Part 22 (1/2)

”The hills were round them, and the breeze Went o'er the sun-lit fields again; Their foreheads felt the wind and rain.”

Let the modern reader go through the _Rape of the Lock_, and then take up the song of the hunter s.h.i.+lric from Macpherson's ”Carric-thura.”

s.h.i.+lric, not knowing that his love Vinvela is dead, thus communes with himself:

”I sit by the mossy mountain; on the top of the hill of winds.

One tree is rustling above me. Dark waves roll over the heath.

The lake is troubled below. The deer descend from the hill. No hunter at a distance is seen. It is mid-day; but all is silent.

Sad are my thoughts alone. Didst thou but appear, O my love! a wanderer on the heath! thy hair floating on the wind behind thee; thy bosom heaving on the sight; thine eyes full of tears for thy friends, whom the mist of the hill had concealed! Thee I would comfort, my love, and bring thee to thy father's house!”

To him mourning thus, the spirit of his dead love appears:

”But is it she that there appears, like a beam of light on the heath? bright as the moon in autumn, as the sun in a summer-storm, comest thou, O maid, over rocks, over mountains to me? She speaks: but how weak her voice! like the breeze in the reeds of the lake.

”'Alone I am, O s.h.i.+lric! alone in the winter-house. With grief for thee I fell. s.h.i.+lric, I am pale in the tomb.'

”She fleets, she sails away; as mist before the wind! and wilt thou not stay, Vinvela? Stay and behold my tears! fair thou appearest, Vinvela! fair thou wast, when alive!

”By the mossy mountain I will sit; on the top of the hill of winds. When mid-day is silent around, O talk with me, Vinvela!

come on the light-winged gale! on the breeze of the desert, come! Let me hear thy voice, as thou pa.s.sest, when mid-day is silent around.'”

The readers of the eighteenth century did not stay to consider whether the foregoing was, or was not, a genuine antique: it suited their taste admirably. Rousseau had brought sentimentalism into favour; the ”return to nature” was a kind of creed with the French philosophers: these facts aided greatly in causing the epidemic of Ossianism that overran Europe.

I should not like to be condemned to read nothing but Ossian for a year.

The short staccato sentences, the difficulty of getting hold of anything definite amid so many moonbeams, gliding ghosts, whistling reeds, and feasts of sh.e.l.ls, has a very debilitating effect on the mind. There is too much weeping: one is constantly saying with Tennyson, ”Tears, idle tears, I know not what they mean.” Yet, no one can dip into Macpherson without being rewarded by some phrase of an impressive or refres.h.i.+ng kind, _e.g._:--

”Thou art with the years that are gone; thou fadest on my soul.”

”Why dost thou build the hall, son of the winged days?”

”Her steps were like the music of songs; she saw the youth and loved him. He was the stolen sigh of her soul.”

”Why does Ossian sing? Soon shall he lie in the narrow house, and no bard shall raise his fame.”

”When shall it be morn in the grave to bid the slumberer wake?”

”Mixed with the murmur of waters rose the voice of aged men, who called the forms of night to aid them in the war.”

”Autumn is dark on the mountains; grey mist rests on the hills.”

AT THE FOOT O' BENNACHIE.

I have on several occasions, during the last year or two, visited that part of Aberdeens.h.i.+re which is immediately under the glorious ridge of Bennachie. Like all lovers of ballad lore, I know by heart the poem of the little wee man who had such prowess, and who invited the poet to go with him to his green bower. After seeing magnificent examples of dancing, the poet found himself lying in the mist at the foot of Bennachie:--

”Out went the lichts, on cam' the mist, Leddies nor mannie mair could I see; I turned aboot, and gave a look, I was just at the foot o' Bennachie.”