^V. VMIUWH^V ^ y.\iu unnina//! WJ rn'Ull ^Aavaain^ ^Aavtiani^ c-> i-n ^ , 'P I' >&Aavaan# ^tllBRARYQ^ ^UIBRARYQr ^OKAUF(%, ^0FCAIIF(% ?>A X~^ **. * X-~^ i. y 0Aiivaan-# ^Anwara^ \WEl!NIVER% ^lOSANGElfj^ %MI1V3J0^ "%BAIN(H\\V .\WEUNIVER% .^E-UNIVEW/a. B 5 ^lOSANCElfx^ g ^/hbajim^ ^UBRARYflr %83AINn3^ S ^WHITCHO^ ^0FCAIIF0% ^ / 'P v ^amih^ ^HIBRARY-Qr 1 i*" i o 5. / 'P 1^ ^HIBRARYflr ^l-UBRARYQr .\WEUNIVERi/A vV vlOSANCtUj> : 0% a-0KA1IF0%, is? i'Wy* is y ^ ^, *C i2 *, A\UUNIVER% ^lOSANCEl^ ^UIBRARYQ JO^ ^OJIIVDJO^ i-^ ^AaviiaiH^ <^U3HVS01^ "^sjiaAiNn awv** ^.OFCAUFOfy y o\mm# OV^ "%3AINI1]\\V Wa ^lOSANGEtfr- 5); :_ r ^UBRARYOc ^M-UBRARYO? ^KMITVHO^ ^OFCALIFOfa, 5- *Y*T^ 1 & ^OFCAUFOff^ .\WEUNIVERfy < AWEUNIVERS/, %13DNVS0^ T6//r vAUIBRARYC/r AV\EUNIVERS/A vjclOSANCEl^> <^lt!BRARYfl ILIIVI tl~s g^fci I HIT WALLACE; OR, THE FIGHT OF FALKIRK. o T. DAVISON, Lombard-street, Wbitefriars, London. Ht-7 WALLACE; OR, THE FIGHT OF FALKIRK; A METRICAL ROMANCE. B BY MISS HOLFORD. SECOND EDITION- LONDON: PRINTED FOR LONGMAN, HURST, REES, ORME, AND BROWN, PATERNOSTER- ROW. 1810. TO MISS GERTRUDE LOUISA ALLEN. Oh, Friend ! who hand in hand, o'er steep and vale, Along life's path still journey est by my side, Content alike, if sorrow's storms assail, Or hope and fortune shed their sun-lights wide, With me the varied climate to abide ! Oh, Friend ! thro' every change of feeling dear ! Or droops my heart, or emulant in pride, My buoyant fancy wings her high career, And scatters with bright glance the flimsy forms of fear. Wilt thou reject my Muse, and scorn the song She lov'd to weave and consecrate to thee ? No ! for thy glowing cheek and faithful tongue Say, thy heart cherishes the minstrelsy ! 817982 VI Then let the critic scowl with frosty eye, Let censure's marking finger soil the lay, Let envy's demons, flitting thro* the sky, Shed their dense vapour if the Muse's ray, And friendship's steady light, with lustre gild the day ! And deem not, jealous for our native land, With alien step I sought the billowy Forth, When led a pilgrim by the Muse's hand, I climb'd the rude hills of the stormy north, And sung her sons their hardihood and worth ! No ! as I turn again my truant eyes, To mark the pleasant land which gave us birth, Quick in my soul what rushing crowds arise, Heart-cheering visions all of native sympathies! Yes ! for mine eyes first open'd on the day In England ! gem and glory of the west ; Where the light minstrel pours the unbidden lay, Untremulous, untrampled, unoppress'd, Pours from a free, a proud, a happy breast ! Home of the exile ! Mother of the brave ! England I among the nations singly bless'd I Vll O'er the wide world whose arms are stretch'd to save, Whose silver throne stands fix'd, amid the eternal wave ! Long, long, my country, may thy favour'd land Drink at the source benign whence blessings flow ! Long may we kiss our Father's gentle hand, And mark with moisten'd eye his sacred brow, Bleaching in many a rugged winter's snow ! And oh ! while all around the nations shake, While ruin's wasteful whirlwinds o'er theai blow, Let not the sight our rash presumption wake, God his Anointed loves, and spares us for his sake ! Hail George the Good ! our sovereign, and our friend] Hail christian king ! Thy people's father, hail ! Oh ! as thy feet life's craggy path descend, Which from the hill-top winds into the vale, Millions with blessings load thy evening gale ! BelovM by England, dreaded by the foe, Unquench'd by age, thy spirit scorns to fail ; Smiling thou bidst thy sons to battle go, And when they fight for thee, 'tis heaven directs the blow! WALLACE. CANTO THE FIRST. I. Wake not for me, ye Maids of Helicon! Ye love to weave your perfum'd wreaths, And pour your magic numbers, In some soft clime, where Flora breathes, And young Favonius slumbers ; And when ye strike your golden lyres, 'Tis pleasure, youth, or love inspires ; And on your ever smiling brows The myrtle blossom sheds her snows, 2 WALLACE. canto i. And sighing youths and blue-eyed maids Wander amid your sacred shades ; Nor shall my ruder step advance, To scare ye from your raptur'd trance : Wake not for me, ye Maids of Helicon! II. Dark Spirit of the northern lay, Hear from thy misty mountain, bleak and cold I Pour on my sight long ages pass'd away ! Shew me the deeds of old! With thy unutterable spell Bid this adventurous breast to swell! Give to my awe-struck ears The murmurs deep of long sepulchred years, And to my wildly wandering eyes Bid the dim forms of mouldering chiefs arise, From the grey cairn's moss-mantled stone, To those who sleep with kings the regal dust of Scone! Spirit of northern song ! Awake ! descend ; Bend from thy misty throne dark spirit bend ! canto i. WALLACE. III. Now faint rose the distant vesper song, Then it died on the breeze away, For of old Dunblane, the saintly throng Hallo w'd the closing day; Heaven's beaming arch shone clear and blue, And the sweet broom glisten'd with chrystal dew, And the Merle and the Mavis caroll'd free, And the Lintwhite pour'd his melody, And a mystic joy thro' the wild groves ran Yet stormy and dark was the breast of man; And the azure sky, tho' it sparkled so, Was big with an injur'd nation's woe ! IV. But Nature's gentle voice is drown'd For hark ! to the pibroch's battle sound ! Hark ! to the war-steed's clattering heel ! Hark ! to the warrior's clanging steel ! In the wanton breeze the standard plays, And the mail gleams bright in the sun's last rays, b 2 4 WALLACE. canto i. And fiercely glances many an eye That shall ne'er see to-morrow's evening sky; And the heart beats warm in many a breast, Beats warm on the vigil of its rest! For, of peaceful years, a false array Oft flatters the hero's closing day; And many a smile plays to deceive, Like that which gilded St. Mary's eve ! Who has not heard old Scotland's wrongs Appeal to the vengeful sky, When the cry of a nation's thousand tongues Was ruin, and skaith, and misery ? When Sorrow sate in the wasted glen, And lifted her voice, and wept in vain, O'er the grizly heaps of slaughter'd men, Which scatter'd their native plain ; When Tweed, all purple with vital blood, Roll'd to the sea a horrid flood, When the sanctuary's venerable spires Flam'd in the conqueror's impious fires, canto i. WALLACE. And blaz'd to the heavens an offering dread Of wrath on the crime-stain'd victor's head ? Oh ! listen, just Power, to a nation's cry ! Ruin, and skaith, and misery ! VI. And was there none no Scottish arm, In whose veins the native blood ran warm ? And was there no heart in the trampled land That spurn'd the usurper's proud command ? Could the wrong'd realm no arms supply But the slavish tear, or the abject sigh ? Had ye forgot, when Norway's host Spread o'er old Coila's shore, From the inhospitable coast, What tidings Haco bore ? And how he left the invaded plain Incumber'd with heaps of ghastly slain, While the rest dismay'd, from the field of blood Rush'd to their graves 'mid the bitter flood ! WALLACE. canto i. VII. From Solway's oft disputed deep To Stroma's wild and stormy isle, From old Braidalbin's snow-crown'd steep, Even to the pleasant braes of Kyle, Was the cry of the country heard! From each mountain brow, or broomy heath, It roused her sons from their sleep of death ; Then Wallace, like a storm-cloud rose, And roll'd back ruin on her foes, And the soul of the spoiler fear'd ! VIII. From Roslyn to the fields of Clyde, With his trusty clan good St. Clair hied : His bold heart touch'd with Scotland's shame, Fierce from the west Lochaber came, And with him rush'd an iron race, As e'er look'd foeman in the face; Nor ach'd their hardy brows to feel The grasp severe of circling steel, canto i. WALLACE. The left arm from each manly breast With hairy targe the dart represt ; The right but struck the hapless foe, Nor needed descend with second blow ; For wherever the brave Macpherson led, The raven still hover'd o'er his head, And whenever his clan in battle stood, The dark bird look'd for a feast of blood. IX. From Galloway's wide spreading heath The grim Macdowall joins the fight ; His high mind pondering schemes of death, And anguish for his trampled right ; For memory stings his tortured brain With his wasted lands and vassals slain ; Wildly he sweeps his bright claymore, Which shall sprinkle the field with Southron gore ; On the breeze see his ancient banner wave, Which valour won, and a monarch gave ; As he marks it float 'mid the summer sky, New lightnings flash from his kindling eye, 3 WALLACE. canto i. And fondly he vows in his secret breast To avenge the crown'd Lion's injured crest ! X. The valiant blood of a noble line, Macduff, fills that gallant heart of thine ! And wherever Scotland lifts her spear, Be sure that the brave Macduff is there ! Young Crauford throws his bonnet by For the steel'd helmet's glittering pride, He couches his lance on his youthful thigh, And rushes to war by Wallace side ; While the black scarf on his bosom spread, Hints at a deed so dark and foul, As gives a tongue to the silent dead, And floods of ke to the living soul ! XL Proud of his youth, his strength, his name, See Bothwell shake his snowy plume, While the warm flush of hoped-for fame Mingles with manhood's ripening bloom. canto i. WALLACE. How strong his arm ! how keen his eye ! How throbs his breast with martial fire ! He waves his gleaming steel on high, Crying, " Havoc ! for my murder'd sire ! Old Murray, who, with traitor-blood, Swell'd the proud waves of Fortha's flood ! Murray, who nobly closed his eye 'Mid the warrior's glorious lullaby, Victory ! Victory !" xn. A soft, but not inglorious cause, Sent the brave Lord Robert to the fight ; He bends his proud head to beauty's laws, And shakes his spear as a lady's knight ; A northern lassie's yellow hair Holds the baron's heart in a magic snare ; Then burn, or fall, Werke's ancient tower ! Your lord is away to his lady's bower ; With a plaided scarf she binds her prize, And his war- word now is, " My Marion's eyes !" 10 WALLACE. canto i. She arms her soldier's daring hand, Against the sons of his native land ; She smiles farewel to kin and friends, A glamour o'er his sight descends, The scenes of his early youth forgot, He thinks, and acts, and breathes, a Scot I XIII. Thy country's blessing on thy name Bold fronted hero ! gallant Graeme ! For her, how many of thy race Have look'd destruction in the face ! And, or prophetic whisperings lie, Thro' distant, dim futurity, Thy name shall long the symbol prove Of loyal faith, and patriot love ; Now heaven be with thee, gallant Graeme ! Thy country's blessing gilds thy name ! XIV. But see, with limbs of giant size, Firm as his own embattled pile, canto i. WALLACE. 11 Wrath in his darkly rolling eyes, Comes the fierce Duncan of Argyle ! His belted coat, and bonnet blue, His tartans waving with the gale, His broad bright axe, of temper true, His pliant hauberk's ringing mail, The generous Highland chief proclaim, Aye foremost in the fields of fame : With sprightlier cheer, in lightsome dance, Ne'er did gallant his lady lead, Than Duncan bade his clan advance, O'er heaps of dying and of dead ; For sooth to say, no harp's soft tone Pleas'd his rough ear like a parting groan. XV. Ah ! would the Muse could drop the tear, Distinct, on every hero's bier ! Well pleas'd, the embalming dew to shed, On every patriot's cherish'd head ! But many a name has envious time Snatch'd from the fame-bestowing rhyme, 12 WALLACE. canto i. Which might have blazed on history's page, To light this fearful, lowering age : But man, alas ! since first began The fickle, wavering, race of man, Thro' every clime and age the same, Has stain'd his crest, and stoop'd to shame ; Fear'd for his land to strike the blow, Or basely sold her to' the foe ! XVI. Yet still, in battle's stormy hour, When fiercely fell the iron shower, Dalziel, of ancient daring vain, Still fronted death, and scoff'd at pain : Jardine nor toil nor danger tired, When honour spurred, or valour fired ; And Ramsay, thy imperial bird Soar'd o'er the undistinguish'd herd, Fix'd upward the unshrinking eye, And led to death, or victory ! In many a tale of Scottish glory, Frazier, thy name shall grace the story ; canto i. WALLACE. 13 And Scrymgeour, in far distant years, When thou art mouldering in thy grave. Memory shall see thee thro' her tears Thy country's sacred banner wave ; For history grave, and verse sublime, Shall give thy deeds to latest time ! XVII. Souls ! who in Odin's gloomy hall The horrid human goblet quafFd, Who triumphed at the Sister's call, And 'mid life's parting anguish laugh'd, Whose dark and battle-boding forms Ride on the blast, and murmur storms, And 'mid the cruel conflict's shock The groans of dying heroes mock ; E'en such, so bloody, wild, and dire, Old Scotland's warriors stood Quick as the red wide wasting fire, Fierce as the winter flood ! 14 WALLACE. canto i. XVIII. But yet, amid their country's wreck, The bold, indignant band, Bow'd for her sake, the stubborn neck, And listen'd to a chief's command : 'Tis thus, against the rugged shore, Old ocean's restless waters roar Onward they rush, but heaven's eternal laws Stay the rash wave, the maddening billows pause ! O bright and keen is the archer's eye, And glances the point of his feather'd dart, As he lifts the twanging yew on high, And aims at an English heart ! But the message of death is still deferr'd, *Till the voice of the bold Bonkill is heard. XIX. And soon shall the winged mischief flee, Bonkill, for the fight ne'er stays for thee ! Thy heart is flame, and thy steed the wind, Oh ! ne'er shall brave Stewart lag behind ! canto i. WALLACE. 15 Yet the wrinkle is deep on thy manly cheek, And thy raven locks have the silver streak, And many a year of toil and woe Have robb'd thy breast of the genial glow ; Unus'd, by war's rude harness press'd, Thine eyes to sleep, and thy limbs to rest, Thy nights are the wakeful nights of sorrow, And darkness and doubt still veil thy morrow ; And ne'er shall thy inward conflicts cease, Till thou find'st a grave, or thy country peace ! XX. Comyn, to thy secret breast give heed, And marshal thy thoughts aright, So heaven shall bless thy courser's speed, As thou provest a loyal knight ! But red is thy beard, and red thine hair, And red is thine eye's portentous glare ; Malice lurks under thy heavy brow, Tho' the sound of thy words glides soft and slow, And the bars of thy steeled aventayle Cover a cheek with envy pale ! 16 WALLACE. canto ?. But Chief of thy country's curse beware ! Tis a ponderous weight for thy heart to bear And I would not wish mortal foeman worse, Than his heart should be charg'd with his country's curse. XXI. Oh, Wallace ! thy bold unruffled brow Speaks the calm of a noble mind ; Thou hast drank of the wave at the ebb and flow, Thou stand'st like an oak, while tempests blow, Unbent by the wavering wind ! 'Mid the bursting flame, or the midnight flood, 'Mid horror's wildest scene, When the brooks of thy country are swollen with blood, Unshaken, thy soul still holds her mood, And thy brow is still serene ! In the heat of destruction's fatal day Thy cheek it wax'd not pale, Though the soul of a friend still flitted away On every passing gale ; Nor on their heads, how dear soe'er, Dropp'd from thine eye one funeral teai* oanto i. WALLACE. 17 Nor heav'd thy heart one farewel sigh, As the soldier met his destiny ; Nor private joy nor grief he knows, Whose bosom is fill'd with his country's woes ! XXII. Such Wallace was, and many a year Ere he had spirit, form, or limb, They say, that voice of gifted seer, 'Mid tales of wonder, death, and fear, Had prophesied of him ! Old Learmont, who, by Leader's stream, Beneath the wan moon's sickly gleam, Dar'd to lift his mortal eye, To the glimmering forms which glided by < The unborn people of futurity ! XXIII. It was now the edge of a summer night, And the march had been long and sore, v And each weary soldier with delight Beheld the bright orb's softening light 18 WALLACE. canto i. Tinge the purple western shore ; And when the halt was pass'd around, Their tir'd limbs hail'd the gentle sound, And each in his heart the signal bless'd, For one short hour of rugged rest ; For the basnet's weight their temples galls, And fast from their brows the heat-drop falls, And they find it sweet to close their eyes On heather beneath the arching skies, Tho' forbidden to loose the iron clasp Which binds them hard in its rigorous grasp. XXIV. Yet dare not the leader's care-rack'd head Court the short repose of the dewy bed ; No, his labouring heart must still repress The toil-balm of forgetfulness ! Then give them their glittering hour of pride, For the scorpions of care in their bosoms creep, And they dare not lay their woes aside While their simple vassals sleep ! They are gone to the glen where the birken tree canto i. WALLACE. IQ Weeps over the gliding stream, Whose waters wandering silently, Glance in the moonlight beam ; And there, 'mid the shade of the forest deep, The chiefs their awful council keep. XXV. Por council, they seek the greenwood glen, And the shade of the birken tree ; But their brows wear the frown of angry men, And they greet right sullenly : Comyn has slacken'd his helmet's brace, That the soft night wind may cool his face- But he fixes on earth a scowling eye, Heaven grant it speak not treachery ! Brave Stewart has lowered his lofty crest, He has toss'd his helm on the verdant bank, And of the whispering burnie drank, To allay the heat of his fever'd breast ; Then lifted in scorn his manly head, But never a word the chieftain said, c2 20 WALLACE. canto i. For secret pride and wrathful ire Had set his kindling soul on fire ! XXVI. The tumults of each rankling mind Wallace beheld with pensive cheer ; But U9ed to fortune's shifting wind, He griev'd, yet did not fear ! " Say, noble chieftains, shall we dream By this lone burnie's lulling stream, And far from blows, and far from strife, Here sit, and sweetly muse thro' life, And smile to think how mad they are Who wake the brazen note of war ? Ah ! contemplation's gentle power Shall be quickly scared from our greenwood bower, And the steps profane of strangers rude Shall break on our sylvan solitude !" XXVII. " Proud yeoman, a truce with your biting jest," Cried Bonkill, with reddening cheek, canto i. WALLACE. 21 " For whoever in deeds gangs first and best, You are aye the first to speak ; Yet nor prideful gait, nor boasting words, Shall raise ye aboon your country's lords ! 'Weel may yon robber scorn the land Whose barons fight at thy command ! The winking owl, from his murky hole, Envied the plumes of each nobler fowl, And pluck'd from ilk bonnie birdie's breast A feather to prank his russet crest ; Then struts from his nook in the low-roof d byre, And forgets who lent him his gay attire ; Wallace ! ye sprang from as rude a nest, And may tak my tale as it likes ye best !" XXVIII. Red Comyn laugh'd in his canker'd heart, Yet to manly daring slow, He waited till Stewart had flung his dart, To aim the second blow ; Yet he shook as he lean'd on his slender spear, And his cheek grew livid, yet not with fear ; 22 WALLACE. canto r. Then with faltering tongue he silence broke, And thus, in wily accents, spoke " Wallace, thy pride has done thee wrong ; Remember thy low degree ! Go act thy part 'mid the righting throng, We know thou art valiant, fierce, and strong, And our smiles shall guerdon thee ; Whilst I, the chief of a princely clan, Lead to the field our army's van !" XXIX. * What ! yield our army's van to thee, Red Comyn, that may never be ; Now, by yon glittering heaven ! there's not Who breathes our air another Scot, Red Comyn, I suspect but thee, Of soul-defiling perfidy ! Ah ! how would English Edward stare, To see thee foremost in the war ! Has he forgot thy cringing bow ? Has he forgot thy vassal vow ? canto i. WALLACE. 25 Why, Comyn, all this injured land Beheld thee kiss the tyrant's hand, And heard thee, on her darkest day, Swear thy disloyal soul away ! Wash from thy front this spot of shame, Till then, 'twere best to lower thy aim ! XXX. Stewart, my swelling breast would fain The tumult of its thoughts constrain ; For strong, nor easily subdued Is passion's lawless multitude ; E'en now they rush in rebel throng, To choke my voice, and chain my tongue ; Yet, I would not vex thy gallant heart, By flinging thee back thy poison'd dart ; Nor will I retort thy bitter jest, Tho' it rankles now in my wounded breast! Stewart ! thou lovest thy country well And can'st thou be the foe Of Wallace, who caught her as she fell, And forbade her overthrow ? 24 WALLACE. canto I. XXXI. A king in chains a trampled land, Our chiefs, a pale, desponding band ; A people, wrong'd, despoil'd, bereft, Nor courage, zeal, nor honour left ! Who heard the nation's dying cry ? Stewart I scorn to boast, 'Twas I ! I rallied round her banner'd tree Her baffled, flouted, chivalry ; I led them on, our foe with fear Gazed trembling on our fierce career And St. Andrew smiled from his seat in heaven, As he saw from our fields the spoiler driven ! And Stewart, shall I be denied The warm heart glow of honest pride ? 'Tis all I ask for perils braved, Our rescued land our Scotland saved ! XXXIL Now, by my father's soul I swear- That soul, which ne'er knew guilt or fear, canto i. WALLACE. 25 And by the might of this good hand, Which drove the invader from our land, Nor thou, nor any Scot alive, Shall Wallace of his right deprive ; His hard-earn'd, glorious, cherish'd right, To stand the first in Scotland's fight ! Know, Stewart, that the sparkling star That rose to gild my destiny, Scatters its radiance wide and far ; Still, still it shines with steady beam, And flings its long and brilliant stream O'er the dark passage to futurity ! Still shall its lustre lead me on, Still many a glorious day be won ; Nor will I drop my lofty ken On the low views of little men ! Chosen to avert a nation's fate, How can /stoop my thoughts to envy, spleen, or hate?" XXXIII. He ceas'd, yet still his heaving breast Hard 'gainst the binding corslet press'd ; Q6 WALLACE. canto t. His eye of fire, his crimson cheek, The tumult of his feelings speak ; O'er his plum'd brow the moon-beams dance, And seem to sport with his light'ning glance ; For still, on his undissembling face, Each strong emotion stands confess'd, And little recks he who may trace The thoughts of his noble breast : No sheltering helm, no visor's bar, Cover his cheek from the hail of war ; His bonnet of green conceals from sight His morion small, of metal light ; And black waves tjie plume o'er his lofty brow, A dark death sign to the trembling foe ! XXXIV. Then great Macduff and gallant Graeme, With hearts of fire, and eyes of flame, Disturb'd the sullen pause ; " For shame, for shame, ye Scottish Lords ! If all the aid your zeal affords Be low cabals and wrangling words, canto i. WALLACE. 8? Farewel our country's cause ! Methinks, brave nobles, it were best To rid us of yon irksome guest ; Then ye may waste each sunshine day In scoffing all your spleen away ; Then ye may wage your wordy wars, Your lady fights, and selfish jars; . Nay, even now if words delight, Stay here and talk we rush to fight ! Wallace, Saint Andrew be our speed ! Away ! and dauntless be thy lead, Even to the misty borders of eternity, For by old Scotland's wrongs, her sons shall follow thee!" XXXV. Young Bothwell, careless, brave, and proud, Saw the faint gleam of rancour break O'er wily Comyn's livid cheek, And spoke his thoughts aloud : " What, is the day forgot and gone, When Ormsby held his courts at Scone ; That day, which saw our Monarchs' graves Trampled and spurned by foreign slaves ; 28 WALLACE. canto i. While each august, insulted shade, Iniplor'd from sons supine the lingering aid ? What, is the English coward flown ? Freed are the ancient towers of Scone ? Dust of our sires ! once more repose Untrod, unmock'd by impious foes ! But see ! the spirits of the mighty dead Still hover o'er their just avenger's head ! They hear ye from their clouds, ye wrangling train ! Ye violate their tombs, ye break their sleep again ! XXXVI. Grey Cambuskenneth ! hoary pile ! Which towering 'mid the pride of years, Hast gleam'd to many a summer's smile, And frown'd 'mid many a winter's tears ; Oh ! what a day of boast was thine, How did thy glimmering turrets shine, When Wallace, rushing from thy height, Put England to the flight ! Then Cressingham, we pour'd thy blood To the dark raven's screaming brood ! Then Warenne turn'd his courser's head canto i. WALLACE. 29 Swift from the field the veteran fled ! Ah ! better had our Scottish spears Closed a long train of honour'd years ! Not such my gallant father's heart, It bore him nobly thro' his part ; The brave old man ne'er turn'd his face From any peril but disgrace ! " Young Bothwell paused, choked by a tide Of filial love and filial pride ; Nor dared the rudest soldier sneer, Tho' on his downy cheek sparkled the unbidden tear ! XXXVII. Now swift, and swifter on the ear Came the rattling hoof of an armed steed j It came with the breathless haste of fear, Or urgency of need ; And now the ferny brake is pass'd, And the tangling boughs are dasb/d aside, And he who rode thro' the wood so fast, Halts in the birken glen at last, Where the wimpling waters glide : 30 WALLACE. canto i. " Now hail now hail Sir Adam Currie ! What tidings do ye bring ? Your courser's plight bespeaks your hurry ; Where is yon robber King ?" XXXVIII. " Now hail now hail each gallant knight ! I bring ye a merry tale ; Troth I have spied a bonny sight In old Linlithgow's vale ! A pageant, meet to fire the bold, And make the coward's blood run cold ! Nay even I, (tho' by the rood, No breath of fear e'er chill'd my blood) Yet I will tell ye true ; When first yon lion King I saw, My bosom heaved 'twixt hate and awe, Suspended at his view ; Methought a more than mortal grace Beamed on the regal warrior's face ! But soon my heart began to burn, Revenge and wrath soon took their turn, canto i. WALLACE. 91 When I saw the rays of the western sun Play 'mid the gorgeous folds of Durham's Gonfalon ! XXXIX. Now God and St. Mary give ye might, And rouse your souls to the coming fight ! May your arm be strong, and your sword be good, For to-morrow shall prove a day of blood !" Brave Stewart starts from his gloomy mood, " Thank heaven ! at length the hour appears, When copious streams of English blood Shall wash out the stain of Scotland's tears ! Wallace, it seems 'tis now o'er late To sum up our debts of love or hate ; Let them yield to the aweful voice of fate, And sleep in each haughty breast ; Bat oh ! in to-morrow's hottest strife, Let heaven but spare me strength and life, Thou shalt not fight the best ! Here let our vain contentions end, Tins hour, who serves my country is my friend I S% WALLACE. canto i. XL. Comyn, awake ! 'tis a glorious hour ! Comyn, awake, arouse ! And by our country's guardian power, I charge thee smooth thy brows ! Oh, Comyn ! all this world of toys, With all its grandeurs, all its joys, Its pride, its ancestry, its might, All sink like bubbles from my sight ! Devour them, Time ! Yet let me save From the wide wreck, a glorious grave ! Nay, e'en resentment's pungent smart, That clings so closely to the heart, The pomp of place, of wealth, of blood, Sink all before old Scotland's good ! My country take the sacrifice And may thy rescue be the price ! " XLI. Wan is the cold and watery ray Which sheds a pale and joyless day canto i. WALLACE. 33 Thro' November's cloudy sky, Yet fainter, ghastlier was the smile, Than wintry gleams on Westra's isle, Of Comyn's hollow eye ! I have mark'd the gloomy brow of scorn, I have traced the sneer of guile, But the darkest frown by malice worn Was mock'd by Comyn's smile ! Yet Stewart, generous, brave, and kind, Saw not this meteor of the mind, And their iron hands the chieftains join'd. Then from Torwood's green and shadowy brake They stride to the heath where their vassals lie, To bid their clustering thousands wake, And prepare for victory : Comyn arrays his valiant throng, Of armed horsemen, fleet and strong ; And Stewart cries to his archers good, " See that your arrows be keen and bright, For their barbed points shall be dipp'd in blood Ere ye sleep to-morrow night!" 34 WALLACE. canto 1. XLII. Macduff and Murray in the van Are rousing each his sturdy clan, And many a shout and ldud huzza Hails the faint streak of dawning day : Nor thought of death, or wounds, or flight, One sanguine heart oppress'd ; Tumultuous hope, and wild delight, And burning zeal, and courage bright, Throb'd in each ardent breast. Stewart beheld the fervour rise, And raised to heaven his glowing eyes, And thus the hero prayed : " Oh God of battles ! Truth and Zeal Make to thy throne their loud appeal, And shall they want thy aid ! No ! the dread spirit of thy wrath Shall light us thro' the rugged path, 'Till our loved land shall rise again, Brighter from sorrow's transient stain ; Then, wrongs reveng'd, and Scotland free, Peace, long lost, exiled peace, shall smile on victory !" canto i. WALLACE. 35 XLIII. While each brave leader cheers his men, We'll return to Torwood's leafy glen, For there, beside the glassy rill, Wallace and Graeme are lingering still ; But what the lonely heroes say, Or why in the arching shade they stay, Is the secret of another day ; For the Muse now drops her flagging wing, And my northern harp has lost a string, And the weary bard must rest awhile, Ere again he claims your ear, again he woos your smile. END OF CANTO THE FIRST. Dfi WALLACE. CANTO THE SECOND. I. Sages have said, and fools have found, That life is but a joyless round, That fate in wrath has lent to man A struggling, striving, sorrowing span ; His bitter cup still overflows With public wrongs or private woes, Domestic ills, a sullen train, Perplex his heart, and rack his brain ; While he whom angry stars have hurled, 'Mid the rude tempests of the world, 38 WALLACE. canto n. Whose aching, feverish, anxious breast, Ne'er feels the balm of humble rest ; Oh ! let but reason intervene, How does he hate the weary scene ! He lowers awhile his lofty eye To unmolested penury, And views with envious heart the hind In turfy Sheelin laid, rock'd by the northern wind ! II. Rude is our passage to the tomb, But does no radiance pierce the gloom i Methinks a mild, unwavering blaze, Sheds daylight on the darksome maze ; On the lone hovel's roof it rests, And warms the shivering inmates breasts ; The king, who feels it at his heart, Drops of his cares the heavier part ; With it the steel-clad bosom knows Its dearest moments of repose ; Hail, friendship ! since the world began, Heaven's kindest, noblest boon to man ! canto ii. WALLACE. 39 All other joys, with meteor fire, Quench'd in the mists of time, expire ; But thou, unhurt by fortune's blast, Shin'st brightest, clearest, at the last ! The dreary heart, unwarm'd by thee, Broods o'er a sullen destiny ; Heaven's fairest gifts would fail to bless That cold and wintry haunt of cheerless selfishness ! III. Wallace in sober mood revolves High soaring hopes and deep resolves ; Sees victory gain'd, the day his own, A native monarch on the throne, And hears his much-lov'd country shed A thousand blessings on his head ! 'Twas a gay dream, the voice of Graeme Dispers'd it, and it fled away, As fly from morning's ruddy beam The mists of early day : As its accents came to Wallace' ear, They sounded with half their wonted cheer, 40 WALLACE. canto ii. And when he rais'd his speaking eye, It sparkled with half the usual joy, For who so blithe as the gallant Graeme, When he stood on the edge of the hour of fame ! But now, a strange, unwelcome guest, O'erclouds his brow, and chills his breast ; His generous heart disdain'd to bear The ponderous weight of untold care ; Tho' half ashamed, his lips confess His fancy's dreary dreams, his bosom's heaviness. IV. " Wallace, in many a busy hour We have look'd on death together, We have seen the fiercest war-clouds lower, Stood calm 'mid many an iron shower, And mock'd the pelting weather ; And smil'd to see our burnish'd mail Turn the thick storm of arrowy hail j For still, wherever Wallace trod, My foot as firmly press'd the sod ; canto ii. WALLACE. 41 My heart's first boast, my dearest pride, To stand or fall by Wallace' side ! How wilt thou marvel then to hear, That gossip tales and baby fear, Sleep's flimsy shades night's mockeries, With magic film delude my eyes, Till to my heart the future seems Crowded with sanguine forms, a scene of ghastly dreams r V. Nay, Wallace, smile not on thy friend ; Tis pressing on a thorn : Chide, and thy voice shall not offend ; But Graeme endures not scorn ! Of late in great Kincardine's tower, Subdued by slumber's welcome power, In willing thrall I lay ; When to my eyes a phantom rose, Which scared the angel of repose, And fill'd me with dismay : All shivering, wan, and smear'd with blood, Close to my couch Sir Patrick stood ; 42 WALLACE. canto ii. His pale, pale cheek and clotted hair, His hollow eyes' unearthly glare, Appall'd my senses, from my brow The beads of fear began to flow ; The phantom shook its gory head ' Art thou a Graeme ?' it sternly said, ' Art thou a Graeme ? And does thine eye Shrink to behold war's livery ? The Fates, enamour'd of our name, Loudly demand another Graeme ; Thy death-word is pronounced on high, The last of all thy fields is nigh ! Farewel, thy task shall soon be o'er; We meet ere long, to part no more !' VI. But ere he melted from my view, His hands a sable curtain drew : Oh, Wallace ! what a scene was there ! Memory e'en now recoils with fear ; Half drown'd in seas of Scottish blood, And struggling 'mid the horrid flood canto ii. WALLACE. 4 Our mangled thousands lay ; These very men, who warm in life Pant to begin the deadly strife, Fond haste ! to-morrow's evening ray Shall see their glory pass'd away ! Stewart, of name and lineage proud, Lay mingled with the bleeding crowd ; In the midst, a spectre, sad and wan, Lean'd on a broken spear, Quick from his breast the life-blood ran I gazed upon the dying man, Amazement banish'd fear, For in act, in garb, in face the same, Gasping his latest breath, I saw thy comrade Graeme ! VII. I sprang from my couch as the dawn arose, And thought in my restless mind, That the grizzly forms of vex'd repose Would flee from the morning wind ; And I climb'd to the brow of the upland heath, To taste of the gale the freshest breath ; 44 WALLACE. canto n A cloud was on Craig Rossie's brow, Dark gloom'd Kincardine's towers below, And the winding Ruthven's ripling swell Murmur'd low on mine ear, * Farewel ! farewet !' Then I thought on thee and thy loyal tryste* And I sprang on my berry-brown steed, That it might not be said that Graeme was miss'd In the hour of Scotland's need ; But still as I rode, I turn'd me round, To list to the Ruthven's mournful sound, And thou can'st not think how its voice was dear, When its last faint murmur met mine ear ! For prophetic was my answering sigh To the stream which I lov'd in infancy ! " VIII. " By heaven !" cried Wallace, " yonder foe Has bribed some demon of the night, To chill thy bosom's generous glow, Unstring thy right arm for the blow, And blunt the sword of our worthiest knight i * Appointed meeting. canto ii. WALLACE. But blush not, man ! a goblin tale Oft makes the hero's cheek turn pale ; Oft has my sleep been vex'd and cross'd By wailing sprite, or grizzly ghost, 'Till gazing on the shadows grim, Spell-bound, I've shook in every limb ; But when arose the welcome day, The cowards shun'd the piercing ray, And reason whistled them away ; But see, where the warlock rowan # bends, And offers its mystic aid, For 'tis said, that the helm which its leaf defends Shall mock the temper'd blade." Then smiling, he tore a branch in haste, And fast in the helm of his comrade placed, And tho' little of warlock aid he reck'd, With the powerful plant his bonnet deck'd. IX. u Oh, Graeme ! my brother, and my friend, The dawn is creeping on, * Mountain ash. 46 WALLACE. canto ij. And thou or I may meet our end Ere this day's work is done ; Or by the cozie ingle side Thro' tame old age may safely glide ; But this we know no coward slave Shall ever sleep in either- grave ; Yet lest life's wintry eve be ours, Let's cut out talk for tedious hours, While still our proudest theme shall be, The tale of this day's victory ! Our trampled fields refuse to give Yon lawless plunderers means to live, And their wasted forms will but afford Half triumph to the hungry sword ; But heaven is weary to the skies The cries of ravaged nations rise ; Yon Cambrians, harness'd to the yoke, Their bloody chains have rudely broke, For every sigh of the summer wind, And everv groan of the distant flood, Brings to each gall'd and fetter'd mind Their weeping country left behind, canto ii. WALLACE. 47 And Conway's waves of blood ; Wrapt in grey mists, 'mid the evening gale, White-bearded prophets dimly sail, And our mountain echoes, sad and faint, Seem Hoel's mournful harp, and Hoel's mild complaint. X. Poor Cambria ! lost, insulted land, Crush'd by a tyrant's ruthless hand, Woe is my heart for thee ! Thy banner rent, thy name a wreck, And each brave son's degraded neck Harness'd to slavery ! See, Graeme, yon reddening eastern sky Gives promise of a golden day, My heart is blithe, my hopes are high ; Time chides us as we loitering stay, And bids us form our bold array ; Myself will lead old Scotland's van, Where many a tried and loyal clan Shall lift the unconquer'd spear : The noble Stewart shall oppose, . 48 WALLACE. CANTO II. With Selkirk shafts, the English bows, While Comyn leads our horse, and combats in the rear/ XL A jealous pang Graeme's bosom cross'd, As Wallace thus dispos'd the host " And has the glorious field of fame No post of trust, for slighted Graeme V* " Impetuous soldier ! by the tie Of sweet, unforc'd fraternity ; By radiant honour, dearly bought ; By all our fields, together fought ; E'en conquest's self, unshar'd by thee, Would smile like half a victory ! Now mark me, Graeme when on the plain Which shall bear the battle's bloody stain, Our patriot numbers stand In four close schiltrons, sharp and bright, I have chosen my station on the right, On the left do thou command ; Fife's youthful Earl and Bothwell true The centre fight shall lead, canto ii. WALLACE. 49 While Bonkill's scatter'd archers strew The field with English dead ! Now speed thee, Graeme, and bid them on, Wallace will join the march anon ; But ere this day's rude work begin, Tis meet he should consult the monitor within I" XII. Then Graeme dismiss'd the transient gloom, And shook, well pleased, his shadowy plume j He pois'd his spear, and grasp'd his shield, And turn'd him towards the crowded field ; But the dark bird sate on the oak, And loaded the gale with his sullen croak ; On heavy wing, in cow'ring flight, The rowan he snatch'd from the helmet bright ; Then flew from the chieftain's eager gaze, Which follow'd his course in deep amaze ! E'en Wallace felt his cheek turn pale, And his heart for doubt began to fail ; Graeme cheerly smil'd on his faltering friend, * Tis well ! Fate warns me of my end ! 50 WALLACE. canto ii Another hour of toil and sorrow, Sleep, tranquil sleep, is mine to-morrow ! " Then he strode away, and the woodland rang With his ponderous armour's iron clang. XIII. Then Wallace whistled loud and shrill, He whistled loud and long, He listen'd, but all around was still, Save the hum of the martial throng : Then he step'd in haste tow'rds an arching glade, Where the flaunting wild-rose crept, There, on moss couch supinely laid, Like faery tenant of the shade, His page serenely slept ; His brow was as the blossom white, Which decks May's scented thorn, And his velvet cheek was blushing bright, And glowed like a summer morn ; And his ringlets waved with a yellow gleam, Like the golden sands of Glengeber's stream : A gallant steed, to the rowan tied, canto ii. WALLACE. 51 Grazed by the slumbering page's side ; Wallace, impatient, cried amain, " What ho ! my page ! arise ! Meet follower in a warrior's train, Come, ope thy baby eyes !" XIV. Loud was the call sleep, frighted, fled The urchin rais'd his bonnie head, And started from his mossy bed ; " Alas ! the night was long and drear i I sank oppress'd by sleep and fear ; O'er my dull eyes soft slumbers crept, And ere I wist my senses slept." " Tis well, poor urchin ; fear not me ; This is no time to chide ; David, I grieve to part with theej, But love, not wrath, signs the decree, And drives thee from my side : Rude as I am, my melting heart Would surely act the woman's part, s<2 52 WALLACE. canto ir- To see some ruffian hand destroy So fragile, and so fair a toy ! No to Dundaff in haste repair Graeme has secur'd thy welcome there j There, safe amid the peaceful shades, Ensnare the birds, and woo the maids ; My time far different labours claim, When Wallace hunts, he follows glorious game!" XV. From David's cheek the roses fled, In silence droop'd his languid head ; The tear-drop glisten'd in his eyes, His heart swell'd high with rapid sighs, And vainly strove the boy to hide Impetuous sorrow's gushing tide : " How now, my boy ? Why this alarm I I pray thee be content ! Dundaff shall hide thee safe from harm, Howe'er betide the event ; And sure thy harmless being's date canto ii. WALLACE. 55 Can ne'er provoke the sword of hate ; E'en should I fall, those bonnie eyes of thine Shall win thee other friends, and gentler tasks than mine. XVI. One last request, my pretty boy, I make thee ere we part : Take hence this pledge of vanish'd joy ; The warrior scorns the idle toy, And tears it from his heart ! She whom it bids me think upon Was once a hero's bride ; Pale, pale as the moonlight beam she shone ; 'Twas a wavering light, and quickly gone ; It sparkled awhile, and died ! In her silent grave the lady slept, And dark and stern was the warrior's mood, And long and bitterly he wept ; But his tears were tears of blood ! For the souls which darken'd his vital beam He plunged in death's cold and bitter stream, And many a widow rues the hour .54 WALLACE. canto it. That snapt the stem of that warrior's flower ! Then mercy died, and frantic ire With human victims fed the fire; Sweet Agnes lean'd from her sapphire skies, And saw the fatal volumes rise, And her spirit drank in heaven, a husband's sacrifice ! XVII. Thou tremblest, boy ! the tale severe Harshly smites thy infant ear ; Nor can thy waxen breast suppose The horrid joy revenge bestows ! Thou hast not lov'd, and canst not tell What hell-born tortures, fierce and fell, That warrior's bosom tore, When savage guile, in evil hour, Crush'd his pale lily in her bower, And bade it bloom no more ! 'Twas not the grief of a single breast, Pity became a general guest ; The rudest soldier's heart of stone Claim'd half the anguish for his own ; canto ii. WALLACE. 55 The hardy Graeme awhile forgot the man, And down his rugged cheek the infant sorrows ranj XVIII. Oh, David ! while I writhed in woe, I knew the hand that sent the blow, And own'd the just, tho' hard, decree Of stern unveering destiny ! I was not born to bask in joy, A loitering, sighing, amorous boy ; Love's April sky, the smile and tear, Usurp'd the warrior's sterner year, And rust had crept o'er his idle spear But the pealing thunder, loud and deep, Burst rudely on inglorious sleep ! David, this scarf, the gift of love, Sweet Agnes' ivory fingers wove ; Perchance, ere the end of this day's fight, The bosom it guards may be dull and cold, And a ruffian's gory hands, ere night, Might stain the silken fold ; Nay, the secret voice of martial pride 56 WALLACE. canto ii. Bids me throw the cherish'd toy aside ; For I would not be found in my country's wreck, With a love-knot twin'd around my neck ! Now hence, my boy, and peace benign Guard with her silver wings that gentle head of thine ! " XIX. Whose is the form, so gaunt and drear, That frowns by Wallace' side, Drinking, with cold and frozen ear, The tale of his murder'd bride, O'er whose eyes a glassy lustre plays, Wintry and dim, like a dead man's gaze ; On whose pale lip the vital breath Comes faint and chill, like the damps of death ? Sure some grim prisoner of the tomb Has dared to break his dungeon's gloom ! Methinks so haggard, cold, and wan, Ne'er stood on earth a living man ! That form was clad in weeds forlorn, By berries stain'd, by brambles torn ; As the mild breeze of morning sigh'd, canto ii. WALLACE. 57 It waved in tatters long and wide, And with a rugged cord the unseemly garb was tied ! XX. When Wallace beheld that form so drear, A chill through his heart-blood ran ; He guess'd 'twas the shuddering touch of fear, For he could not endure the glance austere Of that dark mysterious man ! " Now, by Saint Fillan's arm !" he said, " I charge thee speed away ! Go, moulder amid the churchyard shade, Where those lank limbs in dust have laid And silence many a day ! By the dank charnel's vaporous steam, By those dim eyes which bluely gleam, I know full well, That form from earth has long been gone, And well I ween survives there none Who heard thy passing bell ! This know I by the dew-drops cold That bathe my shuddering brow, S3 WALLACE. canto n. For never man of earthly mould Might bid those drops to flow !" XXI. A dreary, dark, malignant smile, Wrinkled the old man's cheek the while " Lo ! Scotland's champion Wallace, fears ! The heart of battle views dismayM The feeble wreck of lingering years, A penance-wasted shade ! But fear me not my days of crime Fled with my unreturning prime ! Since him thou seest began to be, A hundred years have pass'd, And I .hoped that each, by destiny Was mark'd to be the last ! Pierce with thy spear my body thro', No crimson drop of life would flow ; Touch me ! lo ! cold as the marble stone ! Life's kindly warmth is chill'd and gone, Yet still the grave opes not for me, I cannot, cannot cease to be ! canto ii. WALLACE. 59 XXII. Wallace, were this some charnel-vault, I would breathe in thy shuddering ear The withering tale of the hideous fault That call'd for a doom so drear ; But should I the dark, dark deed declare, Twould pollute the pure and genial air ! When all but the wolf and the murderer rest ; When the ruffian stands by his sleeping guest ; When the wild gust shakes the lonely tower, And horror claims the midnight hour ; When on the churchyard vapours, sail Uncertain forms and visions pale > Then 'twere a time for such a tale !" Then he waved a ghastly hand of bone That ghastly hand was long and bare, Nor flesh, nor blood, nor nerves were there ; 'Twas the hand of a wasted skeleton And that accurs'd right hand the nameless deed had done!' 60 WALLACE. canto it. XXIII. " Hated of heaven, and shunn'd of man, Where could I hide my head ? To the void wilderness I ran, And howling, call'd the lightnings wan Their blue death-gleam to shed ; If I touch'd the soft green leaf of spring, It crumbled and shrank like a blasted thing ! I pluck'd the fresh lily from the dell, A horrid blood-drop stain'd the bell ! If I bent my lip to the fountain clear, The chrystal wave would disappear, And a sanguine tinge the waters wear ! Wild with despair and frantic rage, I vow'd a dismal pilgrimage ; Wherever the giant crimes of yore Had stain'd this land with human gore, My restless foot was sworn to explore : I climb'd that rude and grass-grown path That leads to Gilcomgain's ruin'd rath,* And many a wild and ghastly hour * A fortress. canto ii. WALLACE. 61 I spent in Finella's fatal tower ; I have laid me on the treacherous bed Whence Duncan's gentle spirit fled, And stood, undaunted and unscared, By night on the dusky plain of haunted Monivaird I XXIV. Day follow'd day year roll'd o'er year, And I look'd for rest from the penance drear 'Mid the western main, in a lonely isle, Nod the black walls of a fire-scath'd pile ; There did I make my heather-bed, There did I hide my wretched head : Tis a grim haunt, and meet to be The goal of wandering misery ! For over its head the storm-cloud scowls, And its fragments rock as the deep wind howls, And the vex'd spirit of the waves Around its foot incessant raves ; There many a death-cry's wild complaint Floats on the sobbing blast, It comes on the ear so sad and faint 62 WALLACE. canto h. 'Till the drowning agony is past, And the sound in silence sinks amid the wat'ry waste. XXV. To live unpitied and forgot, My life a blank, my name a blot, Was all I ask'd of heaven : Despair had stilTd my stormy breast, A dreary frost had chain'd to rest Its waves by passion driven ! But this was mercy soon there fell (But how or when I cannot tell) A fatal influence* o'er my soul, Which holds it still in dread controul : Then, sleep, insatiate destiny ! From thy black phial thou hast shed The choicest drop upon this head Of human misery ! * The second sight, canto ii. WALLACE. 03 XXVI. As I sate on my rock, 'raid the weltering main, Strange visions came to my wilder'd brain ; Wild forms and ghastly shapes arose, And told dark tales of human woes ; Sometimes they spread before my sight The tumult of the distant fight ; No secret murderer whet his knife, No struggling victim sued for life, But mine ear was fiU'd with the wailing cry, And the gushing life-stream met mine eye : Avenging fate forgot not me, But sent a demon brood, Of crimes and evils yet to be, To break my solitude ! XXVII. When the merry harp and the pibroch rung, When wassel flow'd, and minstrels sung In old Dunfermline's hall ; When fair Joleta led the dance, I saw that grizzjy guest advance, 64 WALLACE. CANTO II. Who stopt the mirth of the bridal ball ! Many a gallant on his lady's ear Left half his guileful tale untold ; For that withering stranger's glance austere Made e'en the lover's heart turn cold ! As the spectre glided 'mid the throng, Each faltering minstrel hush'd his song ; The pallid gleam of the corpse-fire's light Usurp'd the blaze of the torches bright ; On beauty's cheek the rose-buds died, And the primrose wan their place supplied : None knew the unwelcome stranger's name, Whither he went, nor why he came ; He came, to breathe in a monarch's ear, A solemn death-call, deep and drear ! XXVIII. Who is it that rides thro' the night so fast, 'Mid the driving sleet and the howling blast ? Oh ! the way is steep, and the orb of night Has hidden in clouds her guiding light ! Headlong he falls from the craggy rock ! CANTO II. WALLACE. 65 Mine ear yet rings with the clanging shock Far, far away, in my ruin'd pile, 'Mid the stormy waves of a lonely isle, I mark'd on Scotland's saddest day The spot where her mangled father lay ! The maiden blossom of the north, Like a pale snow-drop glinted forth, Then closed its scarcely open'd bell, Felt the keen blast, and shivering fell ! The north- wind sobs where Margaret sleeps, And still in tears of blood her memory Scotland steep* ! XXIX. Unreal forms abused my mind, Unreal voices fill'd the wind, Each howling blast that swept the sea Brought some mysterious tale to me : Frantic, I sought from scenes like these Relief in real miseries ! Since to the world I fled again, I chose thee out from living men, To search thy bosom's inmost shrine, F 66 WALLACE. canto ii. To know each half-breath'd word of thine ; I saw thee, when the warlock's call Shook to the base Gask's ruin'd hall ; And I knew, by the wild unearthly tone, By whom that spectre horn was blown ! Wallace ! I have search'd the page of fate, I have number'd the hours of thy being's date ! But see where yon vulture wheels around, He calls his mate to the battle ground ; There shall a costly feast be spread, A feast of woe shall Scotland see, For yon bird shall gorge on the life-stream red, Of the flower of our country's chivalry 1 " XXX. " Hence, trembling Warlock ! false and base ! Wallace abhors thy babbling race ! Ye hoary messengers of harm, Prophets of woe and death, Fain would ye wither the hero's arm With your chill and blasting breath ! The book of fate I cannot read, But well I guess 'tis there decreed, canto ii. WALLACE. 67 Whenever my years shall find an end, Scotland shall mourn a vanish'd friend, My bones shall sleep in an honour'd grave, And my name shall live with the good and brave ! " XXXI. The old man smil'd " Thy bones shall have A wandering and unquiet grave ; No stone shall mark thy place of rest, No sod shall cover thy mouldering breast ; In dust thy corse shall never lie, Thine is a soaring destiny ! Like thy aspiring soul, thy dauntless form Shall float amid the skies, and sail amid the storm !" XXXII. " Now, wizard I conjure thee, tell, Amid thy secrets dark and fell, (If to the end of this day's fight Thine eye extends its mystic sight) If, 'mid the waste of Scottish blood, Graeme's vital stream must swell the flood ?" f2 68 WALLACE. canto it, " The Sisters ope the fatal shears, Its latest sand his hour-glass wears ; To-morrow night, o'er proud Dundaff, A funeral cloud shall sail, And death's black flag on the banner-staff Shall wave to the sullen gale ! Yea, art thou pale, because the gust Shall scatter a little human dust ? Short-sighted man ! the dreaded blow Which lays thy gallant comrade low, Is Mercy's gift. How would his eye Endure the ghastly train to see, Of scorns and wrongs, which destiny Has heap'd to pour on thee ? Time glides away on footsteps fleet, Then, valiant chief, farewel ! Remember this voice, for when next we meet It shall toll thy passing bell!" XXXIII. Then Wallace looked all around He stamp'd with his foot on the solid ground, canto ii. WALLACE. 69 And scarce could he tell, if indeed he stood 'Mid the leafy glens of green Tor-wood, Or if some dark malignant sprite In glamour mist had veil'd his sight ; But his ear still rang with the dread adieu, And he felt the fearful warning true : He heard the distant war-horn sound, His gallant courser paw'd the ground, And seem'd, with his summons loud and deep, To bid him awake from his mystic sleep, For the noble beast was bred to war, And had heard the bugle sound afar : Then Wallace sprang in his lofty seat, And plac'd his spear in rest, And smiTd as he felt the pulses beat To arms in his manly breast ; " Oh ! fate !" he cried, " prepare thy worst, Thy malice I defy ! For of Scottish men, the best and first, Shall Wallace live or die ! " Then he prick'd the sides of his prancing steed, And rush'd thro' the wood with lightning's speed ! 70 WALLACE. canto ii. XXXIV. As Wallace pass'd the arching glade, Stooping, he check'd his courser's pace, For the tangling boughs of the pendant shade Had torn his plume and scarr'd his face ; But when he lifted his head anon, A cheering pageant spied he, Across the plain stout marching on, Of the flower of Scotland's chivalry ; At first in wrath his breast he cross'd, For he thought 'twas the rear of his lingering host, And vowed a vow in his hasty mind Never again to halt behind ; And marvel'd that Graeme, the fierce and bold, Had led his men with zeal so cold ; Troth, but his heart was light and gay, When he knew by the rude, yet firm array, That these were the men of Galloway, Who had cross'd the swelling waves of Clyde, To quell the English robber's pride ; Two leaders, ardent, keen, and strong, Led to the field the valiant throng ; canto ii. WALLACE. 71 These chiefs forsook their bleak domain, To join Macdo wall's patriot train ; Sir Adam Gordon, old in fight, Still lov'd the fray like a youthful knight, And martial Carrick's eye of fire Proclaim'd the worthy son of many a warlike sire ! XXXV. Marching eastward o'er the heath Flash'd many a glittering lance, And the well-known banner of Menteith Met Wallace' joyful glance ; Three hundred horse, a dazzling train, Sparkled gaily on the plain ; Wallace spurr'd on, his hopes were high, His bosom swell'd with ecstasy ; The warlock's threat'ning cross'd his brain, But his heart still promis'd victory : Each chieftain's iron hand he grasp'd, But the lov'd Menteith to his breast he clasp'd ; For in childhood's hour of bliss serene, While yet life smiled, a vernal scene, 72 WALLACE. canto ii. Shar'd had their early pastimes been, And with mutual hopes in infancy They had sent the aspiring kite on high, And chas'd with emulous speed thebright-wing'd butterfly. XXXVI. The rapid words of greeting kind Now claim'd but short delay, For swift as the rush of the mountain wind Wallace resumed his way; He heard the horn at distance wound, And his soul caught fire at the well-known sound ; And when he reach'd the assembled host, His plumed cap on high he toss'd, And bade them be of sprightly cheer, And told of the aid that hover'd near. XXXVII. Here pause my lay for the mists of time Cover the armed throng ! In vain I seek the forms sublime, With feeble voice I pour the rhyme, canto xi. WALLACE. 73 And weave the imperfect song ! The filmy shades of ancient days Melt as we too intensely gaze ! Turn then aside my aching eyes, 'Till again from their misty clouds shall rise The dim and dark-robed years of Scotland's miseries ! END OF CANTO THE SECOND. WALLACE. CANTO THE THIRD. I. Wist ye not, king, that heaven saw When David and Llewellyn died ? And did no secret thought of awe Whisper to that heart of pride ? Cambria ! beside thy gleaming lakes, 'Mid thy green vales and mountains hoar, What sullen voice thy echoes wakes ? 'Tis but the lone sound of the cataract's roar For they, the men of song ! lie hush'd on Arvon's shore ! Even they have felt the hand of fate, 76 WALLACE. canto hi. And Cambria's groves are desolate ! They are crush'd, and heaven's approving ear No more the sacred lay shall hear ! And shall it not avenge the silence drear ? II. But veil not, king, thy lofty head ! Pause not till all thy work is done ! Shrink not, while man has blood to shed ! Hark ! pride and hatred urge thee on ; Another crown must still be won ! Oh ! for thy sceptre and thy ball Oh ! for thy mighty power I would not share thy death-bed hour, That hour which comes to all ! I would not look into my soul, And see the spots which darken thine ; Those murder stains, so black and foul, To call thy kingdoms mine ! I would not own thy guilty breast, When sent by heaven's just decree, canto in. WALLACE. 77 The grim, inexorable guest, Stands by thy couch to summon thee ! III. Peace, fro ward strains ! The guilty head Leave we to brave the rage of heaven ! Ah ! who but waits his doom with dread, And trembling, hopes to be forgiven ! When we stand on the dark grave's fearful brink, When we touch the verge of the world below, When our lip shall be wet with the chill, cold drink, The latest drop in our cup of woe, When the warrior quits his useless brand, And the sceptre slips from the nerveless hand, When the ardent heart, its tremblings o'er, Shall waver, and hope, and fear no more, When love's warm smile, hate's fiery eye, Must, quench'd in the dust of the church-yard lie If thou knowest a breast like the virgin snow, Pure and unthaw'd on Dunma'it's brow ; Oh ! ask, when it touches this awful goal, What are the thoughts of the passing soul ? 78 WALLACE. canto hi. The tear that swims in the filmy eye, The chill, faint breath of the final sigh, These are the passing soul's reply ! The farewel of the lingering mind, Which hangs on this pleasant world, for ever left behind ! IV. Methinks I told you even now The sun had risen on Scotland's train ; But the Muse, 'mid fancy's ebb and flow, Fain would lead ye back again, To where the moonlight shade did fall, Eastward of old Linlithgow's wall ; Where on the heath a monarch lay, Lay lowly, 'mid his proud array ; The king was sick, infirm, and old, Yet to guard the anointed head From baleful dews or night-blasts cold, No tent its curtain spread, For the regal soldier loved to share The rugged heather bed, and dank unwholesome air. canto in. WALLACE. 79 V. He shrank not as the chill night-wind Came bleak from the northern sea ; 'Twas a thought of pride to his warlike mind, That of all his train, the meanest hind As softly lodged as he : And he smiled, as the rude and reckless blast Through his grey hairs uncourtly past. There many a gently nurtur'd heir Trembled in Scotland's hostile air, And fain would have spread his couch of down, But for dread of the king's indignant frown ; And many a deep, yet secret sigh, Flitted back to their peaceful native sky, To the perfum'd air of the taper'd hall, To the stately shew of the midnight ball, To the mellow voice of minstrelsy, To the unalarm'd repose of the velvet canopy j VI. But these were boys, who ne'er met lance Sharper than lady's wounding glance ; 80 WALLACE. canto hi. Who ne'er with mailed champion strove, Whose rudest oaths were vows of love ; Yet let them meet the raging foe, Anon their English hearts shall glow ! Let them but feel the kindling flame, Once roused, they ne'er forsake the game ; And many a silken textured wight, Who timorous seeks the untried fight, Quits his first field in conscious pride, His maiden sword in crimson dyed ! The bruising mail, the smarting scar, The ungentle livery of war, Soon wean the English youth from toys, To glory's sports of death, and honour's perilous joys ! VII. The brave earl Guy a fearful name, Tho' yet but young in life, Was practis'd in the field of fame, And old in martial strife : Bigod and Hereford were there, And gallant Ralph de Monthermer ; canto in. WALLACE. 81 The hardy Welchman, bold Montalt, Still fierce and rapid in assault ; Yet methinks 'twere nobler had he lain Stiffening on his native plain, Than graced with banner broad the dark oppressor's train! VIII. Two Lancasters, both men of mrght, Attend their monarch to the fight ; William de Ross, a loyal lord, Aids Edward with his northern sword, And recks not, tho' its fatal steel His once-lov'd kinsman's bosom feel ; For hatred most corrodes the breast Where most affection throve, And its lurid blossoms flourish best When grafted upon love ! IX. Behold ! well clad in war's attire, With looks that speak a soul on fire, 8* WALLACE. canto hi. Whose lips breathe wrath, whose eyes disdain The loftiest of the armed train ! Was he not sworn, yon man of might, With pride elate, with fury blind, To preach the day-beam's heavenly light, And promise comfort to mankind ? He swore ! God heard the sacred word Which sealed to holy peace his life I Yet see ! he waves the ruffian's sword, And hark ! he lifts the daemon cry of strife ! X. Round his peace-consecrated head Are six and twenty standards spread, And vassal youths, of nobles born, Crouch beneath Durham's eye of scorn ! His bulky form, with twisted mail, Is covered cap-a-pee, And the gambeson,* of much avail, When strokes of boisterous dint assail, * A quilted coat, worn for the purpose of deadening blows. canto in. WALLACE. 83 Descends below his knee ; Between it and his iron vest, A plastron* guards his ample chest; The holy mitre cast aside, Yields to the helmet's warlike pride ; And those same hands, ordain'd to share To men the soul's mysterious food, Stain'd with the impious work of war, Are cased in steel and dyed in blood ; When stately barons, stretch'd along, Lay mingled with their vassal throng ; When even Edward's mighty head, Unshelter'd, press'd the dewy bed, The haughty Durham's curling brow, Mark'd with a sneer the prostrate crowd. And as he felt the night-wind blow, Shivering he sought his pallion proud : Flow'd for his use the blood-red wine, Bright torches round him lustre shed, * An invisible breast-plate. OS 84 WALLACE. canto in. And wrapt in linen soft and fine, He sank > his beads untold, upon a velvet bed ! XL Sir Ralph, his rival in the fight, Gave the proud priest a stern good night ; The hardy knight was bred and born To battle's dangerous trade ; He loved the fight, and saw with scorn The man of God, with temples shorn, Usurp the helmet's shade : With fury in his heart, he sees The bishop's tent, encircled wide, With banners floating on the breeze, And all the pomp of princely pride ; Guidons and pennons fann'd the air, As if a monarch slumber'd there ; And thro' night's silence you might hear The distant watch-word pass'd around, For no rash step might venture near That consecrated ground ! As Basset on the damp earth lay, canto in. WALLACE. 80 Wrath's pungent stings drove sleep away, Nay, I fear that in his secret breast He mutter'd a curse on the warlike priest : For this, Launde's venerable train, With many a mass shall plead to heaven ; Methinks they shall not sue in vain, But the rough soldier's just disdain Already is forgiven ! XII. Clinton, the king's beloved esquire, Watch'd by his sovereign's side, Of zeal and truth that never tire, Of loyal valour's purest fire, This youth was prov'd and tried ! And tho' the fearless Edward chose, Unwatch'd, unguarded, to repose, When each tired soldier soundly slept, Unseen, unheard, young Clinton crept To where the king forgot his crown And cares, amid the heather brown ; And bending, round the royal head 86 WALLACE. canto hi. His quilted gambeson he spread ; Then pensive, leaning on his spear, And shivering in the night-blast drear, He waited the slowly coming day, And as he watch'd the pale moon's ray, He mus'd on the maiden bright who slumber'd far away ! XIII. Among the chiefs who press'd the heath, Lay Pembroke's earl, proud Adomar ! None better lov'd the sport of death, With hotter speed none rush'd to war ! Beneath his massy iron mace What hapless victim e'er found grace ? Whose is that giant form, whose length And ponderous limbs speak power and strength, From whose bent brow sleep's gentle sway Charms not the rugged frown away, Whose rest some galling vision breaks, Whose sudden hand his faulchion seeks ? Nor marvel that an inward war Should vex that warrior's breast, canto in. WALLACE. 87 The false Cospatric of Dunbar ! How can he hope for rest ? When shall his torturing conscience cease To gnaw his soul, and banish peace ! He dreams on many a pleasant strath And many a shadowy glen, Dear haunts of childhood's harmless path ; Now, blackening in the smoke of wrath, And foul with the blood of his countrymen ! He dreams that on the roll of fame Cospatric's name shall stand, Aye, branded with the mark of shame, A rebel to his native land ! Then sleep, Dunbar ! and ne'er fall rest Softer on traitor's hollow breast ! XIV. Lord Berkeley was a gallant knight As e'er couch'd lance on thigh ; He was fierce and fell in the field of fight, But in the eye of each lady bright, The flower of courtesy ! 88 WALLACE. canto hi. His youth was past yet still the foe Read death in the frown of Lord Berkeley's brow ; His youth was past alas ! the while ! Yet many a pretty female wile, Contended for lord Berkeley's smile ! Ambition was now a dying flame, And his world-worn breast was cloy'd with fame ; So many a smile his youth had bless'd, That love was cold in lord Berkeley's breast ! Then why did he seek the piercing air Of Scotia's mountains, bleak and bare ? Why did he quit blue Severn's side, Where waves the meadow's golden pride, On whose banks the roguish zephyr pours From apple-groves white-blossom'd showers ; Where on the summer breezes sail The soft trill of the nightingale ; Or echoing wide o'er the twilight plain, The milk-maid's simple evening strain, Orthecow-boy , splaintivevoice,ashecallshislowingtrain. canto in. WALLACE. 89 XV. When lord Berkeley quitted his ancient tower, Alone he went not forth ; But bare from Severn's pleasant bower Its greenest plant, its gayest flower, From the warm breath of the summer hour To the buffeting blasts of the north ! Sir Maurice had broken many a spear, And waken'd many a sigh, But he long'd to begin the high career, Where danger and death make the triumph dear Of blood- wash'd victory ! What reck'd he, tho' in many a joust His baffled rival bit the dust ? He scorn'd the prize he bore away, As the guerdon of inglorious play, And long'd for danger's hotter day ; Yet to mark the soft brown of his hazel eye, Or his false tongue's warbled flattery, You might deem the youth a gallant meet To sigh out his life at a lady's feet : But the soft swain vanish'd, when anon 90 WALLACE. CANTO HI. Lord Berkeley summon'd his eager son, To buckle his burnish'd cuirass on Then his hazel eye pour'd a stream of fire, And his cheek blush'd bright with the flush of ire ; Nor 'mid Edward's thousands rode a knight More mild in the hour of peace, nor direr in the fight ! XVI. 'Mid the yellow broom lord Berkeley lay But where was Sir Maurice gone ? When low in the heavens the sun's last ray Blush'd its farewel to expiring day, He had wander'd forth alone : His fleetest steed the knight bestrode, Yet gently thro' the camp he rode ; He had doff'd his cumbrous glittering gear, For the pliant weed of the hobiler ; # Nor shone his plated brigandine, With quaint device, or blazon fine ; A streaming pennon deck'd his lance, As it sparkled in the sun's last glance ; * The dress of a light-armed soldier. canto in. WALLACE. pi As the western barrier-rail he pass'd, He answer'd the watchman's call in haste ; Yet in the wide camp knew there none Whither Sir Maurice alone was gone : Lord Berkeley guess'd that the foe was near, And his brave heart throbb'd with a father's fear ; Albeit, nor doubt, nor fear confess'd, He hid them close in his anxious breast ; But with angry brow and tongue severe, He call'd aloud, that his train might hear, And wish'd, with bitter speech and stern, He might dearly buy his truant ride, And by some rude adventure, earn A lesson to his restless pride. XVII. Spirit of Song ! oh ! do not fly ! Let not thy mystic light expire ! Oh, pour thy visions on mine eye ! Oh, set my soul on fire ! Oh ! bid it flow, the living strain, The holy incense memory pays 92 WALLACE. canto hi. Yon sacred, venerable train Of time-enshrouded days ! They are gone the mighty chiefs of yore, Gone to their house of rest ! And our feeble footsteps wander o'er Many a hero's mouldering breast, While, with curious eyes, our pigmy race Their huge gigantic relics trace ; On the massy helm with awe we gaze, The ponderous spear we lift in vain Oh ! great were the men of ancient days Ere the world was in its wane ! The cold grey stone is on their dust, And the broad bright brand is devour'd with rust ; They have yielded the battle and the chase To a short-liv'd, weak, degenerate race ! But the Muse lives still, and tho' grain from grain, The winged winds their dust has blown, Tho' heedless feet or driving rain Each record has worn from the mossy stone ; Yet the Muse still lives she lives to tell How bold their deeds their hearts how brave, canto in. WALLACE. 93 To lift the fame-bestowing spell, Which bids their names arise, and quit the o'erwhelming grave ! XVIII. Linlithgow's muir, thy heather bell Is crush'd by the warrior's ruthless stride, And many a broom-flower shrank and fell Beneath the sleeper's armed side ! Oh ! fresh as the golden-crested broom, Sweet as the rose's summer bloom, Many a fair plant from Scotland's bower, Shall rue to-morrow's stormy hour, As they drop in their wintry tomb ; As pale they hang the wither'd head, With sever'd stem and fragrance fled, And lie all crush'd on the field of death, Like the broom-flower on Linlithgow's heath ! XIX. Where have we been ? Why did we stray, While many a name is yet untold, Meet to adorn the poet's lay, 94 WALLACE. canto hi. When he sings of the chiefs of old ? Oh ! 'tis a task the Muse denies, To fix so long her roving eyes, To linger with her wings of flame, And tedious creep from name to name ! Follow us to the field of fame ! The flashing sword, the whirling spear, The dreadful shock of the knight's career, 'Tis these must tear from the grasp of death The never-dying name the never-fading wreath ! XX. Lord Clifford tho' we love thee well, We pause not on thy name ! Sleep now amid the battle's yell, Many a noble deed shall tell, Lord Clifford strikes for fame ! What, shall we pass earl Marshal by That moody-fronted lord ! Sleep wraps in clouds his wrathful eye, Keen as his two-edged sword ! Let others fight, that men may say canto in. WALLACE. 95 They bore the prize of fame away ; Nor breath of praise, nor song of bard, Shall yield, stern Bigod, thy reward ! E'en now he dreams his greedy hands Hold in their grasp the plunder'd lands, And hears the weeping shepherds hail Him lord of fertile Tiviotdale ! XXI. Why, thou fair orb, dost thou smile so bright, As thou rollest on thy way ! Can'st thou not hide thy silver light, That the heavens, all dark with the clouds of night, Might frown on yon fierce array ! But why should'st thou hide thy shining brow, Thou who walk'st thro' the midnight sky ! Tho' the daemon who gives the word for woe, Bids the tear descend, and the life-blood flow, Thy place shall be still on high ! Thou lookest on man thou seest him Mess'd In the light of his little day Thou lookest anon he is gone to rest 96 WALLACE. CANTO III. The cold worm creeps in his lordly breast, He sleeps in the grave's decay ! . Thou sawest his rise thou shalt see him fall, Thou shalt stay till the tomb has cover'd all, 'Till death has crush'd them, one by one, Each frail, yet proud ephemeron ! To-morrow thy cold and tranquil eye Shall gaze again from the midnight sky ; With unquench'd light, with ray serene, Thou shalt glance on the field where death has been ; Thou shalt gild his features, pale and wan, Thou shalt gaze on the form of murder'd man, On his broken armour scatter'd round, On the sever'd limb, and the yawning wound But thou, amidst the wrecks of time, Unfrowning passest on, and keep'st thy path sublime ! XXII. Fortha, how gently rolls thy stream Beneath the moonlight's yellow gleam ; Each billow calm, each gale at rest, How softly heaves thy glittering breast ! canto in. WALLACE. 97 Ah ! who would think, conceal'd beneatli, Lie horror, danger, shipwreck, death ! The pale light rests on yon riven tower, Once stern and strong in the pride of power, And awful still in its evening hour : Where is the hooting tenant gone, Who 'mid the rank grass, waving high, Pour'd, as the night's mild empress shone, His uncouth minstrelsy ? He heard the war-horse neighing loud, He heard the steps of the clanging crowd, He heard, and wav'd his pinion grey, And flitted sullenly away ! Old Dunipace ! time's misty shroud, Hangs dark on each swelling mound ; History would fain disperse the cloud, And pierce thy veil profound : Perchance within each hollow breast, What once were kings and heroes, rest ! Perchance, yon breathing sleepers lie On dust which once was living man, H 98 WALLACE. canto hi. And strutted its hour beneath the sky, 'Till it yielded its little span ! XXIII. In yonder camp 'tis all so still That you might hear a foot-fall pass The deep, low echo from the hill, The tinkling fall of the humble rill, The weak-voic'd nations of the grass ; Save, when by fits the breeze blew cold, And whistled in the standard fold ; Save the watchman's call, as he strides alone, Or the clang of his iron sabaton ; Save, when the angry blood-hound bay'd, Or the fiery steed impatient neigh'd : Even they who thought to watch thro' night, Were lull'd by the silent scene ; No longer they gaz'd on the heavens bright, A shade fell mild o'er their cheated sight, And they sank on the dewy green ; E'en Clinton, who unbidden took canto in. WALLACE. ft His stand by his monarch dear, Beguil'd, the much-lov'd post forsook, And nodded on his spear. XXIV. Ho ! havoc ! havoc ! treason ! death ! The king ! the king is slain ! Tumult and uproar shake the heath, Each glittering weapon quits its sheath, And flashes o'er the plain ! Young Clinton, starting at the shout, Rolls his bevvilder'd eyes ; Hasty they glance 'twixt fear and doubt, To the spot where his master lies Some secret hand, some traitor's wound, Has left him struggling on the ground ! Again the hoarse yell rends the sky, Havoc, and death, and treachery ! XXV. Bigod, who saw young Clinton stand, With his glittering weapon in his hand, h 2 100 WALLACE. CANTO III. Mistook the mute and dread surprise Which glared in his wildly rolling eyes, And " Lo ! where the villain stands !" he cries, Then seizes the youth by his waving crest, And with two-edged sword assaults his breast ! The king no longer felt his wound, But started dauntless from the ground, " Hold, on thy life, thou moody lord ! For by the God who gave me breath, Edward's own hand, the royal sword Shall avenge young Clinton's death ! Thanks, loyal knights, and may that power Which led me to this happy hour, This hour, ordain'd by heaven to prove, And bless me with my soldiers' love, Teach it to smile upon my heart Till conquest, kingdom, life depart." XXVI. Earl Marshal, slowly from his prey Withdrew his grasp severe, And muttering low, he strode away, canto in. WALLACE. 101 " Remember on another day, Officious zeal to fear;" For he saw the coat of Clinton spread, To guard the monarch's sacred head, And much he abhorr'd in the loyal youth, The simple test of love and truth ; He never knew, nor sought to know, Of faith sincere, the grateful glow But read in affection's beaming eye The well-dissembled wile of smooth hypocrisy ! XXVII. The barons still with eager eyes Seek the audacious foe, And each, with thundering menace cries, " What traitor dealt the blow ?" Edward, tho' on his royal brow The dew of pain is starting slow, Smiling, directs his glittering spear, To where his steed stood plunging near, And shew'd his polish'd cuirass, broke By the arm'd courser's savage stroke : 102 WALLACE. canto in. With vulgar rage, and barbarous zeal, They flew to avenge the deed, And in many a hand the high-rais'd steel Threaten'd the unconscious steed. The king reprov'd the impetuous lords, And bade them sheathe their eager swords, And ask'd, with faint and faltering speech, For the healing hand of the skilful Leech. They laid him softly on the ground, And with gentle caution sought the wound ; And soon they saw, with hearts forlorn, Their monarch's side all bruised and torn ; The broken rib, the starting bone, From other lips had forc'd the groan ; But Edward's soul with regal pride The body's weak controul defied. XXVIII. Skill'd in the healer's blessed art, The cunning Leech perform'd his part ; Bath'd in soft balm the burning wound, And tightly swath'd the body round ; canto in. WALLACE. 103 Then gently in the monarch's ear He pours the prudent hint of fear ; He speaks of sleep, and rest, and care, Bids him of fight and toil beware ; Bids hirn the bruising mail lay by, For peace's silken drapery, Lest fever, with its fangs of flame, Seize on the unresisting frame ; And bade him think, ere yet too late, His life involv'd a nation's fate. With lowly tone and soothing speech, Thus mildly sued the cunning Leech ; Gave sundry precepts, grave and wise, Meet to be stored, lest need arise ; Much, by the giddy Muse forgot, And much, which Edward heeded not ! XXIX. The king starts from the healer's hand ! Some joyous outcry sweeps the sky! And in the west the distant band Send shouts like shouts of victory ! 104 WALLACE. canto m. No ear can doubt 'tis hope and joy That raise the wild, unwonted cry ! " Make way, make way ! " the ebbing throng, Soon leave a passage wide and long. " Make way, make way ! 'tis I who bring News fit to heal a wounded king ; 'Tis I, who bring the promise high, Of conquest, fame, and victory !" XXX. Disguis'd by dust, and toil, and heat, Sir Maurice quits his staggering steed, And falling at his monarch's feet, Still panting with his breathless speed, Scarce would his gasping haste allow His tongue the welcome truth to show : " I have seen him, sire ! that patriot knight, The gallant leader of the foe ! Oh ! how each nerve was up for fight ! Oh ! how my heart began to glow ! Oh ! how it panted, hand to hand, canto in. WALLACE. 105 Against that sinewy chief to stand, And flash before his eyes my yet unspotted brand ! XXXI. Edward, who lov'd the coming fight, Heard the young soldier with delight, " Rise ! Berkeley, rise ! and quickly say, How near the foe what force they boast ? Say, does yon ruddy sparkling ray, Which brightens the skies with its splendors gay, Bring doomsday to yon rebel host?" XXXII. " My liege, as evening thicken'd round, I quitted our guarded barrier ground ;" He drop'd his eye, for the monarch frown'd ; " Pardon, dread liege ! I own 'twas wrong ; But something still within my breast Was goading with its ceaseless tongue, And would not let me rest ; It told me that a trusty scout Might find yon hardy rebels out ; 106 WALLACE. canto hi. I could not bear the mocking hours Should see us idly loitering here, While sloth and famine waste our powers, And rust is blunting every spear ! Believe me, sire, the daring deed, The sudden stroke, the rash, hot speed, These, these alone, in war succeed ! " XXXIII. Sir Maurice paus'd, and Edward smil'd, To see youth's spirit boiling o'er, And his aged heart, by the tale beguil'd, Went back to the fights of yore, And thought on the days, when in fields of blood, 'Gainst the rebel Montfort, fierce he stood ; Remembering his own impetuous joy, He smil'd as he view'd the warlike boy ! " Now, might I well, with tongue austere, Adjudge thee to a doom severe, And teach that restless heart controul, And bind in iron bands thy soul ; But oh ! I would, the powers divine canto in. WALLACE. 107 Form'd every subject's heart like thine, Timid, like thine, to own a master's frown, Or bold, like thine, to assert the glory of his throne ! " XXXIV. Young Berkeley's downy cheek was dyed With the rich tint of generous pride ; On his eye-lash hung a chrystal clear, In semblance like a starting tear ; But it could not be, for tears, they say, Should never soil a warrior's face ; And yet, methinks that chrystal's ray Lent manly beauty grace ! XXXV. " Please you, my liege, to hear the tale With fruitless haste my courser sped, 'Till the bright sun, in the western vale, Had hidden his visage, broad and red ; I cast around my anxious eye, But never a foeman could descry ; Each shepherd's song, each throstle's note, 108 WALLACE. canto m. I took for the trumpet's brazen throat ; And the foliage, trembling in the breeze, I guess'd were the rebels' standard-trees : At length all baffled, vex'd, and spent, Back to the camp my way I bent ; And thought I felt the galling jeers, The wounding scoffs and poison'd sneers, Which every foil'd adventurer bears. XXXVI. Loth to return my comrade's jest, I gave my foaming courser rest ; I led him to a babbling rill, Which gush'd from the foot of a rocky hill : The fair moon now was risen high, The vault of heaven was glittering bright, Yet nevertheless, right pensively I gaz'd on the lovely night, And said to my steed, in a sullen tone, * Come, come, 'tis time we should be gone ! ' Scarce had I spoke, when near I spied, Come tottering down the hill's rude side, canto in. WALLACE. io to thy secret breast give heed. St. xx. 1. I. Well known in history as the red Comyn, a name which he derived from his complexion. He shared with Wallace and Stewart the command of the army at Falkirk. 238 NOTES ON CANTO THE FIRST. The winking owl, from his murky hole. St. x x v 1 1 . ] . 9. It is said by Major, that Sir John Stewart frequently upbraided Wallace for his pride, comparing him to an owl, which, after begging a feather from better-dressed birds, became proud of their spoils, and exalted himself above them. Blind Harry speaks for him thus : " Wallace, he said, you take thee meikle cure : So fared it by working of Nature, How an owlet complained of his fethreme, While dame Nature took of ilk bird, but blame A fair feather, and to the owlet gave, Then he thro' pride rebuted all the lave," &c. Has he forgot thy vassal vow ? St. xxix. 1. 10. The Muse has here availed herself of her charter : it Was John Comyn the black, who distinguished himself by the peculiar servility of his submission to Edward, at the castle of Norham, on the 11th of June, 1291 ; but the behaviour of his son at Falkirk, and his subsequent perfidy to Bruce, exculpate the Muse from any very flagrant injustice in attributing to him the same traits which marked the political conduct of his father. NOTES ON CANTO THE FIRST. 239 What, is the day forgot and gone ? St. xxxv. 1. 5. When Edward, after having made Baliol his captive, settled Scotland, he appointed Ormsby justiciary of the kingdom, who took up his residence at Scone, where he held his courts ; from thence Wallace, assisted by Sir William Douglas, drove him, and it was only a most precipitate flight that saved his life. This was one of the earliest achievements that marked the career of Wallace. / Then Cressingham, we pour'd thy blood. St. xxxvi. 1. 9. Cressingham, who with the old earl of Warenne led the English forces at the battle of Stirling, fell a victim to his own rashness, and was so hateful to the Scots, that his body was treated with every possible indignity. " The earl fled in such haste to Berwick, that his steed, being put up in the stable of the friars minors, never after tasted meat, but died." Dugdale. 240 NOTES ON CANTO THE SECOND. Of lute in grey Kincardine 's lower. St. v. 1. 5. Kincardine castle, anciently the principal seat of the Graemes, is situated in Strathern, about twenty miles north-east of Stirling, near the northern margin of the Ochills, on the edge of a romantic glen watered by the Ruthven. Close to my couch Sir Patrick stood. St. v. 1. 12. The elder brother of Sir John Graeme, who fell after a gallant conflict, almost singly maintained, in the bat- tle of Dunbar, in which he obstinately stood his ground to the last, after the defeat and flight of his countrymen. Yon Cambrians, harnessed to the yoke. St. ix. 1. 19- Previous to the battle of Falkirk, the band of Welch whom Edward had led with him into Scotland, muti- nied in a fit of intoxication, and slew eighteen English ecclesiastics. The outrage was retorted with sanguinary fury ; whereupon the Welch quitted the army, hover- NOTES ON CANTO THE SECOND. 241 ing, however, near it, and leaving little doubt, that had fortune favoured the Scots, they would have joined the conquerors. In four close schiltrons, sharp and bright. St. xi. I. 14. The schiltron was a circular body of spearmen, two, three, or more deep, whose crossed or serried weapons presented a most formidable barrier, and was compared to the impenetrable panoply of the hedge-hog. She whom it bids me think upon. St. xvi. 1. 6. There is an odd story related by Blind Harry, of the English having slain the wife of Wallace, during the night, at Lanark, and of the signal vengeance taken by him and his adherents on the murderers, every one of whom the following night they burned to death. The minstrel thus briefly notices the murder of our hero's wife. " When Southron saw that 'scaped was Wallace, Again they turn'd, the woman took on case Put her to death, I cannot tell you how, Of sick matter I may not tarry now," &c 242 NOTES ON CANTO THE SECOND. " Now, by Saint FillarCs arm /" he said. St. xx. 1. 6. St. Fillan was abbot of Pittenween, in Fife ; but hav- ing resigned his dignity, died a hermit amid the wilds of Glenurchy. While transcribing the scriptures, his left hand sent forth in his aid a wonderful illumination. It is said by Leslie, that Robert the Bruce obtained posses- sion of this splendid arm, and used to carry it in a silver shrine at the head of his army. That previous to the battle of Bannockburn, his chaplain removed the inva- luable relique from its shrine, to deposit it in a place of security ; but while Robert was addressing his prayers to the empty casket, it was observed to open and shut, suddenly, and the saint was found to have taken the trouble of replacing his arm in the shrine. That leads to Gilcomgaiits ruirid rath. St. xxiii. 1. 19. Gilcomgain was Maormor of Mearns, and first hus- band to the grand-daughter of Kenneth the 4th, Gruoch, afterwards so well known as the Lady Macbeth. He NOTES ON CANTO THE SECOND. 243 was perfidiously burned with fifty of his followers, dur- ing the night, in his fortress, by order of Malcolm the 2d. I spent in Finelld s fatal tower. St. xxiii. 1. 21. Finella murdered the great Kenneth the 3d, in re- venge for the death of her son. Buchanan, from Bo'etius, gives a curious account of the transaction. She dissem- bled her anger, and invited the monarch to her castle of Fettercairn, a place then pleasant for its shady groves and piles of ancient buildings. After having entertain- ed him very splendidly, on pretence of taking him to view the pleasantness of the place and the structure of the castle, she led him into a private room to shew him a brass statue, which was so ingeniously constructed, that when a string, which was secretly bent therein, was let go, it would of its own accord shoot forth arrows ; and whilst Kenneth was intently viewing it, it shot him. By night on the dusky plain of haunted Monivairdl St. xxiii. 1. 25. Kenneth the 4th was killed at Monivaird, or the Plain of the Bard, in a great battle with Malcolm the R 2 244 NOTES ON CANTO THE SECOND. 2d. It is in the upper part of Strathern ; a large cairn marks the field of battle. When fair Joleta led the dance. St. xxvu. 1. 4. " On the solemnization of the second marriage of Alexander 3d with J oleta, daughter of the Count de Dreux, as the bridegroom led the bride in the dance, followed in the same by many lords and ladies, there ap- peared at the last a creature resembling death, all naked of flesh and lire, with bare bones, right dreadful to behold, through which spectacle the king and residue of the company were so astonished, that they quickly made an end of their dance." Hollinshed'sScot. Chron. Who is it that rides thro' the night so fast ? St. xxviii. 1. 1. Alexander the 3d was thrown from his horse from the cliffs at Kinghorn, on the eastern coast, whither he was riding late from Edinburgh, a year after his mar- riage with Joleta. Southwell says, the night on which this disaster happened was so tempestuous, that he, " and many others who then lived and felt it, durst not NOTES ON CANTO THE SECOND. 245 uncover their faces against the bitter northern blast, that drove the snow and sleet most vehementlie against them." Thomas of Erceldoune is reported to have pro- phesied both the storm and the death of the monarch. The maiden blossom of the north. St. xxviii. 1. 11. Margaret, the Maid of Norway, was grand-daughter and heir of Alexander, by his daughter Margaret, who married Eric, king of Norway. The young queen, on coming to take possession of her dominions, died in one of the Orkneys. Sir Adam Gordon, old in fight. St. xxxiv. 1. 24. A gallant and noble chieftain of Galloway. And martial Carriers eye of fire. St. xxxiv. 1. 26. Sir Gilbert Carrick, of Cassillis, hereditary baillie of Carrick, was immediately descended from Fergus, lord of Galloway, and Duncan, the first earl of Carrick, and was maternal ancestor of the earl of Cassillis. Amid the universal submission, forced and voluntary, paid by the Scottish barons to Edward, and which remains on record, 246 NOTES ON CANTO THE SECOND, it deserves to be noted in favour of the stubborn patriot- ism of this family, that the names of its individuals are not to be found in any of those acknowledgments of na- tional weakness. And the well-known banner of Menteith, St. xxx v. 1. 3. We are told that a strong band of private friendship united Sir John Menteith and the gallant Wallace. From Blind Harry, and other authority of the same de- scription, I gather, that Wallace was twice gossip, or sponsor, to Menteith's children. NOTES ON CANTO THE THIRD. The brave earl Guy ra fearful name. St. vn. 1. 1, Guy Beauchamp, earl of Warwick, was son to the earl of Warwick who fought in the battles of Dunbar and Stirling. At the time of the fight of Falkirk he was twenty-six years of age; he was remarkable for his NOTES ON CANTO THE THIRD. 247 swarthy complexion. So much did he distinguish him- self at Falkirk, as to obtain in reward grants of many of the confiscated lands of the Scottish nobles. DugdaWs Baronage. And gallant Ralph de Monthermer. St. vii. 1. 6. Ralph de Monthermer was permitted to use the title of earl of Gloucester, because he, a simple esquire, did marry Joan of Acres, widow of Gilbert de Clare, the last earl, whose son was a minor, and in wardship of the king. Dugdale's Baronage. The loftiest of the armed train ! St. viii. 1. 14. Anthony Beik, bishop of Durham, who so powerfully assisted Edward in his Scottish war, was one of the most remarkable men of his time for courage, power, and magnificence ; his ordinary retinue consisted of a hun- dred and forty knights, and he could bring six-and- twenty standards into the field. Sir Ralph, his rival in the fight. St. xi. 1. 1. Sir Ralph Bassett, of Drayton, with the bishop of 248 NOTES ON CANTO THE THIRD. Durham, led the second column of the English forces at the battle of Falkirk. For this, Launders venerable train. St. xi. 1. 22. Launde abbey, in Leicestershire, was founded by Sir Ralph Bassett's ancestors, the Bassetts of Sapcote. The false Cospatric of Dunbar ! St. x in. 1. 15. Cospatric, earl of March and Dunbar, followed the banners of the enemy of his country throughout these wars. Much of the success of the English at the sanguinary siege of Berwick was attributed to him, as he obtained possession of the citadel by stratagem. At the famous battle of Dunbar he was opposed by his own more loyal countess, who fortified Dunbar castle against the English. Lord Berkeley was a gallant knight. St. xiv. 1. 1. Thomas Lord Berkeley, with his son Sir Maurice, both distinguished themselves at the battle of Falkirk : the former had been a famous warrior, and the latter, though young, had already borne away the prize at several tournaments, and evinced a very martial temper. NOTES ON CANTO THE THIRD. 249 What, shall we pass earl Marshal by? St. xx. 1. 6. Bigod, earl marshal, who led the first line of the En- glish, was a factious and avaricious baron, perpetually tormenting and thwarting his sovereign. At this period of the Scottish war, he was discontented at Edward's delaying to ratify his grants to certain conquered lands, which had been promised to him. To where his steed stood plunging near. St. x x v 1 1. 1. 8. As Edward and his army slept on a heath to the east of Linlithgow the night previous to the battle of Falkirk, the king was struck on the side by his war-horse, which stood ready harnessed near him, and two of his ribs were broken. 250 NOTES ON CANTO THE FOURTH. And shouting aloud, " To mass ! to mass /" St. xxii. 1. 17. Historians relate, that Durham, who with Bassett led the second column of the English, at first moved for- ward to the attack as if prepared to make a gallant onset, yet all on the sudden halted, as if panic-struck, and proposed waiting till Edward with the reserve should join them ; the impetuous Bassett, however, provoked at the delay, cried out, " To mass, Bishop ! and instantly charged. Now , who was he, that coward slave? St. lxiv. 1. 1. According to Buchanan, &c. Comyn retreated with his force without striking a single blow. The secret intelli- gence which existed between him and Edward, and the gold and promises of the latter, are supposed to have been the incentives to his conduct, combined with the jealou- sy which then prevailed amongst the Scottish chieftains. The dreadful slaughter of his countrymen which ensued NOTES ON CANTO THE FOURTH. 25 1 seems principally attributable to this disgraceful deser- tion. " On, on, my friends ! 'tis but a life ! St. lxvii. 1. 8. We may boast in our modern annals of a similar in- stance of gallantry to the one exhibited in the closing scene of the illustrious Stewart. When the English troops stormed Monte Video, on the 3d of February, 1807, the brave Lieutenant Colonel Vassall, of the 38th regiment, was, in advancing to the breach, fatally stop- ped in his ardent career by a grape-shot, which broke his leg, and eventually terminated his existence. Adored by his men, numbers rushed from their ranks to support him; but as he fell, the hero exclaimed, " Push on, my brave soldiers! It is but a leg in the service!" When the town surrendered, he cheered with his men as he lay bleeding on the ground. Pale, pale on the plain lies every man I St. lxix. 1. 2. The brave Stewart, endeavouring to rally and form his Selkirk bowmen, was thrown from his horse and kill- ed. His archers crowded round his body, and almost to a man perished by his side. 252 NOTES ON CANTO THE FIFTH. Nor see ye, bleaching in the blast. St. till. 1. 1. Wallace was brought to Westminster, where he was arraigned as a traitor, who had burned villages, stormed castles, and slaughtered many English. " I am not a traitor," said Wallace; " but of all the rest I am guilty !" He was executed with studied ignominy and rigour ; his head was placed on a pinnacle in London, and his mangled limbs distributed over his own country. Say, what reward can Edward give. St. lxvii. 1. 7. John Menteith, who betrayed his friend Wallace to the English, and was therefore deservedly hated by the Scots, received, amongst other rewards, the government of the castle of Dumbritton. Buchanan's Hist, of Scot- land, vol. 1. THE END. tgS ,-/t V8Jm-VJ^ i-ANGEUfo Ci ^UBRARYO^ ^t-UBRARYOc IMNIHWv A\tfl)NIVR% m t^-i from which tt was borroweo__ 0SANCEl% 0SANCEI% ubainihv^ EUBRARYQ^ wAorawrra^' ^UNIVER% ^clOSANCnJ^ ^ U(7l fistf ffif SJUI? 'JJEDKV-SOV^ ^IIBRARY^ 4^' 5 ^UIBRARY^. j 1 ir-' ^ ^UiBRARY0/> 1 I/' ^ ^KMIIW-JO^ ^OJIWDJO^ ^OFCALIFOfy* ^OFCALIF(%. ,UC SOUTHERN REGIONAL LIBRARY FACILITY AA 000 081731 2 y 0AHvaan^ ' v %aviaiH^ ^WEUNIVER%. ^lOSANCEl^ ^JUDNVSOl^ ^UNIVEBSte. cc CZ CO ^lOSANGElfj^ <$U1BRARY^ =3 ^fOJIlVDJO^ ^0FCALIF(%, ^OFCAIIFOR^ fl