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R POETS OF THE ANCIENT BRITONS. (_For the Mirror._) Hail! to the Bards, who sweetly sung The praises of dead peers In lofty strains, thus to prolong Their fame for many years. LUCAN. This sect appears to have descended from _Bardus_, son of _Druis_, king of Britain; he was much esteemed by the people for inventing songs and music, in praise of meritorious actions; and established an order, in which such of the people were admitted as excelled in his art, distinguishing them by the name of _bards_, after his own name. Julius Caesar reports, that on his arrival he found some of them. Their business was to record the noble exploits of their warriors in songs and ditties, which they sung to their instruments at the solemn feasts of their chiefs; and in such high estimation were they held, that, when two armies were ready to engage, if a bard stept in between them, both sides delayed the attack till he was out of danger. As these bards were neither repugnant to the Roman authority nor the Christian religion, they alone, above all other sects, were suffered to continue long after the birth of Christ; and it is said that some of them are still to be found in the isle of Bardsey, (so named from them). _Wisbech_. T.C. * * * * * THE SCOTTISH PEASANT'S LAMENT. BY THE AUTHOR OF AHAB. (_For the Mirror_.) Oh! had I my home by the side of the glen, In a spot far remote from the dwellings of men, Wi' my ain bonnie Jeannie to sit by my side, I'd nae envy auld Reekie her splendor and pride. The song of the mavis should wake me at morn, And the grey breasted lintie reply from the thorn; While the clear brook should run in the sun's yellow beam, And my days glide as calmly along as its stream. But here, in the city's dull streets, I must live, Nae Jeannie her arms for my pillow to give; Nae mavis, nae lintie, to sing from the tree, Nae streamlet to murmur its music to me. O better, by far, had I never been born, Or my head laid in rest in the glen 'neath the thorn; Since the songs of my birds I no longer can hear, Nor in slumber recline by the side of my dear. Now, all that makes life still endured, is the dream, That comes o'er my soul, of the bird and the stream; And the love of my Jean--when that vision shall close, In the silence of death let my ashes repose. Yet then, even then, my sad spirit will be, By
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