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38 EDINBURGH PAST AND PRESENT. the West Meadow, have been for hundreds of years the favourite resort for golf players. This forms the north-western portion of the old ‘ Borough Wuir,’ on which the Scottish army encamped on the eve of their fatal march to Flodden. To the iouth-east there is a walk between deep hedges, long and familiarly known as the Lover’s Loan. Apart from its old associations and present uses the Meadows have always presented peculiar charms for musing and solitary men,-for students, for clericals, for actors, for strangers, and every soh of accomplished idlers, as well as every variety of professional men. Here we have overheard the player rehearsing his part for the evening theatre; the wild-eyed poetic youth reciting Byron, or reading Shelley or Coleridge himself (as he thought) alone ; ’ the desperate and suicide-revolving man uttering his broken and frenzied soliloquies; the student conning his Tacitus, or repeating his sermon for the Presbytery ; the lover revolving a sonnet to his mistress’s eyebrow or walking at her side; the wretched waif, with madness and hell contending for the mastery over his miserable face, emaciated figure, and tattered attire, as he elbows without scruple or begs without shame from the doctor, the divine, the master of the New Academy or High School, the professor, or the judge who have sought recreation but not found solitude in the Meadows. Here, too, was daily to be viewed a scene, whichin its varied beauty and sublimity, seemed to suit all and soothe many who frequented it with its fresh green pastures, where in full spring or summer tide ‘ You scarce could see the grass for flowers ; ’ its trees from under whose shadow your soul ‘ Floated and mingled far away With the warm winds of the summer day ; ’ its cool walks, where you felt yourself at times entirely alone, and could revel unseen in Hazlitt’S First Acpzlaiirtance with PO&, and in Shelley’s translations from Faust, bound together in the one blue cover of the Liberal; and with constant feeling of thk neighbourhood and occasional flashing out of the presence of Arthur’s Seat, Salisbury Crags, and the distant Pentlands leaning like wearied Titans against the south-western sky. (We have in Mr. Paton’s delightful drawing a glimpse of the-avenue that unites the Meadows and Bruntsfield Links.) To the old Borough Muir belonged the ground now laid out so beautifully as the Grange Cemetery. Here slumbers the fiery dust of Chalrners, and
Volume 11 Page 60
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Volume 11 Page 61
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