A noble heart doth teach a virtuous scorn. The public faith shall save our souls, And good out-works together; And ships shall save our lives, that stay Only for wind and weather. But when our faith and works fall down, And all our hopes decay, Our acts will bear us up to heaven, The clean contrary way. SONG. The Royalist. [Written in 1646.] Come, pass about the bowl to me; When we are ships and sack 's the sea. Pox on this grief, hang wealth, let's sing, Shall kill ourselves for fear of death? We'll live by the air which songs doth bring, Our sighing does but waste our breath: Then let us not be discontent, Nor drink a glass the less of wine; In vain they'll think their plagues are spent, When once they see we don't repine. We do not suffer here alone, Though we are beggar'd, so's the king; 'Tis sin t' have wealth, when he has none; Tush! poverty's a royal thing! Our heads shall turn as round as theirs, Fill this unnatural quart with sack, And every month shall be a sign. Let's tipple round; and so 'tis here. LADY ELIZABETH CAREW. LADY ELIZABETH CAREW is believed to be the author of the tragedy of Mariam, the Fuir Queen of Jewry, 1613. Though wanting in dramatic interest and spirit, there is a vein of fine sentiment and feeling in this forgotten drama. The following chorus, in Act the Fourth, possesses a generous and noble simplicity : [Revenge of Injuries.] The fairest action of our human life And 'tis a firmer conquest truly said, If we a worthy enemy do find, To yield to worth it must be nobly done; But if of baser metal be his mind, In base revenge there is no honour won. Who would a worthy courage overthrow, We say our hearts are great, and cannot yield; The weakest lion will the loudest roar. Truth's school for certain doth this same allow, High-heartedness doth sometimes teach to bow. To scorn to owe a duty overlong; To scorn to be for benefits forborne; To scorn to lie, to scorn to do a wrong. To scorn to bear an injury in mind; To scorn a free-born heart slave-like to bind. But if for wrongs we needs revenge must have, Then be our vengeance of the noblest kind; Do we his body from our fury save, And let our hate prevail against our mind? What can 'gainst him a greater vengeance be, Than make his foe more worthy far than het Had Mariam scorn'd to leave a due unpaid, She would to Herod then have paid her love, And not have been by sullen passion sway'd. To fix her thoughts all injury above Is virtuous pride. Had Mariam thus been proud, Long famous life to her had been allow'd. SCOTTISH POETS. ALEXANDER SCOт. While Sidney, Spenser, Marlow, and other poets, were illustrating the reign of Elizabeth, the muses were not wholly neglected in Scotland. There was, however, so little intercourse between the two nations, that the works of the English bards seem to have been comparatively unknown in the Lorth, and to have had no Scottish imitators. The country was then in a rude and barbarous state, tyrannised over by the nobles, and torn by feuds and dissensions. In England, the Reformation had proceeded from the throne, and was accomplished with little violence or disorder. In Scotland, it uprooted the whole form of society, and was marked by fierce contentions and lawless turbulence. The absorbing influence of this ecclesiastical struggle was unfavourable to the cultivation of poetry. It shed a gloomy spirit over the nation, and almost proscribed the study of romantic literature. The drama, which in England was the nurse of so many fine thoughts, so much stirring passion, and beautiful imagery, was shunned as a leprosy, fatal to religion and morality. The very songs in Scotland partook of this religious character; and so widely was the polemical spirit diffused, that ALEXANDER Scor, in his New Year Gift to the Queen, in 1562, says That limmer lads and little lasses, lo, Will argue baith with bishop, priest, and friar. Scot wrote several short satires, and some miscellaneous poems, the prevailing amatory character of which has caused him to be called the Scottish Anacreon, though there are many points wanting to com. plete his resemblance to the Teian bard. As specimens of his talents, the two following pieces ar presented : Rondel of Love. Lo what it is to luve, But still decay, both nicht and day; Luve is ane fervent fire, Kendillit without desire, Short plesour, lang displesour; Repentance is the hire; Ane pure tressour, without messour Luve is ane fervent fire. Sen she that I have servit lang, Though this belappit body here Sen in your garth3 the lily whyte My faithful heart she sall it have, Deplore, ye ladies clear of hue, That wounded be with luvis dart. Do go with mine, with mind inwart, And bide with her tou luvis best. SIR RICHARD MAITLAND. SIR RICHARD MAITLAND of Lethington (14961586), father of the Secretary Lethington, of Scottish history, relieved the duties of his situation as a judge and statesman in advanced life, by composing some moral and conversational pieces, and collecting, into the well-known manuscript which bears his name, the best productions of his contemporaries. These Lethington Castle. daughter acted as amanuensis to the aged poet. His familiar style reminds us of that of Lyndsay. Satire on the Town Ladies. Some wifis of the borowstoun And of fine silk their furrit clokis, Their wilicoats maun weel be hewit, Their woven hose of silk are shawin, Sometime they will beir up their gown, Their collars, carcats, and hause beidis 4 Their shoon of velvet, and their muilis And some will spend mair, I hear say, 1 Rather. 3 Garden. Competent; had it in my power. 4 Embrace. 1 Wot, or know not. 4 Beads for the throat. Spend. 8 Attire Leave, burgess men, or all be lost, ALEXANDER MONTGOMERY. ALEXANDER MONTGOMERY was known as a poet in 1568; but his principal work, The Cherry and the Slae, was not published before 1597. The Cherry and the Slae is an allegorical poem, representing virtue and vice. The allegory is poorly managed; but some of Montgomery's descriptions are lively and vigorous; and the style of verse adopted in this poem was afterwards copied by Burns. Divested of some of the antique spelling, parts of the poem seem as modern, and as smoothly versified, as the Scottish poetry of a century and a-half later. The cushat crouds, the corbie cries, Repeating, with greeting, His shadow in the well. I saw the hurcheon and the hare The air was sober, saft, and sweet, Had trinkled mony a tear; Some knoping, some dropping Through Phœbus' wholesome heat. Cry till their eyes become red. Burns, in describing the opening scene of his Holy Fair, The hares were hirpling down the furs." and, previous to turning clergyman, had studied the law, and frequented the court; but in his latter years he was a stern and even gloomy Puritan. The most finished of his productions is a description of a summer's day, which he calls the Day Estival. The various objects of external nature, characteristic of a Scottish landscape, are painted with truth and clearness, and a calm devotional feeling is spread over the poem. It opens as follows: O perfect light, which shed away Thy glory, when the day forth flies, The shadow of the earth anon Whilk soon perceive the little larks, The summer day of the poet is one of unclouded splendour. The time so tranquil is and clear, Save on a high and barren hill, All trees and simples, great and small, That balmy leaf do bear, Than they were painted on a wall, No more they move or steir. The rivers fresh, the caller strearus The water clear like crystal beams, The condition of the Scottish labourer would seem to have been then more comfortable than at present, and the climate of the country warmer, for Hume describes those working in the fields as stopping at mid-day, 'noon meat and sleep to take,' and refreshing themselves with 'caller wine' in a cave, and 'sallads steep'd in oil.' As the poet lived four years in France previous to his settling in Scotland, in mature life, we suspect he must have been drawing on his continental recollections for some of the features in this picture. At length 'the gloaming comes, the day is spent,' and the poet concludes in a strain of pious gratitude and delight : What pleasure, then, to walk and see The salmon out of cruives and creels, All labourers draw hame at even, KING JAMES VI. In 1584, the Scottish sovereign, KING JAMES VI., ventured into the magic circle of poesy himself, and weak at arguments, and the rules and cautelis' of the royal author are puerile and ridiculous. His majesty's verses, considering that he was only in his eighteenth year, are more creditable to him, and we shall quote one from the volume alluded to. Ane Schort Poeme of Tyme. As I was pansing in a morning aire, And could not sleip nor nawyis take me rest, Athort the fields, it seemed to me the best. Did dewlie helse all thame on earth do dwell. So willingly the precious tyme to tine: And how they did themselfis so farr begyle, To fushe of tyme, which of itself is fyne. Fra tyme be past to call it backwart syne Is bot in vaine: therefore men sould be warr, To sleuth the tyme that flees fra them so farr For what hath man bot tyme into this lyfe, Which gives him day's his God aright to know? Wherefore then sould we be at sic a stryfe, So spedelie our selfis for to withdraw Evin from the tyme, which is on nowayes slaw To flie from us, suppose we fled it noght? More wyse we were, if we the tyme had soght. But sen that tyme is sic a precious thing, I wald we sould bestow it into that Which were most pleasou to our heavenly King. Flee ydilteth, which is the greatest lat; Bot, sen that death to all is destinat, Let us employ that tyme that God hath send us, In doing weill, that good men may commend us. EARL OF ANCRUM-EARL OF STIRLING, Two Scottish noblemen of the court of James were devoted to letters, namely, the EARL OF ANCRUM (1578-1654) and the EARL OF STIRLING (1580-1640) The first was a younger son of Sir Andrew Ker of Ferniehurst, and he enjoyed the favour of both James and Charles I. The following sonnet by the earl was addressed to Drummond the poet in 1624. It shows how much the union of the crowns under James had led to the cultivation of the English style and language: Sonnet in Praise of a Solitary Life. Sweet solitary life ! lovely, dumb joy, That need'st no warnings how to grow more wise By other men's mishaps, nor the annoy Which from sore wrongs done to one's self doth rise The morning's second mansion, truth's first friend, north. He realised an amount of wealth unusual for a poet, and employed part of it in building a hand Most happy state, that never tak'st revenge The court's great earthquake, the griev'd truth of change, Nor none of falsehood's savoury lies dost hear ; Nor knows hope's sweet disease that charms our sense, Nor its sad cure dear-bought experience! The Earl of Stirling (William Alexander of Menstrie, created a peer by Charles I.) was a more prolific poet. In 1637, he published a complete edition of his works, in one volume folio, with the title of Recreations with the Muses, consisting of tragedies, a heroic poem, a poem addressed to Prince Henry (the favourite son of King James), another heroic poem entitled Jonathan, and a sacred poem, in twelve parts, on the Day of Judgment. One of the Earl of Stirling's tragedies is on the subject of Julius Cæsar. It was first published in 1606, and contains several passages resembling parts of Shakspeare's tragedy of the same name, but it has not been ascertained which was first published. The genius of Shakspeare did not disdain to gather hints and expressions from obscurę authors-the lesser lights of the age-and a famous passage in the Tempest is supposed (though somewhat hypercritically) to be also derived from the Earl of Stirling. In the play of Darius, there occurs the following reflection Let Greatness of her glassy sceptres vaunt, י some mansion in Stirling, which still survives, a monument of a fortune so different from that of the ot sceptres, no, but reeds, soon bruised, soon broken: ordinary children of the muse. And let this worldly pomp our wits enchant, All fades, and scarcely leaves behind a token. The lines of Shakspeare will instantly be recalled And like this insubstantial pageant, faded, None of the productions of the Earl of Stirling touch the heart or entrance the imagination. He has not the humble but genuine inspiration of Alexander Hume. Yet we must allow him to have been a calm and elegant poet, with considerable fancy, and an ear for metrical harmony. The following is one of his best sonnets: i swear, Aurora, by thy starry eyes, The lady whom the poet celebrated under the name of Aurora, did not accept his hand, but he was married to a daughter of Sir William Erskine. The cari concocted an enlightened scheme for colonising Nova Scotia, which was patronised by the king, yet was abandoned from the difficulties attending its ccomplishment. Stirling held the office of secretary of state for Scotland for fifteen years, from 1626 to 1641-a period of great difficulty and delicacy, when Charles attempted to establish episcopacy in the A greater poet flourished in Scotland at the same time with Stirling, namely, WILLIAM DRUMMOND of Hawthornden (1585-1649). Familiar with classic and English poetry, and imbued with true literary taste and feeling, Drummond soared above a mere local or provincial fame, and was associated in friendship and genius with his great English contemporaries. His father, Sir John Drummond, was gentleman usher to king James; and the poet seenis to have inherited his reverence for royalty No author |