Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
Scotland: Vols. VI–VIII. 1876–79.
Burns
By Fitz-Greene Halleck (17901867)W
Thou mindst me of that autumn noon
When first we met upon “the banks
And braes o’ bonny Doon.”
My sunny hour was glad and brief;
We ’ve crossed the winter sea, and thou
Art withered—flower and leaf.
I ’ve stood beside the cottage-bed
Where the bard-peasant first drew breath;
A straw-thatched roof above his head,
A straw-wrought couch beneath.
His monument,—that tells to heaven
The homage of earth’s proudest isle,
To that bard-peasant given.
And consecrated ground it is,
The last, the hallowed home of one
Who lives upon all memories,
Though with the buried gone.
Shrines to no code or creed confined,—
The Delphian vales, the Palestines,
The Meccas of the mind.
Crowned kings, and mitred priests of power,
And warriors with their bright swords sheathed,
The mightiest of the hour;
Is lit by fortune’s dimmer star,
Are there,—o’er wave and mountain come,
From countries near and far;
The Switzer’s snow, the Arab’s sand,
Or trod the piled leaves of the west,
My own green forest-land;
Gaze on the scenes he loved and sung,
And gather feelings not of earth
His fields and streams among.
And pastoral Nith, and wooded Ayr,
And round thy sepulchres, Dumfries!
The poet’s tomb is there.
His funeral columns, wreaths, and urns?
Wear they not graven on the heart
The name of Robert Burns?