The Complete Poems of Sir Walter Scott. Walter Scott

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The Complete Poems of Sir Walter Scott - Walter Scott


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did agree,

       To bless fair Clara’s constancy;

       Who cannot, unless I relate,

       Paint to her mind the bridal’s state;

       That Wolsey’s voice the blessing spoke,

       More, Sands, and Denny, passed the joke:

       That bluff King Hal the curtain drew,

       And Katherine’s hand the stocking threw;

       And afterwards, for many a day,

       That it was held enough to say,

       In blessing to a wedded pair,

       “Love they like Wilton and like Clare!”

       L’envoy—to The Reader

      Why then a final note prolong,

       Or lengthen out a closing song,

       Unless to bid the gentles speed,

       Who long have listed to my rede?

       To statesmen grave, if such may deign

       To read the minstrel’s idle strain,

       Sound head, clean hand, and piercing wit,

       And patriotic heart—as Pitt!

       A garland for the hero’s crest,

       And twined by her he loves the best.

       To every lovely lady bright,

       What can I wish but faithful knight?

       To every faithful lover too,

       What can I wish but lady true?

       And knowledge to the studious sage; -

       And pillow to the head of age.

       To thee, dear schoolboy, whom my lay

       Has cheated of thy hour of play,

       Light task, and merry holiday!

       To all, to each, a fair good night,

       And pleasing dreams, and slumbers light!

      THE LADY OF THE LAKE

       Table of Contents

       Preface

       Argument

       Introduction

       Canto First

       Canto Second

       Canto Third

       Canto Fourth

       Canto Fifth

       Canto Sixth

      Preface

       Table of Contents

      When I first saw Mr. Osgood’s beautiful illustrated edition of The Lady of the Lake, I asked him to let me use some of the cuts in a cheaper annotated edition for school and household use; and the present volume is the result.

      The text of the poem has given me unexpected trouble. When I edited some of Gray’s poems several years ago, I found that they had not been correctly printed for more than half a century; but in the case of Scott I supposed that the text of Black’s so-called “Author’s Edition” could be depended upon as accurate. Almost at the start, however, I detected sundry obvious misprints in one of the many forms in which this edition is issued, and an examination of others showed that they were as bad in their way. The “Shilling” issue was no worse than the costly illustrated one of 1853, which had its own assortment of slips of the type. No two editions that I could obtain agreed exactly in their readings. I tried in vain to find a copy of the editio princeps (1810) in Cambridge and Boston, but succeeded in getting one through a London bookseller. This I compared, line by line, with the Edinburgh edition of 1821 (from the Harvard Library), with Lockhart’s first edition, the “Globe” edition, and about a dozen others English and American. I found many misprints and corruptions in all except the edition of 1821, and a few even in that. For instance in i. 217 Scott wrote “Found in each cliff a narrow bower,” and it is so printed in the first edition; but in every other that I have seen “cliff” appears in place of clift,, to the manifest injury of the passage. In ii. 685, every edition that I have seen since that of 1821 has “I meant not all my heart might say,” which is worse than nonsense, the correct reading being “my heat.” In vi. 396, the Scottish “boune” (though it occurs twice in other parts of the poem) has been changed to “bound” in all editions since 1821; and, eight lines below, the old word “barded” has become “barbed.” Scores of similar corruptions are recorded in my Notes, and need not be cited here.

      I have restored the reading of the first edition, except in cases where I have no doubt that the later reading is the poet’s own correction or alteration. There are obvious misprints in the first edition which Scott himself overlooked (see on ii. 115, 217,, Vi. 527, etc.), and it is sometimes difficult to decide whether a later reading—a change of a plural to a singular, or like trivial variation—is a misprint or the author’s correction of an earlier misprint. I have done the best I could, with the means at my command, to settle these questions, and am at least certain that the text as I give it is nearer right than in any edition since 1821 As all the variae lectiones are recorded in the Notes, the reader who does not approve of the one I adopt can substitute that which he prefers.

      I have retained all Scott’s Notes (a few of them have been somewhat abridged) and all those added by Lockhart. My own I have made as concise as possible. There are, of course, many of them which many of my readers will not need, but I think there are none that may not be of service, or at least of interest, to some of them; and I hope that no one will turn to them for help without finding it.

      Scott is much given to the use of Elizabethan words and constructions, and I have quoted many “parallelisms” from Shakespeare and his contemporaries. I believe I have referred to my edition of Shakespeare in only a single instance (on iii. 17), but teachers and others who have that edition will find many additional illustrations in the Notes on the passages cited.

      While correcting the errors of former editors, I may have overlooked some of my own. I am already indebted to the careful proofreaders of the University Press for the detection of occasional slips in quotations or references; and I shall be very grateful to my readers for a memorandum of any others that they may discover.

      Cambridge, June 23, 1883..

       Table of Contents

      The scene of the following Poem is laid chiefly in the vicinity of Loch Katrine, in the Western Highlands of Perthshire. The time of Action includes Six Days, and the transactions of each Day occupy a Canto.

       Table of Contents


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