Edmund Clarence Stedman, ed. (1833–1908). A Victorian Anthology, 1837–1895. 1895.
John Veitch 182994The Laird of Schelynlaw
S
Its muirs are green and wide,
And Schelynlaw’s ewes are the brawest ewes
In a’ the countryside.
And the burnie brattles down,
And there are nae sic knowes as Schelynlaw’s,
With the heather and bent sae brown.
Twa sons in a deidly raid;
And but yestreen his bonnie lass Jean
In Traquair kirkyard was laid.
What ane could wish him ill?
Not e’en Traquair wi’ his black fause heart
And his loons that range the hill.
Rode ane frae Schelynlaw’s gate,
Into the mist of the hill he rode,
His errand might not wait.
Folded the rider dim;
Oh, cloud of the muir! ’t is a gruesome deed
Ye hide in your misty rim.
And round by the Fingland Glen,
But he turn’d and turn’d him aye in the mist;
Its glower was as faces of men!
“The sun is no’ gaun to daw—
For that straik o’ blude and that clot o’ blude,
On the breist o’ auld Schelynlaw!”
A horseman came jaded and rude,
None asked him whence or why he came,
Nor whose on his hands was the blude.
“The Bond i’ faith I hae;
The deid sign nae mair, the lands are thine,
But foul was the stroke I gae:
In moonlight and in mirk,
And monie a stalwart man I ’ve hewn,—
So shrive me, Haly Kirk!
I slew, and Jock o’ the Ha’;
But there ’s my richt hand to burn in flame,
Could I bring back auld Schelynlaw!”
Yet they fell to the house of Traquair;
But Jock o’ Grieston that rode that morn
Was ne’er seen to ride ony mair.
Well did he please the King;
He could tell any lie to the States or the Kirk,
His warrant the signet-ring.
His pride and his power are away,
A graceless son has the old lord’s lands,
And the father’s hairs are grey.
Lairds and braw leddies ride there;
A dole some give to a bow’ddown man,
In pity,—’t is auld Traquair!