Marmion. Вальтер Скотт

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her humming wheel,

      Or pensive cooks her orphans’ meal,

      Yet blesses, ere she deals their bread,                    100

      The gentle hand by which they’re fed.

        From Yair, – which hills so closely bind,

      Scarce can the Tweed his passage find,

      Though much he fret, and chafe, and toil,

      Till all his eddying currents boil, –                       105

      Her long descended lord is gone,

      And left us by the stream alone.

      And much I miss those sportive boys,

      Companions of my mountain joys,

      Just at the age ‘twixt boy and youth,                      110

      When thought is speech, and speech is truth.

      Close to my side, with what delight

      They press’d to hear of Wallace wight,

      When, pointing to his airy mound,

      I call’d his ramparts holy ground!                        115

      Kindled their brows to hear me speak;

      And I have smiled, to feel my cheek,

      Despite the difference of our years,

      Return again the glow of theirs.

      Ah, happy boys! such feelings pure,                        120

      They will not, cannot long endure;

      Condemn’d to stem the world’s rude tide,

      You may not linger by the side;

      For Fate shall thrust you from the shore,

      And passion ply the sail and oar.                          125

      Yet cherish the remembrance still,

      Of the lone mountain, and the rill;

      For trust, dear boys, the time will come,

      When fiercer transport shall be dumb,

      And you will think right frequently,                      130

      But, well I hope, without a sigh,

      On the free hours that we have spent,

      Together, on the brown hill’s bent.

        When, musing on companions gone,

      We doubly feel ourselves alone,                            135

      Something, my friend, we yet may gain,

      There is a pleasure in this pain:

      It soothes the love of lonely rest,

      Deep in each gentler heart impress’d.

      ‘Tis silent amid worldly toils,                            140

      And stifled soon by mental broils;

      But, in a bosom thus prepared,

      Its still small voice is often heard,

      Whispering a mingled sentiment,

      ‘Twixt resignation and content.                            145

      Oft in my mind such thoughts awake,

      By lone Saint Mary’s silent lake;

      Thou know’st it well, – nor fen, nor sedge,

      Pollute the pure lake’s crystal edge;

      Abrupt and sheer, the mountains sink                      150

      At once upon the level brink;

      And just a trace of silver sand

      Marks where the water meets the land.

      Far in the mirror, bright and blue,

      Each hill’s huge outline you may view;                    155

      Shaggy with heath, but lonely bare,

      Nor tree, nor bush, nor brake, is there,

      Save where, of land, yon slender line

      Bears thwart the lake the scatter’d pine.

      Yet even this nakedness has power,                        160

      And aids the feeling of the hour:

      Nor thicket, dell, nor copse you spy,

      Where living thing conceal’d might lie;

      Nor point, retiring, hides a dell,

      Where swain, or woodman lone, might dwell;                165

      There’s nothing left to fancy’s guess,

      You see that all is loneliness:

      And silence aids-though the steep hills

      Send to the lake a thousand rills;

      In summer tide, so soft they weep,                        170

      The sound but lulls the ear asleep;

      Your horse’s hoof-tread sounds too rude,

      So stilly is the solitude.

        Nought living meets the eye or ear,

      But well I ween the dead are near;                        175

      For though, in feudal strife, a foe

      Hath laid Our Lady’s chapel low,

      Yet still, beneath the hallow’d soil,

      The peasant rests him from his toil,

      And, dying, bids his bones be laid,                        180

      Where erst his simple fathers pray’d.

        If age had tamed the passions’ strife,

      And fate had cut my ties to life,

      Here have I thought, ‘twere sweet to dwell,

      And rear again the chaplain’s cell,                        185

      Like that same peaceful hermitage,

      Where Milton long’d to spend his age.

      ‘Twere sweet to mark the setting day,

      On Bourhope’s lonely top decay;

      And, as it faint and feeble died                          190

      On the broad lake, and mountain’s side,

      To say, ‘Thus pleasures fade away;

      Youth, talents, beauty thus decay,

      And leave us dark, forlorn, and grey;’

      Then gaze on Dryhope’s ruin’d tower,                      195

      And think on Yarrow’s faded Flower:

      And when that mountain-sound I heard,

      Which bids us be for storm prepared,

      The distant rustling of his wings,

      As up his force the Tempest brings,                        200

      ‘Twere sweet, ere yet his terrors rave,

      To sit upon the Wizard’s grave;

      That Wizard Priest’s, whose bones are thrust,

      From company of holy dust;

      On which no sunbeam ever shines-                          205

      (So superstition’s creed divines) -

      Thence view the lake, with sullen roar,

      Heave

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