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THE POETICAL WORKS OF ROBERT BURNS
XCIX. ODE SACRED TO THE MEMORY OF MRS. OSWALD, OF AUCHENCRUIVE

Оглавление

[The origin of this harsh effusion shows under what feelings Burns sometimes wrote. He was, he says, on his way to Ayrshire, one stormy day in January, and had made himself comfortable, in spite of the snow-drift, over a smoking bowl, at an inn at the Sanquhar, when in wheeled the whole funeral pageantry of Mrs. Oswald. He was obliged to mount his horse and ride for quarters to New Cumnock, where, over a good fire, he penned, in his very ungallant indignation, the Ode to the lady’s memory. He lived to think better of the name.]

Dweller in yon dungeon dark,

Hangman of creation, mark!

Who in widow-weeds appears,

Laden with unhonoured years,

Noosing with care a bursting purse,

Baited with many a deadly curse?

Strophe.

View the wither’d beldam’s face—

Can thy keen inspection trace

Aught of Humanity’s sweet melting grace?

Note that eye, ’tis rheum o’erflows,

Pity’s flood there never rose.

See these hands, ne’er stretch’d to save,

Hands that took—but never gave.

Keeper of Mammon’s iron chest,

Lo, there she goes, unpitied and unblest

She goes, but not to realms of everlasting rest!

Antistrophe.

Plunderer of armies, lift thine eyes,

(Awhile forbear, ye tort’ring fiends;)

Seest thou whose step, unwilling hither bends?

No fallen angel, hurl’d from upper skies;

’Tis thy trusty quondam mate,

Doom’d to share thy fiery fate,

She, tardy, hell-ward plies.

Epode.

And are they of no more avail,

Ten thousand glitt’ring pounds a-year?

In other worlds can Mammon fail,

Omnipotent as he is here?

O, bitter mock’ry of the pompous bier,

While down the wretched vital part is driv’n!

The cave-lodg’d beggar, with a conscience clear,

Expires in rags, unknown, and goes to Heav’n.


The Complete Works

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