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Old John

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Old John, if I could sit with you a day     At Abrams feet upon the asphodel,     There, while the grand old patriarch dreamed away,     To you my lifes whole progress I would tell;     To you would give accompt of what is well,     What ill performed; how used the trusted talents,     Since last we heard the sound of Braddan bell,          "A wheen bit callants."     You were not of our kin nor of our race,     Old John, nor of our church, nor of our speech;     Yet what of strength, or truth, or tender grace     I owe, twas you that taught me. Born to teach     All nobleness, whereof divines may preach,     And pedagogues may wag their tongues of iron,     I have no doubt you could have taught the leech         That taught old Chiron.     For so it is, the nascent souls may wait,     And lose the flexile aptness of their years;     But if one meets them at the opening gate     Who fans their hopes and modifies their fears,     Then thrives the soul : the various growth appears,     Or meet for sunny blooms or tempests grappling,     No wind uproots, drought quells, frost nips, blight sears         The well-fed sapling.     Old John, do you remember how you ran     Before the tide that choked the narrowing firth,     When Cumbria took you, ere you came to Man,     From distant Galloway that saw your birth?     Methinks I hear you with athletic mirth     Deride the baffled sleuth-hounds of the ocean,     As on you sped, not having where on earth         You were a notion.     What joy was mine I what straining of the knees     To test the peril of that strenuous mile,     To hear the clamour of the yelping seas!     And step for step to challenge you the while,     And see the sunshine of your constant smile!     I loved you that you dared the splendid danger;     I loved you that you landed on our Isle         A helpless stranger.     Old John, Old John! the air of heaven is calm,     No ripple curls upon the glassy sea;     But, as you wave on high the golden palm,     Though love subdues the thrill of victory,     You must remember how at Trollaby     Your five-foot-one of sinew tough and pliant     Threw Illiam of the Union Mills, and he         Was quite a giant.     O wholesome food for keen and passionate hearts,     Tempering the fine pugnacity of youth     With timely culture of all generous arts,     Rejecting menial tricks and wiles uncouth!     Old John, your soul was valiant for the truth;     But ever twas a chivalrous contention:     Love whispered justice, and the mild-eyed ruth         Kissed grim dissension.     Old John, if in the battle of this life     I have not sought your precepts to fulfil,     If ever I have stirred ignoble strife,     If ever struck foul blow, as bent to kill,     Not conquer, by the love you bear me still,     O! intercede that I may be forgiven.     Stern Protestant, not pray to saints? I will         To you in Heaven.     Old John, you must have much to do indeed     If I am all forgotten from your mind.     Ah! blame me not: I cannot hold a creed     That would impute you selfish or unkind.     Ask Luther, Calvin; ask the old man blind     That painted Eden; ask the grim Confession     Of Augsburg what black error lurks behind         Such intercession.     Old John, you were an interceder here;     For me you interceded with great cries.     How have I stood with mingled love and fear,     And not a little merriment! My eyes     Beheld you not, Old John; your groans and sighs     And gasps I heard by listening at the gable,     Inside of which you knelt, and shook the skies,         But first the stable.     It was a mighty "wrastling" with the Lord:     The hot June air was feverish with the heat     And agony of that great monochord;     Our old horse, standing on his patient feet,     Ripped from the rack the hay that smelt so sweet;     And, when there came a pause, their breath soft pouring     I heard the cows; while prone upon "the street"         Our swine were snoring.     You prayed for all, but for my father most,     "The Maister," as you called him, that on rock     Of sure foundation he might keep the post,     And (by a change of metaphor) might stock     Gods heritage with vines to endure the shock     Pf time and sense, being planted with his planting;     That so (another trope) of all the flock         Not one be wanting.     Old John, I think you must have met him there,     My father, somewhere in the fields of rest:     From doubt enlarged, released from mortal care,     Earths troubles heave no more his tranquil breast.     O! tell him what you once to me confessed,     That, all the varied modes of rhetorick trying,     You ever liked "the Maisters" sermons best         When he was crying.     Old John, do you remember how we picked     Potatoes for you in the days of old?     Bright flashed the grep, and with its sharp prong pricked     The pink-fleshed tubers. We were blithe and bold.     Dear John, what jokes you cracked! what tales you told!     So garrulous to cheer your "little midges,"     What time the setting sun shot shafts of gold         Athwart the ridges!     And when the season changed, and hay was mown,     You weighed the balance of our emulous powers,     How "Maister" Hugh was strong the ponderous cone     To pitchfork; but to build the fragrant towers     Was none like "Maister Wulliam." Blessed hours!     The empty cart we young ones scaled, glad riders     And screamed at beetles exiled from their bowers,         And homeless spiders.     But when the corn was ripe, and truculent churls     Forbade us, as we culled the cushaged stook,     Your eye flashed fire, your voice was loosed in skins     Of rage. Old Covenanter, how could you look     The very genius of the pastoral crook,     Tythe-twined, established, dominant? "In our ashes     Still live our wonted fires." You could not brook,         You said, "their fashes."     A perfect treasury of rustic lore     You were to me, Old John: how nature thrives,     In horse or cow, their points; if less or more     Convex the grunters spine; the cackling wives     Of Chanticleer how marked; the bird that dives,     And he that gobbles reddening, all the crises     You told, and ventures of their simple lives,         Also their prices.     The matchless tales your own great Wizard penned     To us were patent when you gave the key:     I knew Montrose; stern Clavers was my friend;     I carved the tombs with Old Mortality;     I sailed with Hatterick on the stormy sea;     Curled Cavalier, and Roundhead atrabiliar,     The shifts of Caleb Balderstone, to me         Were quite familiar.     But most of all, where all was most, I liked     To hear the story of the martyrs doom:     The camp remote by stubborn hands bedyked;     The bones that bleached amid the heather bloom;     The gray-haired sire; the intrepid maid for whom     Old Soiway piled his waters monumental,     And gave that glorious heart a glorious tomb         Worth Scotias rental.     Old John, such stories were to me a proof     That neath the dimpling of the temporal tides     A power is working still in our behoof     A primal power that in the world abides.     In virgins hearts it lives, and tender brides     Confess it. Veil your crests, ye powers of evil!     It is an older power, and it derides         Your vain upheaval.     Old John, do you remember Injebreck,     And that fine day we went to get a load     Of perfumed larch? From many a ruddy fleck     The resin oozed and dropped upon the road;     And ever as we trudged you taught the code     Traditional of woodcraft. Night came sparkling     With all her gems, and devious to Tromode         The stream ran darkling.     But we the westward height laborious clomb;     Then from Mount Rule descended on the Strang,     And saw afar the pleasant lights of home,     Whereat your cheering speech, "Well nae be lang"!     Also a wondrous chirp of eld you sang,     Till, when we came to Braddan Bridge, the clinging     Of that inveterate awe enforced a pang         That stopped the singing.     Yet when we gained the vantage of the hill,     And breathed more freely on the gentler slope,     Then quickly we recovered, as men will:     For Lifes sweet buoyancy with Death can cope,     Being strung by Nature for that genial scope:     And so, when you had ceased from your dejection,     You talked with me of God, and faith, and hope,         And resurrection.     Twas thus I learned to love the various man,     Rich patterned, woven of all generous dyes,     Like to the tartan of some noble clan,     Blending the colours that alternate rise.     So ever tis refreshing to mine eyes     To look beyond conventions flimsy trammel,     And see the native tints, in anywise,         Of Gods enamel.     Old John, you were not of the Calvinists;"     The doctrine o yElaction," you declared,     You gentlest of all gentle Methodists,     "A saul-destroying doctrine."     Whoso dared Gods mercy limit, he must be prepared     For something awful, not propounded clearly,     But dark as deepest doom that Dante bared,         Or very nearly.     On Sunday morning early to the "class,"     Then Matins, as its called in ritual puff     Correct, then Evensong, but let that pass:     Our curate frowns. Nor then had you enough;     But, with your waistcoat pocket full of snuff,     You scorned the flesh, suppressed the stomachs clamour,     And went where you could get "the rael stuff"         Absolved from grammar.     And who shall blame you, John?     Our prayers are good,     Compact of precious fragments, passion-clips     Of many souls, cemented with the blood     Of suffering. So we kiss them with the lips     Of awful love; but when the irregular grips     Of zeal constrain the cleric breast or laic,     Into a thousand fiery shreds it rips         Our old mosaic.     And so it was with you, Old John!     The form Was excellent; but you were timely nursed     Upon a Cameronian lap, the storm     Of that great strife inherited: the thirst     For God was in you from the very first!     The rushing flood, the energy ecstatic,     Oerwhelmed you that you could not choose but burst         All bonds prelatic.     No gentler soul eer took its earthward flight     From Heavens high towers, or clove the ethereal blue     With softer wings, or full of purer light,     Sweet Saint Theresa, bathed in virgin dew,     Your sister was; but Jenny Geddes was too!     The false Archbishop feared the accents surly     Of your firm voice, you were John Knox, and you         Balfour of Burley.     Then is it wonderful in me you found     Disciple apt for every changing mood?     I also had a root in Scottish ground.     No tale of ancient wrong my spirit wooed     In vain: I loved the splendid fortitude,     Although we served in different battalions,     Your folk were Presbyterians, mine were lewd         Episcopalians.     What joy it was to you the day I came     To visit that dear home, no longer mine!     I sat belated, having seen the flame     Of sunset flash from well-known windows.     Nine Was struck upon the clock, and yet no sign     Of my departure; then some admiration     Of what I purposed; then I could divine         A consultation.     That I should sleep with you was their intent,     And so we slept, being comrades old and tried     It was to me a very sacrament,     As you lay hushed and reverent at my side.     Your comely portance filled my soul with pride     To think how human dignity surpasses     The estimate of those who "cant abide         The lower classes."     And, severed by a curtain on a string,     Slept Robert, and his wife, your daughter, slept;     Slept little Beenie, and the bright-eyed thing     You Maggie called, she to her mother crept     And snuggled in the dark. The night wind swept     "Aboon the thatch"; came dawn, and touched each rafter     With tongue of gold; then from the bed I leapt         As light as laughter.     But I must "break my fast" before I went:     And so I sat, and shared the pleasant meal;     And all were up, and happy, and content;     And last you prayed. May Fashion neer repeal     That self-respect, those manners pure and leal     My countrymen, I charge you never stain them;     But, as you love your Islands noblest weal,         Guard and maintain them.     O faithfullest! my debt to you is long:     Lifes grave complexity around me grows.     From you it comes if in the busy throng     Some friends I have, and have not any foes;     And even now, when purple morning glows,     And I am on the hills, a night-worn watchman,     I see you in the centre of the rose,         Dear, brave, old Scotchman!

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"Old John, if I could sit with you a day..."

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