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THE HIGHLANDERS:

PART IV.

"A thousand fantasies

26

Begin to throng into my memory,

"Of calling shapes, and beckoning shadows dire,
"And airy tongues, that syllable men's names
"On sands, and shores, and desart wildernesses.
"These thoughts may startle well, but not astound
"The virtuous mind that ever walks attended
"By a strong siding champion--Conscience.

MILTON.

Now Winter pours his terrors o'er the plain,

And icy barriers close the wild domain,

From the fierce North the sweeping blast descends,
And drifted snow in wild confusion blends;
The Mountain-Cataract, whose thundering sound,

Made echoes tremble in their caves around,

Now dashing with diminish'd majesty,
In frozen state suspended seems on high;
While in the midst a small contracted stream
Tinkles like rills that lull the shepherd's dream,
The River crusted o'er, and hid in snow,
Unfaithful tempts the traveller below

While pools and boiling springs, unsafe beneath,
Betray th' unwary to the snares of death.

How awful now appears Night's silent reign!
Where lofty mountains bound the solemn scene,
While Nature, wrapt in chilly bright disguise,
And sunk in deep repose unconscious lies; *
And through the pure cerulean vault above,
In lucid order constellations move :
The milky-way, conspicuous glows on high.
Redoubled lustre sparkles thro' the sky;
And rapid splendours, from the dark-blue North,
In streams of brightness pour incessant forth;
While crusted mountain-snows reflect the light,
And radiance decks the sable brows of night.
Now, though their herds excite their anxious care,
Tir'd Labour slumbers with the shining share:
Short while they ply the flail, the scanty corn,
Dealt out with frugal care, employs the morn
But social glee, around the cheerful hearth,
Lets loose the careless soul of rural mirth:

* See note No. II.

Bright burns the hearth, th' enlivening torches blaze *,
The pipes awake the notes of former days:
Again they feel their ancient spirit rise,
And courage fires, or pity melts their eyes,
As love or war alternate swells the sound,
And hearts dilate, and bosoms glow around:
Yet even while frost comes bitter on the breeze,
Not all their nights are spent in social ease.

Some bolder spirits of the hardy race,

}

O'er snow-clad mountains wake the dangerous chace;
And some advent'rous youths, with fearless mind,
All thoughts of ease and safety leave behind,
The pathless wilds for wandering steers explore,
Climb the steep rock where nestling Falcons soar,
And heights by human feet untrod before.
There, danger threats in every hideous form,
There groans the Genius of the gathering storm ;
And solitude forlorn, and frantic fear,

And howling blasts, and echoing caves are there.
Yet adamantine souls, and iron forms,

Hard brac'd by toil, and nurst among the storms,
Whom pleasure ne'er could melt, or terror freeze,
Can trace undaunted even such scenes as these;
Amidst the rattling hail erect their head,
And view serene the dwelling of the dead.

* See note No. 12. + See note No. 13.

Where chiefs, who bore of old a mighty name,
In four grey stones concenter all their fame;
Where sleeps the hunter on the hill of heath,
By fancy pictur'd in the misty wreath,
Dim hovering o'er the narrow bed of death.
Yet when the wearied storm has spent its wrath,
Patient he still explores th' adjacent Strath:
By the pale moon he tracks the famish'd hare,
Who seeks among the cots her scanty fare:
At length, a distant light his steps invites,
To share the wonted hospitable rites;

}

Where plenteous cheer, and welcome's genial smiles,
In simple guise the wanderer's care beguiles;
The timely aid, the long-remember'd feast,
Are deep upon the stranger's mind imprest,
And hope and gratitude distend his breast.
Deep in a narrow vale, unknown to song,
Where Maeshy leads her lucid stream along *,
Then turns, as if unwilling to forsake

The peaceful bosom of her parent lake,

While her pure streams the polish'd pebbles show,
That thro' the native crystal shine below;

Upon her flow'ry banks there dwelt a Swain,
Who liv'd a stranger to the cultur'd plain :
He mov'd with active ease, and artless grace,
And manly spirit brighten'd in his face,

*See note No. 14

Fair on his cheek appear'd youth's mantling glow, While lines of stedfast thought had mark'd his brow; Alone, superior in the sylvan reign,

'Twas his to lead the life that poets feign,

Amidst luxuriant fruits, and chrystal springs,

"Where the free soul looks down to pity kings

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Yet while through woods and mountains wont to rove, The pious youth excell'd in filial love;

For his lov'd parents, and their duteous race,

He search'd the flood, or urg'd the vent'rous chace :

And while o'er distant moors he lov'd to roam,

The fruit of all his toils enrich'd their home:
For them the deer resign'd his ample hide,
For them th' enamell'd roes their beauteous pride,
The otter's costly fur, the dappl'd fawn,

The leveret wounded in the dewy dawn:

No Sylvan game their FARQUHAR's pow'r withstood, Who reign'd despotic o'er the pathless wood.

But see! where Winter fierce array'd in storms, With early fury Nature's face deforms;

And

pours his snows with wild unwonted haste, E'er scatter'd herds are brought from ev'ry waste, Where they thro' summer months unheeded rang'd, Or left the district to their home estrang'd.

Now FARQUHAR ceas'd thro' gloomy woods to roam, And hastening downwards, sought his peaceful home, * See note No. 15.

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