Then flew thir birdis o'er the boughis sheen, Next in the Dance followed Envy, llid malice and despite : For privy hatred that traitor trembled ; Him followed mony freikt dissembled, With feigned wordis white : To lee that had delight; Of them can never be quit. The Dance. * Of Februar the fifteenth nicht, I lay intill a trance ; Mahoun' gart cry ane Dance Of shrewis that were never shriven,3 Agains the fast of Fastern's Even, To mak their observance He bade gallands gac graith a guise,5 And cast up gamonds in the skies, As varlots does in France. Heillie 7 harlots, haughten-wise, 8 But yet leuch never Mahoun ; Black-belly and Bausy-broun. Next him in Dance came COVETICE, That never could be content: All with that warlock went: As fire-tlaught maist fervent ; With gold of all kind prent.5 Full sleepy was his gruvie ;? Mony sweir bumbard belly-hudiron, Mony slute daw, and sleepy duddron, Him servit ay with sunyie. 10 Ever lashed them on the lunyie :11 And made them quicker of counyie.12 Let see, quoth he, who now begins. Begoud to lcap at anes. Like to mak vaistie wanes ;10 And round about him, as a wheel, Hang all in rumplesll to the heel Ilis kethat12 for the nanes.13 Mony proud trumpour with him trippit ; Through scaldand fire aye as they skippit, They grinned with hideous granes. Then IRE came in with sturt and strife; Ilis hand was a ye upon his knife, He brandished like a bear; Boasters, braggarts, and bargainers, After him, passit in to pairs, All boden in 'feir of weir,14 In jacks, and scrips, and bonnets of steel ; Their legs were chained down to the heel ; Froward was their effeir : Some upon other with brands beft, 15 Some jaruit others, to the heft, Nae menstrals playit to them, but doubt, By day and eke by nicht ;14 And entered by brief of richt. Far northward in a nook : In hell great room they took : And roop like raven and rook. With knives that sharp could shear. 1 Whose close disputation yet moved my thoughts. 9 The Devil. 3 Accursed men, who had never been absolved in the other world. 4 The eve of Lent. 5 Prepare a m.isque. 6 Gambols. 7 Prond. 8 Haughtily: 9 The names of popular spirits in Scotland. 10 Something touching puffed up manners appears to be hinted at in this obscure line. 1 Large folds. 13 For the occasion. 14 Arrayed in the accoutrements of war. 15 Gave blows. * Dunbar is a poet of a high order. * * His Dance of the Seven Deadly Sins, though it would be absurd to compare it with the beauty and refinement of the celebrated Ode on the Passions, has yet an aniinated picturesqueness not unlike that of Collins. The effect of both pieces shows how much more potent allegorical figures become, by being made to fleet suddenly before the imagination, than by being detained in its view by prolonged description. Dunbar conjures up the personified sins, as Collins does the passions, to rise, to strike, to disappear." They come like shadows, so depart." '-Camp. 12 Robe. 9 Usurers. 1 Many contentious persons. 8 Misers. 4 Great quantity: 5 Every coinage. 6 Laziness. 7 Visage. 8 Dirty, lazy tipplers. Slow and sleepy drabs. 10 Excuse. 11 Loins. 19 Circulation, as of coin. 13 Rewari. 14 A compliment, obviously, to the poetical profession. 15 Page:int. In this stanz. Dunbar satirisc's the outlandish habits and language of the Higirlanders. BELL. The Devil sae deavit was with their yell, That in the deepest pot of hell, lie smoorit them with smook. Tidings fra the Session. [A conversation between two rustics, designed to satirise the proceedings in the supreme civil law court of Scotland.] Ane quirland man, of upland mak, I tell you under this confession, I coine of Edinburgh fra the Session. Is na man there that trusts another : Of innocent folk prereens a futher :: That has his mind all on oppression; Wad look full heigh were not the Session. How feids and favour flemis discretion ; Sic tidings heard I at the Session. Some is put out of his possession ; Sic tidings heard I at the Session. Some goes to gallows with procession ; Sic tidings heard I at the Session. Some gives for thank, and come for threat; Some givis wordis fair and slie ; In Giving sould Discretion be. That ere the gift delivered be, In Giving sould Discretion be. And for a lood-pick halden is he, In Giving sould Discretion be. Then vice and prodigalitie. In Giving sould Discretion be. And, though the poor for fault2 sould die, In Giving sould Discretion be. And to auld servants list not see, In Giving sould Discretion be. Some gives to men of honestie, In Giving sould Discretion be. Though all the contrair weel knaws he; In Giving sould Discretion be. Some gives to knaw his authoritie, In Giving sould Discretion be. The people to teach and to o'ersee, Of Discretion in Taking. Some takes o'er little authoritie, In Taking sould Discretion be. The clerks takes benefices with brawls, Some of St Peter and some of St Paul's; Tak he the rents, no care has he, In Taking sould Discretion be. In mails and gersomsø raisit o'er hie ; In Taking sould Discretion be. 1 Appreciated. And are unmindful of their profession, The younger at the elder leers : Sic tidings heard I at the Session. Of Discretion in Giving. Some, wardly honour to uphie ; In Giving sould Discretion be. Some gives on prattick for supplie; In Giving sould Discretion be. 1 Whispered. ? Is advanced before a great number. 4 Armpit. 9 Starvation. 3 A large proportion of the strangers who visited Scotland at this early period were probably from Flanders. 4 Complain. 5 Foolish. 6 Rents and fines of entry. 5 Pledge. 6 Hostility. 7 Banishes. 9 Carries. # Nose. 8 Fox. Some merchands taks unleesomel wine, pying a prominent place in the history of his counWhilk maks their packs oft time full thin, try, he died of the plague in London in the year By their succession, as ye may see, 1522. Douglas shines as an allegorical and descripThat ill-won gear 'riches not the kin: tive poet. He wants the vigorous sense, and also In Taking sould Discretion be. the graphic force, of Dunbar ; while the latter is Some taks other mennis tacks,2 always close and nervous, Douglas is soft and verAnd on the puir oppression maks, bose. The genius of Dunbar is so powerful, that And never remeinbers that he maun die, manner sinks beneath it; that of Douglas is so much Till that the gallows gars him rax :3 matter of culture, that manner is its most striking In Taking sould Discretion be. peculiarity. This manner is essentially scholarly. He employs an immense number of words derived Some taks by sea, and some by land, from the Latin, as yet comparatively a novelty in And never fra taking can halá their hand, English composition. And even his descriptions of Till he be tyit up to ane tree ; nature involve many ideas, very beautiful in themAnd syne they gar him understand, In Taking sould Discretion be. selves, and very beautifully expressed, but inappro priate to the situation, and obviously introduced Some wald tak all his neighbour's gear ; merely in accordance with literary fashion. Had he of man as little fear The principal original composition of Douglas is As he has dread that God him see ; a long poem, entitled The Palace of Honour. It was To tak then sould he never forbear : designed as an apologue for the conduct of a king. In Taking sould Discretion be. and therefore addressed to James IV. The poet Some wald tak all this warld on breid ;4 represents himself as seeing, in a vision, a large And yet not satisfied of their need, company travelling towards the Palace of Honour. Through heart unsatiable and greedie ; He joins them, and narrates the particulars of the Some wald tak little, and can not speed : pilgrimage. The well-known Pilgrim's Progress In Taking sould Discretion be. bears so strong a resemblance to this poem, that Great men for taking and oppression, Bunyan could scarcely have been ignorant of it. Are set full famous at the Session, King Hart, the only other long poem of Douglas, And puir takers are hangit hie, presents a metaphorical view of human life. But Shawit for ever, and their succession : the most remarkable production of this author was In Taking sould Discretion be. a translation of Virgil's Æneid into Scottish verse, which he executed in the year 1513, being the first GAVIN DOUGLAS. version of a Latin classic into any British tongue. GAVIN DOUGLAS, born about the year 1474, a It is generally allowed to be a masterly performance, younger son of Archibald, fifth Earl of Angus, was though in too obsolete a language ever to regain its popularity. The original poems, styled prologues, which the translator affixes to each book, are esteemed amongst his happiest pieces. [A postrophe to Honour.] (Original Spelling.) [Minning in May.) While shortly, with the bleezand torch of day, Abulyit in his lemand fresh array, 1 Worthy reward. ? Without equal. 8 Issued from. + Opened. 1 Unlawful. Leases. 3 Till the gallows stretches him. 5 Purple streaks mingled with gold and azure. 4 In its whole breadth. 5 Get high places in the supreme 6 Yellowish brown.. 7 Nostrils. 8 Glittering. court of law. * Part of the prulogue to the 12th book of the Æneid. * Furth of his palace royal ishit Phæbus, So dusty powder upstoursl in every street, With golden crown and visage glorious, While corby gaspit for the fervent heat. Crisp hairs, bricht as chrysolite or topaz; Under the bowis bene in lufely vales, For whase hue micht nane behald his face. Within fermance and parkis close of pales, The busteous buckis rakis furth on raw, The young fawns followand the dun daes, Kids, skippand through, runnis after raes. For to behald, it was ane glore to see In leisurs and on legis, little lambs The stabled windis, and the calmed sea, Full tait and trig socht bletand to their dams. The soft season, the firmament serene, On salt streams wolk? Dorida and Thetis, The loune illuminate air and firth amene. By rinnand strandis, Nymphis and Naiadis, And lusty Flora did her bloomis spread Sic as we clepe wenches and damysels, l'nder the feet of Phoebus' sulyart? steed; In gersy graves3 wanderand by spring wells ; The swarded soil embrode with selcouth3 hues, Of bloomed branches and flowers white and red, | Wood and forest, obnumbrate with bews.4 Plettand their lusty chaplets for their head. Tuwers, turrets, kiruals, and pinnacles hie, Some sang ring-songes, dances, leids, and rounds. Of kirks, castles, and ilk fair citie, With voices shrill, while all the dale resounds. Stude painted, every fane, phiol,6 and stage,7 Whereso they walk into their caroling, (pon the plain ground by their awn umbrage. For amorous lays does all the rockis ring. Of Eolus north blasts havand no dreid, Ane sang, * The ship sails over the salt faem, The soil spread her braid bosom on-breid; Will bring the merchants and my leman hame.°5 The corn crops and the beir new-braird Some other sings, ‘I will be blythe and licht, To leis7 their pain, and plein their jolly woe. With heartis pensive the lang summer's morrow. Had in their pasture eat and nip away; Some ballads list indite of his lady ; And blissful blossoms in the bloomed yerd, Some livis in hope ; and some all utterly Submits their heids to the young sun's safeguard. Despairit is, and sae quite out of grace, Iry leaves rank o'erspread the barınkin wall; His purgatory he finds in every place. The bloomed hawthorn clad his pikis all; Dame Nature's menstrals, on that other part, Furth of fresh bourgeonsll the wine grapes ying12 Their blissful lay intoning every art, Endland the trellis did on twistis hing; And all small fowlis singis on the spray, The loukit buttons on the gemmed trees Welcome the lord of licht, and lampe of day, O'erspreadand leaves of nature's tapestries ; Welcome fosterer of tender herbis green, Soft grassy verdure after balmy shouirs, Welcome quickener of flourist flouirs sheen, On curland stalkis smiland to their fouirs. Welcome support of every rute and vein, The daisy did on-breid her crownal small, Welcome comfort of all kind fruit and grain, And every fiouer unlappit in the dale. Welcome the birdis beild upon the brier, Welcome master and ruler of the year, Welcome repairer of woods, trees, and bews, Welcome depainter of the bloomit meads, Heavenly lillies, with lockerand topris white, Welcome the life of every thing that spreads Opened and shew their crestis redemite. Welcome storer of all kind bestial, Ane paradise it seemed to draw near Welcome be thy bricht beamis, gladdand all. * JOHN SKELTON. John Skelton flourished as a poet in the earlier Searchand by kind ane place where they should lay. part of the reign of Henry VIII. He was rector of Phirbus' red fowl,13 his cural crest can steer, Dysse, in Norfolk, and chiefly wrote satires upon his Oft streikand furth his heckle, crawand cleer. own order, for which he was at one time compelled Amid the wortis and the rutis gent to fly from his charge. The pasquils of Skelton are Pickand his meat in alleys where he went, copious and careless effusions of coarse humour, disHis wivis Toppa and Partolet him by playing a certain share of imagination, and much A bird all-time that hauntis bigamy. rancour ; but he could also assume a more amiable The painted pownel4 pacand with plumes gym, and poetical manner, as in the following canzonet : Kest up his tail ane proud plesand wheel-rim, To Mistress Margaret Hussey. Merry Margaret, As midsummer flower, Sere small fowls, workand crafty nests, Gentle as falcon, Endlang the hedges thick, and on rank aiks Or hawk of the tower; Ilk bird rejoicand with their mirthful makes. With solace and gladness, In comers and clear fenestres of glass, Much mirth and no madness, Full busily Arachne weavand was, All good and no badness; To knit her nettis and her wobbis slie, So joyously, Therewith to catch the little midge or flie. So maidenly, So womanly, 1 Ocean. ? Sultry 3 Uncommon. Boughs. Her demeaning, • Battlements. 6 Cupola. 7 Storey & Earth. 9 Meadow. 10 Cool vapours. 1 Rises in clouds. 2 Walked. & Grassy groves. • Laye 13 Young. 18 The cock. 14 The peacock. 6 Songs then popular. 6 Whisper. 7 Relieve. 8 Shelter. 11 Sprouts. In ererything, correctness of style, and purity of expression; he Far, far passing was tlie first to introduce the sonnet and blank verse That I can indite, into English poetry. The gentle and melancholy Or suffice to write, pathos of his style is well exemplified in the verses Of merry Margaret, which he wrote during his captivity in Windsor As midsimmer flower, Castle, when about to yield his life a sacrifice to tyrannical caprice : Prisoner in Windsor, he recounteth his Pleasure there passed. So cruel prison how could betide, alas ! As proud Windsor ? where I, in lust and joy, With a king's son, my childish years did pass, In greater feast than Priam's son of Troy: Where each sweet place returns a taste full sour! The large green courts where we were wont to hove, With eyes cast up into the Maiden Tower, And easy sighs such as folk draw in love. The stately seats, the ladies bright of hue ; The dances short, long tales of great delight, With words and looks that tigers could but rue, Where each of us did plead the other's right. EARL OF SURREY. The palm-play, where, despoiled for the game; From Chaucer, or at least from James L., the Have missed the ball and got sight of our dame, With dazed eyes oft we by gleams of love, writers of verse in England had displayed little of the grace and elevation of true poetry. At length To bait her eyes, which kept the leads above. a worthy successor of those poets appeared in The gravel ground, with sleeves tied on the helm Thomas Howard, eldest son of the Duke of Norfolk, Of foaming horse,2 with swords and friendly hearts; and usually denominated the EARL OF SURREY. With cheer, as though one should another whelm, This nobleman was born in 1516. He was educated Where we have fought, and chased oft with darts; at Windsor, in company with a natural son of the With silver, drops the mead yet spread for ruth, In active games of nimbleness and strength, Where we did strain, trained with swarnıs of youth, Our tender limbs that yet shot up in length: Of pleasant plaint, and of our ladies' praise, What hope of speed what dread of long delays : With reins availed 3 and swift ybreathed horse ; With cry of hounds and merry blasts between, Where we did chase the fearful hart of force. Wherewith, alas, reviveth in my breast, The pleasant dreams, the quiet bed of rest : The wanton talk, the divers change of play, Wherewith we passed the winter night away. The tears berain my cheeks of deadly hue, The which, as soon as sobbing sighs, alas, king, and in early life became accomplished, not only Upsupped have, thus I my plaint renew : in the learning of the time, but in all kinds of courtly O place of bliss ! renewer of my woes, and chivalrous exercises. Having travelled into Italy, he became a devoted student of the poets of whom in thy walls thou dost each night enclose; Give me accounts, where is my noble fere ;4 that country--Dante, Petrarch, Boccaccio, and Ariosto—and formed his own poetical style upon theirs. To other leef, but unto me most dear: His poetry is chiefly amorous, and, notwithstanding Echo, alas ! that doth my sorrow rue, his having been married in early life, much of it con- Returns thereto a hollow sound of plaint. sists of the praises of a lady whom he names Geral. Thus I alone, where all my freedom grew, dine, supposed to have been a daughter of the Earl In prison pine with bondage and restraint, of Kildare. Surrey was a gallant soldier as well as a poet, and conducted an important expedition, in And with remembrance of the greater grief 1542, for the devastation of the Scottish borders. To banish the less, I find my chief relief. ve finally fell under the displeasure of Henry VIII., 1 Hover; loiter. and was beheaded on Tower Hill in 1547. The ! A lover tied the sleeve of his mistress on the head of his poetry of Surrey is remarkable for a flowing melody, horse. 3 Reins droppod. * Companion. 6 Agreeable. |