In darkness we’ll meet, and in silence remain,’ |
Ilk word now and look now, were mockful or vain; |
Ae mute moment morne the dream that misled, |
Syne sinder as cauld as the leaves that we tread. |
“This ditty was sung in the weaving shops, and when in the warbling of one who could lend a good voice to the occasion, and could coax the words and air into a sort of social understanding, then was it a song.”
Thom had no furtherance for many years after this first appearance. It was hard work at all times to win bread; when work failed he was obliged to wander on foot elsewhere to procure it, losing his youngest child in a barn from the hardships endured one cold night of this untimely “flitting;” his admirable wife too died prematurely from the same cause. At one time he was obliged to go with his little daughter and his flute, (on which he is an excellent performer,) into the streets as a mendicant, to procure bread for his family. This last seems to have been far more cruel than any hardship to the honest pride native to the Scotchman. But there is another side. Like Prince, he was happy, as men in a rank more favoured by fortune seldom are, in his choice of a wife. He had an equal friend, a refined love, a brave, gentle, and uncomplaining companion in every sorrow, and wrote from his own experience the following lines:
THEY SPEAK O’ WYLES. |
Air—“Gin a bodie meet a bodie.” |
They speak o’ wyles in woman’s smiles, |
An’ ruin in her e’e— |
I ken they bring a pang at whiles |
That’s unco sair to dree; |
But mind ye this, the half-ta’en kiss, |
The first fond fa’in’ tear, |
Is, Heaven kens, fu’ sweet amends |
An’ tints o’ heaven here. |