Page:Shetland Folk-Lore - Spence - 1899.pdf/34

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The Picts and their Brochs

islands, either as an independent people, prior to the Norse invasion, or accompanying the Norse warriors at a later date.

But to return to the Picts. Whoever they were, they are gone, leaving nothing behind them but the numerous brochs, burial mounds, and standing stones; and as we gaze on these mouldering remains of a byegone age, we can only soliloquise in the words of the poet:

Once in the flight of ages past
There lived a man, and who was he?
Unknown the region of his birth,
The land in which he died unknown.
His name has perished from the earth,
This truth survives alone:
That joy and grief, and hope and fear,
Alternate triumphed in his breast;
His bliss and woe—
A smile—a tear—
Oblivion hides the rest.”

The Picts probably occupied the islands for a thousand years. They have been a numerous, industrious, and intelligent

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