DRYBURGH ABBEY.(6)ByTweed's fair stream, in a secluded spot,Rises an ivy-crowned monastic pile;Beneath its shadow sleeps theWizard,Scott;A Ruin is his resting-place—no vileUnconsecrated grave-yard is the soil—Few moulder there, but these the loved, the good,The honoured, and the famed—and sweet flowers smileAround the precincts of the Abbeyhood,While Cedar, Oak, and Yew adorn that solitude.Hail, Dryburgh! to thy sylvan shades all hail!—As to a shrine, from places far away,With awe-struck spirit, to thy classic valeShall pilgrims come, to muse, perchance to pray;More hallowed now than in thy elder day,For sacred is the earth wherein is laidThe Poet's dust; and still his mind, his lay,And his renown, shall flourish undecayed,Like his loved country's fame, that is not doomed to fade.
ByTweed's fair stream, in a secluded spot,Rises an ivy-crowned monastic pile;Beneath its shadow sleeps theWizard,Scott;A Ruin is his resting-place—no vileUnconsecrated grave-yard is the soil—Few moulder there, but these the loved, the good,The honoured, and the famed—and sweet flowers smileAround the precincts of the Abbeyhood,While Cedar, Oak, and Yew adorn that solitude.Hail, Dryburgh! to thy sylvan shades all hail!—As to a shrine, from places far away,With awe-struck spirit, to thy classic valeShall pilgrims come, to muse, perchance to pray;More hallowed now than in thy elder day,For sacred is the earth wherein is laidThe Poet's dust; and still his mind, his lay,And his renown, shall flourish undecayed,Like his loved country's fame, that is not doomed to fade.
ByTweed's fair stream, in a secluded spot,Rises an ivy-crowned monastic pile;Beneath its shadow sleeps theWizard,Scott;A Ruin is his resting-place—no vileUnconsecrated grave-yard is the soil—Few moulder there, but these the loved, the good,The honoured, and the famed—and sweet flowers smileAround the precincts of the Abbeyhood,While Cedar, Oak, and Yew adorn that solitude.Hail, Dryburgh! to thy sylvan shades all hail!—As to a shrine, from places far away,With awe-struck spirit, to thy classic valeShall pilgrims come, to muse, perchance to pray;More hallowed now than in thy elder day,For sacred is the earth wherein is laidThe Poet's dust; and still his mind, his lay,And his renown, shall flourish undecayed,Like his loved country's fame, that is not doomed to fade.
ByTweed's fair stream, in a secluded spot,Rises an ivy-crowned monastic pile;Beneath its shadow sleeps theWizard,Scott;A Ruin is his resting-place—no vileUnconsecrated grave-yard is the soil—Few moulder there, but these the loved, the good,The honoured, and the famed—and sweet flowers smileAround the precincts of the Abbeyhood,While Cedar, Oak, and Yew adorn that solitude.
ByTweed's fair stream, in a secluded spot,
Rises an ivy-crowned monastic pile;
Beneath its shadow sleeps theWizard,Scott;
A Ruin is his resting-place—no vile
Unconsecrated grave-yard is the soil—
Few moulder there, but these the loved, the good,
The honoured, and the famed—and sweet flowers smile
Around the precincts of the Abbeyhood,
While Cedar, Oak, and Yew adorn that solitude.
Hail, Dryburgh! to thy sylvan shades all hail!—As to a shrine, from places far away,With awe-struck spirit, to thy classic valeShall pilgrims come, to muse, perchance to pray;More hallowed now than in thy elder day,For sacred is the earth wherein is laidThe Poet's dust; and still his mind, his lay,And his renown, shall flourish undecayed,Like his loved country's fame, that is not doomed to fade.
Hail, Dryburgh! to thy sylvan shades all hail!—
As to a shrine, from places far away,
With awe-struck spirit, to thy classic vale
Shall pilgrims come, to muse, perchance to pray;
More hallowed now than in thy elder day,
For sacred is the earth wherein is laid
The Poet's dust; and still his mind, his lay,
And his renown, shall flourish undecayed,
Like his loved country's fame, that is not doomed to fade.