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{Idyls and Legends of Inverburn 1865}
140 HUGH SUTHERLAND'S PANSIES. A FLOWER-PIECE _____ The aged Minister of Inverburn,
“THE lily minds me of a maiden brow,” Pansies? You praise the ones that grow to-day Hugh Sutherland Sutherland was poor, Thus the summers pass’d, 144 The angel still remain’d Hugh and I The truth was out. The weaver play’d the game Even here, I think, his angel clung to him. Soon Sutherland and she he loved were one,— After that, But moons of honey wane, and summer suns The cottage here remain’d untenanted, Two summers pass’d; and still in Edinglass But it was long, No bitter cry, What heart of stone And daily, in the summer afternoon,
[Notes: v. 1, l. 4: The full-blown rose her lips with sweetness tipt;
159 _____
I. AS I lay asleep, as I lay asleep,
II. I awoke from sleep, I awoke from sleep,
III. As we lay asleep, as we lay asleep, 162 IV. I awoke from sleep, I awoke from sleep,
V. As I lay asleep, as I lay asleep,
VI. As it lay asleep, as it lay asleep,
[Notes:
165 AN IDYL OF LOVE AND WHISKY. _____ Tom Love, a man “prepared for friend or foe,
O WIDOW MYSIE, smiling, soft, and sweet! You saw her at the ploughing match, you ken, O years roll on, and fair things fade and pine!— “A marriageable man, for every claim I loved a comely face, as I have said, The Inn had gone to rack and loss complete O sweet was Widow Mysie, sweet and sleek! Sure one so beauteous and so sweet had graced She was not loath!—for, while her comely face Kisses? Ay, faith, they follow’d score on score, The deed thus done, I hied me home, you say, I found my father making up his books, “And if we wait till he has gone his way, O Widow Mysie, wert thou first sincere, 174 Days pass’d; and I began, to my amaze, Then Mysie soften’d, sadden’d, and would speak O Heaven! in what strange Enchanter’s den, “Mysie!” I cried, with flushing face, too late Sir, so it was. Stunn’d, thunder-stricken, wild,
[Notes:
180 _____
I. “O WHO among ye will win for me [1:1]
II. The Minister rode in the white moonshine,
III. But the Minister, when he look'd on me,
IV. He leapt on his steed and home rode he,
V. “O thanks, for thou hast won for me
VI. Oh, off I ran his soul to win,
[Notes:
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Idyls and Legends of Inverburn continued _____ Idyls and Legends of Inverburn Contents
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