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Poem by David Macbeth Moir


The Ruins of Seton Chapel


THE BEAUTIFUL, the powerful, and the proud,
The many, and the mighty, yield to Time,—
Time that, with noiseless pace and viewless wing,
Glides on and on,—the despot of the world.

  With what a glory the refulgent sun,	
Far from the crimson portals of the west,
Sends back his parting radiance: round and round
Stupendous walls encompass me, and throw
The ebon outlines of their traceries down
Upon the dusty floor: the eastern piles
Receive the checkered shadows of the west
In mimic lattice-work and sable hues.
Rich in its mellowness, the sunshine bathes
The sculptured epitaphs of barons dead
Long ere this breathing generation moved,
Or wantoned in the garish eye of noon.
The sad and sombre trophies of decay,—
The prone effigies, carved in marble mail;
The fair Ladye with crossed palms on her breast;
The tablet gray with mimic roses bound;
The angled bones, the sand-glass, and the scythe,—
These, and the stone-carved cherubs that impend
With hovering wings, and eyes of fixedness,
Gleam down the ranges of the solemn aisle,
Dull amid the crimson of the waning light.

  This is a season and a scene to hold
Discourse and purifying monologue,
Before the silent spirit of the Past!
Power built this house to Prayer,—’t was earthly power,
And vanished,—see its sad mementos round!
The gillyflowers upon each fractured arch,
And from the time-worn crevices, look down,
Blooming where all is desolate. With tufts
Clustering and dark, and light green trails between,
The ivy hangs perennial; yellow-flowered,
The dandelion shoots its juicy stalks
Over the thin transparent blades of grass,
Which bend and flicker, even amid the calm;
And, O, sad emblems of entire neglect,
In rank luxuriance, the nettles spread
Behind the massy tablatures of death,
Hanging their pointed leaves and seedy stalks
Above the graves, so lonesome and so low,
Of famous men, now utterly unknown,
Yet whose heroic deeds were, in their day,
The theme of loud acclaim,—when Seton’s arm
In power with Stuart and with Douglas vied.
Clad in their robes of state, or graith of war,
A proud procession, o’er the stage of time,
As century on century wheeled away,
They passed; and, with the escutcheons mouldering o’er
The little spot, where voicelessly they sleep,
Their memories have decayed; nay, even their bones
Are crumbled down to undistinguished dust,
Mocking the Herald, who, with pompous tones,
Would set their proud array of quarterings forth,
Down to the days of Chrystal and De Bruce.



David Macbeth Moir


David Macbeth Moir's other poems:
  1. Lines Written in the Isle of Bute
  2. Thomson’s Birthplace
  3. Langside
  4. Kelburn Castle
  5. An Evening Sketch


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