ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE POETS-NO. 11. THE BALLAD OF THE CRUEL SISTER SEE PLATE. "THE Cruel Sister," is a very ancient and remarkable Scottish ballad, which Sir Walter Scott reproduces with great praise, in his minstrelsy of the Scottish Border. It appears in other collections under the title of Binnorie. There can be but little doubt that it had its occasion in an actual occurrence. It is very beautiful and touching, and the incident of the harp "playing alone," although belonging to things impossible, is related so simply as to seem perfectly natural and true. Not so the means by which the harp is obtained. The illustration is exceedingly spirited and apt. The ballad is as follows: 'Oh sister, reach me but your glove, And sweet William shall be your love.''Sink on, nor hope for hand or glove! And sweet William shall better be my love; 'Your cherry cheeks and your yellow hair, Garr'd me gang maiden evermair.' Sometimes she sunk, and sometimes she swam Until she cam to the miller's dam; 'Oh father, father, draw your dam, There's either a mermaid or a milk-white swan.' The miller hasted and drew his dam, And there he found a drown'd woman; You could not see her yellow hair, For gowd and pearls that were so rare; You could not see her middle sma', Her gowden girdle was sae bra'; A famous harper passing by, The sweet pale face he chanced to spy; And when he look'd that lady on, He made a harp of her breast-bone, The strings he fram'd of her yellow hair, He brought it to her father's hall, He laid his harp upon a stone, 'Oh, yonder sits my father, the king; And yonder stands my brother Hugh, And by him my William, sweet and true.'But the last tune that the harp play'd then, Binnorie, Oh Binnorie; Was-'Woe to my sister, false Helen!' By the bonny mill-dams of Binnorie." FORTUNE-TELLING.-The contrasted duplicity and simplicity which the practice of fortune-telling presupposes and requires, are happily depicted by our artist in this impressive plate. Viewed aright, there is a striking moral in the scene, which addresses itself as obviously to the heart as to the eye. The passion which craves an insight into the future, the perversion and abuse of which gives to fortune-telling its aliment, is a noble incident of our immortality, that needs only a proper direction to kindle the purest aspirations. Yet perverted by ignorance, it can enfeeble the soul to the most unworthy superstition. The lesson of the engraving is that best principles of our nature become, when perverted, the worst, and that superstition partakes no less of folly than of sin. |