Then said Launcelot the tall, "Bring the chargers from
their stall;
Lead them straight unto the hall, down below:
Draw your weapons from your side, fling the gates asunder
wide,
And together we shall ride
On the foe!"
Then Provan knew full well, as he leaped into his selle,
That few would 'scape to tell how they fared;
And Gilkison and Nares, both mounted on their mares,
Looked terrible as bears,
All prepared.
With his bloodhounds in the leash, stood the iron-sinewed
Neish,
And the falchion of Dalgleish glittered bright—
"Now, wake the trumpet's blast; and, comrades, follow
fast;
Smite them down unto the last!"
Cried the knight.
In the cumbered yard without, there was shriek, and yell,
and shout,
As the warriors wheeled about, all in mail.
On the miserable kerne fell the death-strokes stiff and stern,
As the deer treads down the fern,
In the vale!
Saint Mungo be my guide! It was goodly in that tide
To see the Bogle ride in his haste;
He accompanied each blow with a cry of "Ha!" or
"Ho!"
And always cleft the foe
To the waist.
"George of Gorbals—craven lord! thou didst threat me
with the cord;
Come forth and brave my sword, if you dare!"
But he met with no reply, and never could descry
The glitter of his eye
Anywhere.
Ere the dawn of morning shone, all the Gorbaliers were
down,
Like a field of barley mown in the ear:
It had done a soldier good to see how Provan stood,
With Neish all bathed in blood,
Panting near.
"Now ply ye to your tasks—go carry down those casks,
And place the empty flasks on the floor;
George of Gorbals scarce will come, with trumpet and
with drum,
To taste our beer and rum
Any more!"
So they plied them to their tasks, and they carried down
the casks,
And replaced the empty flasks on the floor;
But pallid for a week was the cellar-master's cheek,.
For he swore he heard a shriek
Through the door.
When the merry Christmas came, and the Yule-log lent
its flame
To the face of squire and dame in the hall,
The cellarer went down to tap October brown,
Which was rather of renown
'Mongst them all.