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| FINTRY, my stay in wordly strife, | |
| Friend o my muse, friend o my life, | |
| Are ye as idles I am? | |
| Come then, wi uncouth kintra fleg, | |
| Oer Pegasus Ill fling my leg, | 5 |
| And ye shall see me try him. | |
| |
| But where shall I go rin a ride, | |
| That I may splatter nane beside? | |
| I wad na be uncivil: | |
| In manhoods various paths and ways | 10 |
| Theres aye some doytin body strays, | |
| And I ride like the devil. | |
| |
| Thus I break aff wi a my birr, | |
| And down yon dark, deep alley spur, | |
| Where Theologics daunder: | 15 |
| Alas! curst wi eternal fogs, | |
| And damnd in everlasting bogs, | |
| As sures the creed Ill blunder! | |
| |
| Ill stain a band, or jaup a gown, | |
| Or rin my reckless, guilty crown | 20 |
| Against the haly door: | |
| Sair do I rue my luckless fate, | |
| When, as the Muse an Deil wad haet, | |
| I rade that road before. | |
| |
| Suppose I take a spurt, and mix | 25 |
| Amang the wilds o Politics | |
| Electors and elected, | |
| Where dogs at Court (sad sons of bitches!) | |
| Septennially a madness touches, | |
| Till all the lands infected. | 30 |
| |
| All hail! Drumlanrigs haughty Grace, | |
| Discarded remnant of a race | |
| Once godlike-great in story; | |
| Thy forbears virtues all contrasted, | |
| The very name of Douglas blasted, | 35 |
| Thine that inverted glory! | |
| |
| Hate, envy, oft the Douglas bore, | |
| But thou hast superadded more, | |
| And sunk them in contempt; | |
| Follies and crimes have staind the name, | 40 |
| But, Queensberry, thine the virgin claim, | |
| From aught thats good exempt! | |
| |
| Ill sing the zeal Drumlanrig bears, | |
| Who left the all-important cares | |
| Of princes, and their darlings: | 45 |
| And, bent on winning borough touns, | |
| Came shaking hands wi wabster-loons, | |
| And kissing barefit carlins. | |
| |
| Combustion thro our boroughs rode, | |
| Whistling his roaring pack abroad | 50 |
| Of mad unmuzzled lions; | |
| As Queensberry blue and buff unfurld, | |
| And Westerha and Hopetoun hurled | |
| To every Whig defiance. | |
| |
| But cautious Queensberry left the war, | 55 |
| Th unmannerd dust might soil his star, | |
| Besides, he hated bleeding: | |
| But left behind him heroes bright, | |
| Heroes in C&æsarean fight, | |
| Or Ciceronian pleading. | 60 |
| |
| O for a throat like huge Mons-Meg, | |
| To muster oer each ardent Whig | |
| Beneath Drumlanrigs banners; | |
| Heroes and heroines commix, | |
| All in the field of politics, | 65 |
| To win immortal honours. | |
| |
| MMurdo and his lovely spouse, | |
| (Th enamourd laurels kiss her brows!) | |
| Led on the Loves and Graces: | |
| She won each gaping burgess heart, | 70 |
| While he, sub rosa, played his part | |
| Amang their wives and lasses. | |
| |
| Craigdarroch led a light-armd core, | |
| Tropes, metaphors, and figures pour, | |
| Like Hecla streaming thunder: | 75 |
| Glenriddel, skilld in rusty coins, | |
| Blew up each Torys dark designs, | |
| And bared the treason under. | |
| |
| In either wing two champions fought; | |
| Redoubted Staig, who set at nought | 80 |
| The wildest savage Tory; | |
| And Welsh who neer yet flinchd his ground, | |
| High-wavd his magnum-bonum round | |
| With Cyclopeian fury. | |
| |
| Miller brought up th artillery ranks, | 85 |
| The many-pounders of the Banks, | |
| Resistless desolation! | |
| While Maxwelton, that baron bold, | |
| Mid Lawsons port entrenchd his hold, | |
| And threatend worse damnation. | 90 |
| |
| To these what Tory hosts opposd | |
| With these what Tory warriors closd | |
| Surpasses my descriving; | |
| Squadrons, extended long and large, | |
| With furious speed rush to the charge, | 95 |
| Like furious devils driving. | |
| |
| What verse can sing, what prose narrate, | |
| The butcher deeds of bloody Fate, | |
| Amid this mighty tulyie! | |
| Grim Horror girnd, pale Terror roard, | 100 |
| As Murder at his thrapple shord, | |
| And Hell mixd in the brulyie. | |
| |
| As Highland craigs by thunder cleft, | |
| When lightnings fire the stormy lift, | |
| Hurl down with crashing rattle; | 105 |
| As flames among a hundred woods, | |
| As headlong foam from a hundred floods, | |
| Such is the rage of Battle. | |
| |
| The stubborn Tories dare to die; | |
| As soon the rooted oaks would fly | 110 |
| Before th approaching fellers: | |
| The Whigs come on like Oceans roar, | |
| When all his wintry billows pour | |
| Against the Buchan Bullers. | |
| |
| Lo, from the shades of Deaths deep night, | 115 |
| Departed Whigs enjoy the fight, | |
| And think on former daring: | |
| The muffled murtherer of Charles | |
| The Magna Charter flag unfurls, | |
| All deadly gules its bearing. | 120 |
| |
| Nor wanting ghosts of Tory fame; | |
| Bold Scrimgeour follows gallant Graham; | |
| Auld Covenanters shiver | |
| Forgive! forgive! much-wrongd Montrose! | |
| Now Death and Hell engulph thy foes, | 125 |
| Thou livst on high for ever. | |
| |
| Still oer the field the combat burns, | |
| The Tories, Whigs, give way by turns; | |
| But Fate the word has spoken: | |
| For womans wit and strength oman, | 130 |
| Alas! can do but what they can; | |
| The Tory ranks are broken. | |
| |
| O that my een were flowing burns! | |
| My voice, a lioness that mourns | |
| Her darling cubs undoing! | 135 |
| That I might greet, that I might cry, | |
| While Tories fall, while Tories fly, | |
| And furious Whigs pursuing! | |
| |
| What Whig but melts for good Sir James, | |
| Dear to his country, by the names, | 140 |
| Friend, Patron, Benefactor! | |
| Not Pulteneys wealth can Pulteney save; | |
| And Hopetoun falls, the generous, brave; | |
| And Stewart, bold as Hector. | |
| |
| Thou, Pitt, shalt rue this overthrow, | 145 |
| And Thurlow growl a curse of woe, | |
| And Melville melt in wailing: | |
| Now Fox and Sheridan rejoice, | |
| And Burke shall sing, O Prince, arise! | |
| Thy power is all-prevailing! | 150 |
| |
| For your poor friend, the Bard, afar | |
| He only hears and sees the war, | |
| A cool spectator purely! | |
| So, when the storm the forest rends, | |
| The robin in the hedge descends, | 155 |
| And sober chirps securely. | |
| |
| Now, for my friends and brethrens sakes, | |
| And for my dear-lovd Land o Cakes, | |
| I pray with holy fire: | |
| Lord, send a rough-shod troop o Hell | 160 |
| Oer a wad Scotland buy or sell, | |
| To grind them in the mire! | |
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