Poems (Proctor)/Robert Burns

ROBERT BURNS. (Written for the Burns Centennial, Jan. 25, 1859, and reprinted at the request of friends in Scotland.)
When the frost had killed the daisiesAnd the hills were white with snow,Robert Burns was born in AyrshireJust a hundred years ago.Cold about the cottage ingleWhen the cloudy night fell down,Blew the wind from off the moorlandsWhere the heath was crisp and brownBut the boy was summer's darling,Made of music, love, and fire,And the winter could not harm him,Let it wreak its utmost ire.Now a hundred years are numbered,Yet we hail the happy mornWhen, amid the Ayrshire snow-wreaths,Robert Burns, the man, was born!And King of Hearts he reigns to-day,While the noble throng around him,God be praised that a man has swayAnd the wide world's love has crowned him! With his head upon her bosomIn the firelight's ruddy glow,Plaintive songs his mother sang him,—Airs of Scotland long ago;And he thrilled at tales of heroes,Or of ghosts and warlocks grim,Till he felt a chilly horrorCreeping over every limb,And he shuddered as the tempestShook the window with its moan,Lest the sobbing and the sighingWere a murdered victim's groan;—Now his name is linked with story;Now his life is set to song;All that Scotland has of gloryFloats with Robert Burns along!
So the boy grew older, lovingEvery wild and winsome thingFrom the rush of stormy watersTo the lark upon the wing;He a lark, too, warbling upwardFrom the heather's purple guise,Finding sweetest inspirationIn the light of woman's eyes.Dante shrined his Beatrice,Laura lives in Petrarch's rhyme,—Tenderer praise have Scottish maidensDown through all the coming time! Every woman loves the singerFrom the peasant to the queen,For the sake of "Highland Mary,"For the sake of "Bonny Jean."
How he longed for better knowledge,How he yearned for noble fame,He, the ploughman, the unlettered,Born to bear a humble name;—(O my Poet! thou didst cast itIn the furrow of the yearsThat "A man's a man for a' that,"Thou didst water it with tears;Now the harvest time is coming,Now the fields are white with grain,Thou, the sower, art the reaper,Binding sheaves on every plain!)Ah! the human soul is deeperThan the lore he never knew,So the lays he sung shall echoAll the listening ages through.
Tell us not of mighty princesRuling proud o'er shores and seas;Robert Burns has kingdom granderThan the stateliest of these!Theirs by mountain chains is boundedOr a river's winding line;His sweeps broad from tropic palm-treesTo the farthest polar pine! Scotland (as a gem she wears it,)Dowered with song his lowly birth,And at last his meed, immortal,Is the homage of the earth.Pardon sins he sorrowed over,He who light on daisies trod;Say, "He was of man the lover,"—Leave him to the love of God!
Slow, but surely, comes the morning;Lo! the east is flushed with rose,And the wind so chill at dawningWith a warmer current blows.Truth at last shall be the victorBearing Freedom in its van,While the watchword on its bannerIs "The Brotherhood of Man."Thrones and crowns and jeweled sceptresLike forgotten toys will be;Only he who loves his fellowsShall the heights of honor see.Then, recounting lives of heroes,As their memory backward turns,Truest Prophet, sweetest Singer,Men shall reckon Robert Burns!And King of Hearts he'll reign that dayWhile the noble throng around him;—God be praised that a man has swayAnd the wide world's love has crowned him!