首页
Poems and Songs of Robert Burns
on glenriddell's fox breaking his chain a fragment, 1791. thou, liberty, thou art my theme; not such as idle poets dream, who trick thee up a heathen goddess that a fantastic cap and rod has; such stale conceits are poor and silly; i paint thee out, a highland filly, a sturdy, stubborn, handsome dapple, as sleek's a mouse, as round's an apple, that when thou pleasest canst do wonders; but when thy luckless rider blunders, or if thy fancy should demur there, wilt break thy neck ere thou go further. these things premised, i sing a fox, was caught among his native rocks, and to a dirty kennel chained, how he his liberty regained. glenriddell! whig without a stain, a whig in principle and grain, could'st thou enslave a free-born creature, a native denizen of nature? how could'st thou, with a heart so good, (a better ne'er was sluiced with blood!) nail a poor devil to a tree, that ne'er did harm to thine or thee? the staunchest whig glenriddell was, quite frantic in his country's cause; and oft was reynard's prison passing, and with his brother-whigs canvassing the rights of men, the powers of women, with all the dignity of freemen. sir reynard daily heard debates of princes', kings', and nations' fates, wm.HzgjJX.cOM