Home > Authors Index > Sir Walter Scott > Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border - Volume 2 > This page
Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border - Volume 2, poem(s) by Sir Walter Scott |
||
PART SECOND - ROMANTIC BALLADS - SCOTTISH MUSIC, AN ODE |
||
< Previous |
Table of content |
Next > |
________________________________________________
PART SECOND - ROMANTIC BALLADS - SCOTTISH MUSIC, AN ODE BY J. LEYDEN. TO IANTHE.
Such was the song that soothed to rest. Ah! sure, as Hindu legends tell, Or if, as ancient sages ween, I hear, I hear, with awful dread, Sweet syren, breathe the powerful strain! Lord Barnard is to greenwood gone, Or, change these notes of deep despair, And sing _the Hawk of pinion gray_,[C] Fair was her cheek's carnation glow, In youth's first morn, alert and gay, Sweet sounds! that oft have soothed to rest And thus, the exiled Scotian maid, Soft syren! whose enchanting strain [Footnote A: The Lass of Lochroyan--In this volume.] [Footnote B: See the ballad, entitled, Brown Adam.] [Footnote C: See the Gay Goss Hawk.]
NOTES ON SCOTTISH MUSIC, AN ODE. Far in the green isle of the west.--P. 103. v. 2. Ah! sure, as Hindu legends tell.--P. 104. v. 1. The effect of music is explained by the Hindus, as recalling to our memory the airs of paradise, heard in a state of pre-existence--Vide Sacontala. Did "Bathwell's banks that bloom so fair."--P. 106. v. 3. "So fell it out of late years, that an English gentleman, travelling in Palestine, not far from Jerusalem, as he passed through a country town, he heard, by chance, a woman sitting at her door, dandling her child, to sing, _Bothwel bank thou blumest fair_. The gentleman hereat wondered, and forthwith, in English, saluted the woman, who joyfully answered him; and said, she was right glad there to see a gentleman of our isle: and told him, that she was a Scottish woman, and came first from Scotland to Venice, and from Venice thither, where her fortune was to be the wife of an officer under the Turk; who being at that instant absent, and very soon to return, she entreated the gentleman to stay there until his return. The which he did; and she, for country sake, to shew herself the more kind and bountiful unto him, told her husband, at his home-coming, that the gentleman was her kinsman; whereupon her husband entertained him very kindly; and, at his departure gave him divers things of good value."--_Verstigan's Restitution of Decayed Intelligence. Chap. Of the Sirnames of our Antient Families. Antwerp, 1605. |