Page:Scotish Descriptive Poems - Leyden (1803).djvu/50

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CLYDE;
Formed thy soft breast to melt at human woe, Generous to cherish worth, and wise to know; Each finer passion of the breast to move, To awe with virtue, and inspire with love; With native goodness all mankind to charm; With love thy noble Hyndford's soul to warm; 20This tribute of a humble muse regard, Who scorns to flatter, or to court reward; Who, proud to mark with partial eye the fair, Still makes their virtue, and their charms her care; But chiefly joys to pour her peaceful strains On Clyde's delightful banks and fruitful plains. From one vast mountain bursting on the day, Tweed, Clyde, and Annan urge their separate way. To Anglia's shores bright Tweed and Annan run, That seeks the rising, this the setting sun; 30Where raged the Border war, and either flood Now blushed with Scotish, now with English blood; Both lands by turns their heroes lost deplore: But bleft Britannia knows these woes no more. Clyde far from scenes of strife and horror fled, And through more peaceful fields his waters led: But ere he issued from their deep abodes, He sagely thus addressed his brother floods: