THE exact resemblance which the old Broach (still in use, though rarely met with, among the Highlanders) bears to the Roman Fibula must strike every one, and concurs, with the plaid and kilt, to recall to mind the communication which the ancient Romans had with this remote country.
IF to Tradition faith be due,
And echoes from old verse speak true,
Ere the meek Saint, Columba, bore Glad tidings to Iona's shore, No common light of nature blest The mountain region of the west, A land where gentle manners ruled O'er men in dauntless virtues schooled, That raised, for centuries, a bar Impervious to the tide of war: Yet peaceful Arts did entrance gain Where haughty Force had striven in vain; And, 'mid the works of skilful hands, By wanderers brought from foreign lands And various climes, was not unknown The clasp that fixed the Roman Gown; The Fibula, whose shape, I ween, Still in the Highland Broach is seen, The silver Broach of massy frame, Worn at the breast of some grave Dame On road or path, or at the door Of fern-thatched hut on heathy moor:
But delicate of yore
And the material finest gold;
As might beseem the fairest Fair, Whether she graced the royal chair, Or shed, within a vaulted hall, No fancied lustre on the wall
Where shields of mighty heroes hung, While Fingal heard what Ossian sung.
The heroic Age expired, it slept Deep in its tomb: the bramble crept O'er Fingal's hearth; the grassy sod Grew on the floors his sons had trod: Malvina where art thou? Their state The noblest-born must abdicate;
The fairest, while with fire and sword Come Spoilers, horde impelling horde, Must walk the sorrowing mountains, drest By ruder hands in homelier vest. Yet still the female bosom lent, And loved to borrow, ornainent;
Still was its inner world a place Reached by the dews of heavenly grace; Still pity to this last retreat
Clove fondly; to his favorite seat
Love wound his way by soft approach, Beneath a massier Highland Broach.
When alternations came of rage Yet fiercer, in a darker age;
And feuds, where, clan encountering clan, The weaker perished to a man;
For maid and mother, when despair Might else have triumphed, baffling prayer, One smail procession lacked not power, Provided in a calmer hour,
To meet such need as might befall, Roof, raiment, bread, or burial: For woman, even of tears bereft,
The hidden silver Broach was left.
As generations come and go,
Their arts, their customs, ebb and flow; Fate, fortune, sweeps strong powers away, And feeble, of themselves, decay; What poor abodes the heirloom hide, In which the castle once took pride! Tokens, once kept as boasted wealth, If saved at all, are saved by stealth. Lo! ships, from seas by nature barred, Mount along ways by man prepared ; And in far-stretching vales, whose streams Seek other seas, their canvas gleams. Lo! busy towns spring up, on coasts Thronged yesterday by airy ghosts; Soon, like a lingering star forlorn Among the novelties of morn, While young delights on old encroach,
Will vanish the last Highland Broach.
But when, from out their viewless bed, Like vapors, years have rolled and spread; And this poor verse, and worthier lays, Shall yield no light of love or praise; Then, by the spade, or cleaving plough, Or torrent from the mountain's brow, Or whirlwind, reckless what his might Entombs, or forces into light; Blind Chance, a volunteer ally, That oft befriends Antiquity,
And clears Oblivion from reproach, May render back the Highland Broach.*
[Upon a small island not far from the head of Loch Lomond are some remains of an ancient building, which was for several years the abode of a solitary Individual, one of the last survivors of the clan of Macfarlane, once powerful in that neighborhood. Passing along the shore opposite this island in the year 1814, the Author learned these particulars, and that this person then living there had acquired the appellation of "The Brownie." See "The Brownie's Cell," p. 48, to which the following is a sequel.]
"How disappeared he?" Ask the newt and toad; Ask of his fellow-men, and they will tell
* How much the Broach is sometimes prized by persons in humble stations may be gathered from an occurrence mentioned to me by a female friend. She had an opportunity of benefit
How he was found, cold as an icicle, Under an arch of that forlorn abode;
Where he, unpropp'd, and by the gathering flood Of years hemmed round, had dwelt, prepared to try Privation's worst extremities, and die
With no one near save the omnipresent God. Verily so to live was an awful choice,
A choice that wears the aspect of a doom; But in the mould of mercy all is cast
For Souls familiar with the Eternal Voice; And this forgotten Taper to the last Drove from itself, we trust, all frightful gloom.
TO THE PLANET VENUS, AN EVENING STAR.
Composed at Loch Lomond
THOUGH joy attend thee orient at the birth Of dawn, it cheers the lofty spirit most
To watch thy course when Day-light, fled from
In the gray sky hath left his lingering Ghost, Perplexed as if between a splendor lost
ting a poor old woman in her own hut, who, wishing to make a return, said to her daughter, in Erse, in a tone of plaintive earnestness, "I would give anything I have, but I hope she does not wish for my Broach!" and, uttering these words, she put her hand upon the Broach which fastened her kerchief, and which, she imagined, had attracted the eye of her benefactress
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