Lays of the Scottish Cavaliers and Other Poems by W. E. (William Edmondstoune) Aytoun
page 134 of 200 (67%)
page 134 of 200 (67%)
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Hark! the English cannons' roar.
God! how awful sounds that volley, Bellowing through the mist and rain! Was not that the Highland slogan? Let me hear that shout again! Oh, for prophet eyes to witness How the desperate battle goes! Cumberland! I would not fear thee, Could my Camerons see their foes. Sound, I say, the charge at venture-- 'Tis not naked steel we fear; Better perish in the mêlée Than be shot like driven deer; Hold! the mist begins to scatter! There in front 'tis rent asunder, And the cloudy bastion crumbles Underneath the deafening thunder; There I see the scarlet gleaming! Now, Macdonald--now or never!-- Woe is me, the clans are broken! Father, thou art lost for ever! Chief and vassal, lord and yeoman, There they lie in heaps together, Smitten by the deadly volley, Rolled in blood upon the heather; And the Hanoverian horsemen, Fiercely riding to and fro, Deal their murderous strokes at random.-- Ah, my God! where am I now? Will that baleful vision never |
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