Excerpt from The Feeling for Nature in Scottish Poetry, Vol. 1 of 2 To me it has often seemed curious and puzzling that at any time in the history of Scottish national feeling, and especially national poetry, there should not have been a deep, quick, and impassioned emo tion for the hills, the glens, the burns, and the gleaming rivers of the country, - such as the Tweed and the N ith, the Teviot and the Tay. It has even appeared to me surprising that the mists in the glens and on the hills, With their breaks, their wreaths, and the cleaving glints of sunshine through them, Should not always have been to the onlooker a source of wonder and delight. How the wavy lines of mountains which stretch across vol. I. A.
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