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O, were I yon violet

On which she is walking!
O, were I yon small bird
To which she is talking!
Or yon rose in her hand,
With its ripe, ruddy blossom,
Or some pure, gentle thought
To be blest with her bosom !

Allan Cunningham.

Cowdenknows.

THE BROOM OF THE COWDENKNOWS.

HEN summer comes, the swains on Tweed

WHE

Sing their successful loves;

Around the ewes and lambkins feed,

And music fills the groves.

But my loved song is then the broom
So fair on Cowdenknows;
For sure so sweet, so soft a bloom
Elsewhere there never grows.

There Colin tuned his oaten reed,
And won my yielding heart;

No shepherd e'er that played on Tweed
Could play with half such art.

He sung of Tay, of Forth and Clyde,
The hills and dales all round,
Of Leader-haughs and Leader side,
O, how I blessed the sound!

Yet more delightful is the broom
So fair on Cowdenknows;

For sure so fresh, so bright a bloom
Elsewhere there never grows.

Not Teviot braes, so green and gay,
May with this broom compare;
Not Yarrow banks in flowery May,
Nor the bush aboon Traguair.

More pleasing far are Cowdenknows,
My peaceful happy home,

Where I was wont to milk my ewes,
At eve among the broom.

Ye powers that haunt the woods and plains
Where Tweed with Teviot flows,

Convey me to the best of swains,

And my loved Cowdenknows.

John Crawford.

Craig Elachie.

CRAIG ELACHIE.

LUE are the hills above the Spey,

BLUE

The rocks are red that line his way;
Green is the strath his waters lave,
And fresh the turf upon the grave
Where sleep my sire and sisters three,
Where none are left to mourn for me:
Stand fast, stand fast, Craig Elachie!

The roofs that sheltered me and mine
Hold strangers of a Sassenach line;
Our hamlet thresholds ne'er can show
The friendly forms of long ago;
The rooks upon the old yew-tree

Would e'en have stranger notes to me:
Stand fast, stand fast, Craig Elachie!

The cattle feeding on the hills,

We tended once o'er moors and rills,
Like us have gone; the silly sheep
Now fleck the brown sides of the steep,
And southern eyes their watchers be,
And Gael and Sassenach ne'er agree:
Stand fast, stand fast, Craig Elachie!

Where are the elders of our glen,
Wise arbiters for meaner men?

Where are the sportsmen, keen of eye,
Who tracked the roe against the sky;
The quick of hand, of spirit free?
Passed, like a harper's melody:

Stand fast, stand fast, Craig Elachie!

Where are the maidens of our vale,
Those fair, frank daughters of the Gael?
Changed are they all, and changed the wife,
Who dared for love the Indian's life;
The little child she bore to me
Sunk in the vast Atlantic sea:

Stand fast, stand fast, Craig Elachie !

Bare are the moors of broad Strathspey,
Shaggy the western forests gray;
Wild is the corri's autumn roar,
Wilder the floods of this far shore;
Dark are the crags of rushing Dee,
Darker the shades of Tennessee:
Stand fast, stand fast, Craig Elachie!

Great rock, by which the Grant hath sworn,
Since first amid the mountains born;
Great rock, whose sterile granite heart
Knows not, like us, misfortune's smart,
The river sporting at thy knee,

On thy stern brow no change can see:
Stand fast, stand fast, Craig Elachie!

Stand fast on thine own Scottish ground,
By Scottish mountains flanked around,

Though we, uprooted, cast away
From the warm bosom of Strathspey,
Flung pining by this western sca,
The exile's hopeless lot must dree :
Stand fast, stand fast, Craig Elachie!

Yet strong as thou the Grant shall rise,
Cleft from his clansmen's sympathies;

In these grim wastes new homes we'll rear,
New scenes shall wear old names so dear;
And while our axes fell the tree,
Resound old Scotia's minstrelsy:

Stand fast, stand fast, Craig Elachie !

Here can no treacherous chief betray
For sordid gain our new Strathspey;

No fearful king, no statesmen pale,

Wrench the strong claymore from the Gael.
With armed wrist and kilted knee,

No prairie Indian half so free:

Stand fast, stand fast, Craig Elachie!

Eliza A. H. Ogilvy.

Craigcrook Castle.

CRAIG CROOK CASTLE.

A

HAPPY island in a sea of green,

Smiling it lies beneath the azure heaven,

Well pleased, and conscious that each wave and wind

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