftain's hand,<br/>
No law but Roderick Dhu's command.<br/></p>
<p>XXV.<br/>
<br/>
That summer morn had Roderick Dhu<br/>
Surveyed the skirts of Benvenue,<br/>
And sent his scouts o'er hill and heath,<br/>
To view the frontiers of Menteith.<br/>
All backward came with news of truce;<br/>
Still lay each martial Graeme and Bruce,<br/>
In Rednock courts no horsemen wait,<br/>
No banner waved on Cardross gate,<br/>
On Duchray's towers no beacon shone,<br/>
Nor scared the herons from Loch Con;<br/>
All seemed at peace.—Now wot ye wily<br/>
The Chieftain with such anxious eye,<br/>
Ere to the muster he repair,<br/>
This western frontier scanned with care?—<br/>
In Benvenue's most darksome cleft,<br/>
A fair though cruel pledge was left;<br/>
For Douglas, to his promise true,<br/>
That morning from the isle withdrew,<br/>
And in a deep sequestered dell<br/>
Had sought a low and lonely cell.<br/>
By many a bard in Celtic tongue<br/>
Has Coir-nan-Uriskin been sung<br/>
A softer name the Saxons gave,<br/>
And called the grot the Goblin Cave.<br/></p>
<p>XXVI.<br/>
<br/>
It was a wild and strange retreat,<br/>
As e'er was trod by outlaw's feet.<br/>
The dell, upon the mountain's crest,<br/>
Yawned like a gash on warrior's breast;<br/>
Its trench had stayed full many a rock,<br/>
Hurled by primeval earthquake shock<br/>
From Benvenue's gray summit wild,<br/>
And here, in random ruin piled,<br/>
They frowned incumbent o'er the spot<br/>
And formed the rugged sylvan "rot.<br/>
The oak and birch with mingled shade<br/>
At noontide there a twilight made,<br/>
Unless when short and sudden shone<br/>
Some straggling beam on cliff or stone,<br/>
With such a glimpse as prophet's eye<br/>
Gains on thy depth, Futurity.<br/>
No murmur waked the solemn still,<br/>
Save tinkling of a fountain rill;<br/>
But when the wind chafed with the lake,<br/>
A sullen sound would upward break,<br/>
With dashing hollow voice, that spoke<br/>
The incessant war of wave and rock.<br/>
Suspended cliffs with hideous sway<br/>
Seemed nodding o'er the cavern gray.<br/>
From such a den the wolf had sprung,<br/>
In such the wild-cat leaves her young;<br/>
Yet Douglas and his daughter fair<br/>
Sought for a space their safety there.<br/>
Gray Superstition's whisper dread<br/>
Debarred the spot to vulgar tread;<br/>
For there, she said, did fays resort,<br/>
And satyrs hold their sylvan court,<br/>
By moonlight tread their mystic maze,<br/>
And blast the rash beholder's gaze.<br/></p>
<p>XXVII.<br/>
<br/>
Now eve, with western shadows long,<br/>
Floated on Katrine bright and strong,<br/>
When Roderick with a chosen few<br/>
Repassed the heights of Benvenue.<br/>
Above the Goblin Cave they go,<br/>
Through the wild pass of Beal-nam-bo;<br/>
The prompt retainers speed before,<br/>
To launch the shallop from the shore,<br/>
For 'cross Loch Katrine lies his way<br/>
To view the passes of Achray,<br/>
And place his clansmen in array.<br/>
Yet lags the Chief in musing mind,<br/>
Unwonted sight, his men behind.<br/>
A single page, to bear his sword,<br/>
Alone attended on his lord;<br/>
The rest their way through thickets break,<br/>
And soon await him by the lake.<br/>
It was a fair and gallant sight<br/>
To view them from the neighboring height,<br/>
By the low-levelled sunbeam's light!<br/>
For strength and stature, from the clan<br/>
Each warrior was a chosen man,<br/>
As even afar might well be seen,<br/>
By their proud step and martial mien.<br/>
Their feathers dance, their tartars float,<br/>
Their targets gleam, as by the boat<br/>
A wild and warlike group they stand,<br/>
That well became such mountain-strand.<br/></p>
<p>XXVI<br/>
<br/>
Their Chief with step reluctant still<br/>
Was lingering on the craggy hill,<br/>
Hard by where turned apart the road<br/>
To Douglas's obscure abode.<br/>
It was but with that dawning morn<br/>
That Roderick Dhu had proudly sworn<br/>
To drown his love in war's wild roar,<br/>
Nor think of Ellen Douglas more;<br/>
But he who stems a stream with sand,<br/>
And fetters flame with flaxen band,<br/>
Has yet a harder task to prove,—<br/>
By firm resolve to conquer love!<br/>
Eve finds the Chief, like restless ghost,<br/>
Still hovering near his treasure lost;<br/>
For though his haughty heart deny<br/>
A parting meeting to his eye<br/>
Still fondly strains his anxious ear<br/>
The accents of her voice to hear,<br/>
And inly did he curse the breeze<br/>
That waked to sound the rustling trees.<br/>
But hark! what mingles in the strain?<br/>
It is the harp of Allan-bane,<br/>
That wakes its measure slow and high,<br/>
Attuned to sacred minstrelsy.<br/>
What melting voice attends the strings?<br/>
'Tis Ellen, or an angel, sings.<br/></p>
<p>XXIX.<br/>
<br/>
Hymn to the Virgin.<br/>
<br/>
Ave. Maria! maiden mild!<br/>
Listen to a maiden's prayer!<br/>
Thou canst hear though from the wild,<br/>
Thou canst save amid despair.<br/>
Safe may we sleep beneath thy care,<br/>
Though banished, outcast, and reviled—<br/>
Maiden! hear a maiden's prayer;<br/>
Mother, hear a suppliant child!<br/>
Ave Maria!<br/>
<br/>
Ave Maria! undefiled!<br/>
The flinty couch we now must share<br/>
Shall seem with down of eider piled,<br/>
If thy protection hover there.<br/>
The murky cavern's heavy air<br/>
Shall breathe of balm if thou hast smiled;<br/>
Then, Maiden! hear a maiden's prayer,<br/>
Mother, list a suppliant child!<br/>
Ave Maria!<br/>
<br/>
Ave. Maria! stainless styled!<br/>
Foul demons of the earth and air,<br/>
From this their wonted haunt exiled,<br/>
Shall flee before thy presence fair.<br/>
We bow us to our lot of care,<br/>
Beneath thy guidance reconciled:<br/>
Hear for a maid a maiden's prayer,<br/>
And for a father hear a child!<br/>
Ave Maria!<br/></p>
<p>XXX.<br/>
<br/>
Died on the harp the closing hymn,—<br/>
Unmoved in attitude and limb,<br/>
As listening still, Clan-Alpine's lord<br/>
Stood leaning on his heavy sword,<br/>
Until the page with humble sign<br/>
Twice pointed to the sun's decline.<br/>
Then while his plaid he round him cast,<br/>
'It is the last time—'tis the last,'<br/>
He muttered thrice,—'the last time e'er<br/>
That angel-voice shall Roderick hear''<br/>
It was a goading thought,—his stride<br/>
Hied hastier down the mountain-side;<br/>
Sullen he flung him in the boat<br/>
An instant 'cross the lake it shot.<br/>
They landed in that silvery bay,<br/>
And eastward held their hasty way<br/>
Till, with the latest beams of light,<br/>
The band arrived on Lanrick height'<br/>
Where mustered in the vale below<br/>
Clan-Alpine's men in martial show.<br/></p>
<p>XXXI.<br/>
<br/>
A various scene the clansmen made:<br/>
Some sat, some stood, some slowly strayed:<br/>
But most, with mantles folded round,<br/>
Were couched to rest upon the ground,<br/>
Scarce to be known by curious eye<br/>
From the deep heather where they lie,<br/>
So well was matched the tartan screen<br/>
With heath-bell dark and brackens green;<br/>
Unless where, here and there, a blade<br/>
Or lance's point a glimmer made,<br/>
Like glow-worm twinkling through the shade.<br/>
But when, advancing through the gloom,<br/>
They saw the Chieftain's eagle plume,<br/>
Their shout of welcome, shrill and wide,<br/>
Shook the steep mountain's steady side.<br/>
Thrice it arose, and lake and fell<br/>
Three times returned the martial yell;<br/>
It died upon Bochastle's plain,<br/>
And Silence claimed her evening reign.<br/></p>
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