Title: Poems, Scots and English
Author: John Buchan
Release date: November 25, 2025 [eBook #77335]
Language: English
Original publication: London: T. C. & E. Jack, Limited, 1917
Credits: Hendrik Kaiber, Susan Skinner and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
BY THE SAME AUTHOR
ROMANCES
SHORT STORIES
ESSAYS
POLITICS AND TRAVEL
HISTORY AND BIOGRAPHY
POEMS
SCOTS AND ENGLISH
BY
JOHN BUCHAN
T. C. & E. C. JACK, LIMITED
LONDON AND EDINBURGH
1917
Printed in Great Britain
by Turnbull & Spears, Edinburgh
TO MY BROTHER
ALASTAIR BUCHAN
LIEUTENANT, ROYAL SCOTS FUSILIERS
WHO FELL AT ARRAS
ON EASTER MONDAY 1917
UNDER HIS COUNTRY’S
TRIUMPHING FLAG
{7}
Since there are many variants of our northern speech, it seems fitting to say that the Scots pieces in this little collection are written in the vernacular which is spoken in the hill country of the Lowlands, from the Cheviots to Galloway. Scots has never been to me a book-tongue; I could always speak it more easily than I could write it; and I dare to hope that the faults of my verses, great as they are, are not those of an antiquarian exercise.
J. B.
| PAGE | |
| Midian’s Evil Day—Dear Reverend Sir,—I tak my pen | 13 |
| The Herd of Farawa—Losh, man! Did ever mortal see | 21 |
| The Eternal Feminine—When I was a freckled bit bairn | 30 |
| The South Countrie—I never likit the Kingdom o’ Fife— | 32 |
| The Shorter Catechism—When I was young and herdit sheep | 34 |
| The Kirn—’Twas last back-end | 36 |
| The Fishers—’Tis puirtith sooples | 44 |
| Sweet Argos—When the Almichty took His hand | 48 |
| On Leave—I had auchteen months o’ the war | 55 |
| The Kirk Bell—When oor lads gaed ower the tap | 59 |
| Home Thoughts from Abroad—Aifter the war, says the papers | 62 |
| Fragment of an Ode—Ye’ll a’ hae heard tell | 65 |
| The Great Ones—Ae morn aside the road frae Bray | 67 |
| Fisher Jamie—Puir Jamie’s killed | 69{10} |
| PAGE | |
| Fratri Dilectissimo—When we were little wandering boys | 73 |
| To Lionel Phillips—Time, they say, must the best of us capture | 76 |
| To Sir Reginald Talbot—I tell of old Virginian ways | 77 |
| From the Pentlands, Looking North and South—Around my feet the clouds are drawn | 79 |
| The Strong Man Armed—Gift me guerdon and grant me grace | 84 |
| The Soldier of Fortune—I have seen thy face in the foray | 86 |
| The Singer—Cold blows the drift on the hill | 88 |
| Processional—In the ancient orderly places | 91 |
| Avignon, 1759—I walk abroad on winter days | 93 |
| The Gipsy’s Song to the Lady Cassilis—The door is open to the wall | 95 |
| Wood Magic—I will walk warily in the wise woods | 97 |
| The Song of the Sea Captain—I sail a lone sea captain | 99 |
| Antiphilus of Byzantium—Give me a mat on the deck | 105 |
| An Echo of Meleager—Scorn not my love, proud child | 106 |
{11}
(From Alexander Cargill, Elder of the Kirk of the Remnant in the vale of Wae, to the Reverend Murdo Mucklethraw, Minister of the aforesaid Kirk, anent the Great Case recently argued in the House of Lords.)
{20}
1904
{21}
Who in an April hailstorm discoursed to the traveller on the present discontents.
{25}
1907
{30}
1912
{32}
1916
{34}
(With Proofs)
1911
Gidden’s Song
Jock’s Song
1916
{44}
THEOCRITUS IN SCOTS
(Idyll xxi)
1916
{48}
An Epistle from Jock in billets to Sandy in the trenches.
1916
{55}
1916
{59}
1917
{62}
1917
{65}
1917
{67}
{68}
1916
{69}
1916
{71}
W. H. B.
1912
{76}
1909
{77}
1914
{79}
1898
{84}
1895
{86}
1899
{88}
1898
{91}
1906
{93}
1759
1911
{95}
“Whereupon the Faas, coming down from the Gates of Galloway, did so bewitch my lady that she forgat husband and kin, and followed the tinkler’s piping.”—Chap-book of the Raid of Cassilis.
1898
{97}
(9th Century)
1911
{99}
Diego d’Alboquerque, brother of the great Affonso, a knight of the Portuguese Order of Jesus Christ, having landed on the coast north of Zanzibar, wandered to the Abyssinian highlands, where he saw and loved Prester John’s daughter, Melissa, a cousin of the Lady of Tripoli (la princesse lointaine). He was slain off Goa in the great fight with the Sultan of Muscat.
1905
{105}
Anth. Pal. ix. 546.
1895
{106}
1910
FOOTNOTES:
[1] The occasion of these verses requires a note. The union in 1900 of the Free Church of Scotland and the United Presbyterian Church led to the secession of certain congregations of the former, who called themselves the Free Church, and maintained that the union involved a departure from the principles of that church and a breach of the conditions under which certain properties were held. They brought an action to establish their right to these properties, as the sole remaining repository of Free Church principles. This action was decided against the claimants in the Scottish courts, but, on appeal, the House of Lords, under the guidance of Lord Halsbury (then Lord Chancellor), reversed the decision.
[2] Mr Henry Johnston, K.C., of the Scots Bar (afterwards Lord Johnston), led for the appellants.
[3] The leading counsel for the respondents was Mr R. B. Haldane (M.P. for East Lothian), afterwards Lord Chancellor of England.
[4] A famous Free Church divine of the old school.
[5] The Greek text has not been followed in the songs, as it would be hard to find equivalents for Lycidas and Simichidas in Lowland Scots. Jock’s song is a free paraphrase of Victor Hugo’s Guitare. How close that famous lyric is to the Theocritean manner will be admitted by those who remember Walter Headlam’s Greek version of it.
[6] The Lang Whang is the old Edinburgh-Lanark road.
[7] From “The Marquis of Montrose.”
[8] From “Prester John.”
[9] From “Salute to Adventurers.”
[10] From “A Lodge in the Wilderness.”