The Hope of the World and other poems | ||
THE HOPE OF THE WORLD.
CANTO I.
ARGUMENT.
Capabilities of Man for Happiness.—The Muse of History is invoked to show how miserable Man has rendered the World by his own bad Passions.—The evils of Intolerance and Ambition, as exemplified by the wars of religion and aggrandisement, and the slavery and debasement of the Human Mind consequent upon them.—False Greatness of the Ancient Empires.—Christianity the Hope of the World.
How vast the blessings that around us flow!
Love, the foundation of thy wondrous plan,
Pours joy and plenty in full streams for man:
The generous earth yields up her golden grain,
The trees their fruits, the skies their kindly rain,
The air its health, the flowers their odours rare,
The sun his bright beams shining everywhere.
All nature, smiling through her varied round,
Woos human-kind to joys that still abound:
Sweets for their palate, beauty for their eyes,
And all the charms of music for the ear,
With pain but given to warn of dangers near.
These for the body's;—for the mind's delight,
Knowledge of God, and favour in his sight;
And all that glorious privilege of thought,
To the true soul with mines of treasure fraught;
And Nature, opening her abounding page,
To charm in youth, to captivate in age:
With Hope, best boon the Godhead could impart,
And Love, divinest essence of his heart.
Lord of himself, controller of his fate,
Has man employ'd the gifts so freely given
To the best ends, and made his earth a heaven?
Thy book sublime, with all his deeds enroll'd,
And if thou canst, amid regretful tears,
Read us the awful record of his years!
Mankind's worst enemy hath still been man.
Lust, love of power, and rivalry of creed
Alike have turn'd him to a fiend indeed;
But chief the last has nerved his soul to hate,
His tongue to curse, his hand to strike his mate.
Lo! the first murder-spots that stain'd the land
Came from the wounds made by a brother's hand.
Lo! the first blood that sank into the sod,
Flow'd in contention at the shrine of God!
That since have deluged Earth's green fields with gore!
Bear witness, Asia! where the flaming brand
Of thy Mohammed, in his conquering hand,
Hew'd down thy nations, like the full, ripe corn,
Before the reaper on his harvest morn,
Where his apostles, treading in his path,
Spread o'er thy plains like messengers of wrath,
“Believe our book, ye millions, or ye die!”
And other lands, if they had wish'd to pile
More wondrous pyramids than those of Nile,
Might, without granite, have uprear'd them high
With skulls unburied, bleaching to the sky.
To tell the foul deeds done by bigot hands.
Tell of the millions whom the Hermit drew
To dye the Danube of a sanguine hue,
And choke it up with multitudes of slain,
By high Belgrade or Nissa's fatal plain.
Tell of the second crowds, as mad as these,
Who cover'd earth and swarm'd upon the seas,
When zealous Bernard waved his banner high—
“The Cross! Jerusalem! the Lord!” his cry,—
And of the thousands of that countless host
Who left their bones for vultures on the coast,
And never saw that land they pined to see,
Bethlem's green meads, or waves of Galilee.
Of all her sons who perish'd in the flames,
From her fourth Henry's to her Mary's time;—
Record of sorrow, and despair, and crime.
Call France, to tell of that unhallow'd day,
When brave Coligni, good, and hoary grey,
Fell in the streets already heap'd with slain,
That ran with blood to swell the blushing Seine;
When even babes depending at the breast
Were sought and seized, aud slaughter'd like the rest.
Bid Spain throw open wide her dungeon doors,
And show the blood-stains on the walls and floors.
Bid her disclose the secrets treasured there,
The body's torture and the mind's despair.
Bid her recount the numbers of her dead,
In caverns dark or market-places red;
Doom'd in the first a lingering death to know,
Brought to the second for a raree-show,
Intenser throes in man—betortured man.
New found, but ah! no happier than the rest;—
Columbia! join the universal wail,
Tell us Pizarro's blood-polluted tale,
And all the wrongs inflicted by the bands
Europe sent forth to scourge thy virgin lands,
And teach a creed, whose essence is of heaven,
By deeds of hell, and hope to be forgiven!
'Tis but one page from that tremendous book
Where all your deeds, by Truth's sad fingers traced,
Remain for ever, clear and uneffaced,
Inscribed in characters of gory red,
And damp with tears by pitying angels shed.
Turn o'er the leaf, and see what meets us there—
Less woe—less wrong—less torture—less despair?
Ah, no! a lust, accursed from its birth,
Has play'd its part in ravaging the earth,
Her plains with blood, her human hearts with ill.
The lust of power! the worst that man can know,
Prolific source of never-ceasing woe,
Has sounded shrill the trumpet of alarm,
And call'd the ready multitudes to arm;
Made human shambles in each quiet spot,
Places of skulls for graveless bones to rot!
Of kings and chiefs, and potentates to war!
To waste your lives, and give your roofs to flame,
Your babes to slaughter and your wives to shame,
And all to aid the tyrant of an hour,
To round a province and extend his power;
Or please, perchance, some minion, his delight,
Who loves no prince unlaurell'd in the fight.
Too oft have thousands for a wanton's sigh,
Or favourite's pettishness, been doom'd to die;
Too oft the torch has set a realm on fire,
Because one man was slave to his desire,
Sounded o'er earth his terror-striking name;
Unless the nations trembled at his tread,
And smaller chieftains bow'd their humbled head!
That they should laud these scourges of their kind;
Call each man glorious who has led a host,
And him most glorious who has murder'd most!
Alas! that men should lavish upon these
The most obsequious homage of their knees—
The most obstreperous flattery of their tongue;
That these alone should be by poets sung;
That good men's names should to oblivion fall,
But those of heroes fill the mouths of all!
That those who labour in the arts of peace,
Making the nations prosper and increase,
Should fill a nameless and unhonour'd grave,
Their worth forgotten by the crowds they save—
But that the leaders who despoil the earth,
Fill it with tears, and quench its children's mirth,
And stand adored as demi-gods for aye!
False greatness! where the pedestal for one,
Is on the heads of multitudes undone!
False admiration! given, not understood:
False glory! only to be gain'd by blood.
The page of History is fill'd with crime.
In every age has bad Ambition raised
Its giant head, and, lo!—the earth has blazed!
Each clime remote, in cold or torrid zone,
Has had some king and hero of its own,
To play the fabled Mahadeva's part,
And light Destruction's torch or hurl its dart;
And still as one has run his fiery race,
The next has started to supply his place.
An Alexander grasps his sword, and, lo!
O'er half the globe resounds the voice of woe.
A Gengis comes, and many a fertile plain
Becomes more fertile with the heaps of slain.
Pale Asia bleeds in all her vast extent.
A furious Charles, destruction at his heels,
Drives from the north his conquering chariot wheels.
Napoleon flashes on the world's sad sight,
And blazing towns illumine all the night.
Brave Sarragossa falls amid her woe,
The fires of Moscow burst amid the snow,
Blue Berezina laves her shores with red,
And Europe's fields are cumber'd with the dead.
But why recount their numbers or their deeds?—
Earth's ears are full of them—earth's bosom bleeds
Even now, at mention of their fearful names,
Traced on her soil in furrows made by flames.
From Asia's Tyre to Europe's Waterloo,
Rome, Greece, Assyria—modern states and old,
The same dark history is ever told;
The same bad passions in the conqueror's breast;
The same sad folly blinding all the rest;
One man must rule, a thousand towns must burn;
One King must force the tribute grudged by ten,
And blood must flow from thrice ten thousand men.
Not life alone is crushed beneath its car.
The dead are gone—the millions sleep in peace
In the calm grave, where all their troubles cease;
But on the minds of living men remain
The deep, deep wounds that never heal again.
Were bloodshed sole and last result of strife,
There might be hope for earth's remaining life;
But ah! war's ravages are less confined;
They blight the soul, they fester in the mind;
They brutalize the hearts of suffering men,
And turn this planet to a noisome den,
In whose dark corners Superstition prowls,
And fear-struck Ignorance lies down and howls.
They people earth with all the imps of Eld,
And scare the world with omens of its doom.
In their dark presence Science hides its ray,
And Art, affrighted, wings itself away;
Learning, that flow'ret most divine and fair,
Withers and dies for want of light and air;
And Freedom, fairer and diviner still,
Lies torn, and crush'd, and tortured at their will.
Ah! well they work to trample it for aye!
Tyrants to bind, are not so strong as they;
The first enchain the man's material part;
But they enfetter and destroy the heart.
The power of despots touches not the soul;
The power of Ignorance engulphs the whole!
Thought is enslaved and grovels in the mire,
And Reason crawls, mere pander to desire,
Or shows a wavering and uncertain ray,
To lead its bearers but the more astray.
But still by millions cherish'd and adored:
Nursed but to torture, hugg'd but to destroy!
Or more insidious, with a specious guile,
They wear an angel's form—an angel's smile,
Then lead their victim with those silken reins,
Harder to break than adamantine chains;
Lull him to sluggish and inglorious rest,
And pluck all virtue from his senseless breast.
Steep him in folly first, and then in crime;
Efface God's image from his brow sublime;
With smiles like Circe's, woo him to a beast,
And cast him garbage for his daily feast.
Who shall recount the evils ye have done?
Where shall the mind, o'erwhelm'd by shame, begin
The long, unhappy catalogue of sin?
Lo! Egypt's children clasp their hands in prayer,
And ask a dog to save them from despair;
Raise mighty temples on each hillock's brow,
To chant triumphal pæans to a cow!
Shape out a Moloch, and in public sight,
In adoration of his fearful name,
Consume young babes in sacrificial flame!
And Budha's priests, degraded even as they,
Erect a block to worship night and day,
And preach the doctrine, e'en while they adore,
That man is nothingness, and God no more.
Taught by his creed, behold the mild Hindoo
Committing murders of the blackest hue.
At Brahma's shrine he bends the suppliant knee,
Then lights the torch to fire the red Suttee;
Strews the rich incense for that rite abhorr'd,
And the poor widow burns beside her lord.
Oh! veil thy visage, thou insulted sun!
Light not the hellish deeds that men have done.
Fierce Juggernaut comes yelling from afar,
And eager victims bleed beneath his car!
The Thug walks forth and murders for a trade,
To please a goddess by his frenzy made;
Has its own million to adore and howl!
In nearer climes to find a brighter day,
And read the legends by our fathers told,
Enshrined in Edda in the days of old.
And there fierce Odin on his fiery steed,
Preaches to willing ears his bloody creed.
Dark Fenris howls, and the great snake, uncurl'd,
Opes its wide jaws to poison all the world.
And gloomy Druids, in their thickets hoar,
Worship their gods with offerings of gore.
And view in Greece and Rome more polish'd men,
We find the waters populous, and the air
Swarming with gods that start up everywhere;
Some to be dreaded, some to be adored,
And all in season with due rites implored.
Phantoms they seem, all beautiful and bright,
By poets' fancy clothed in robes of light,
Lustful, revengeful, ignorant, unclean;
In whose high temples man degrades his name
With orgies foul and deeds of blackest shame!
To the far land that bold Columbus gave;
But still the deeds by Superstition done
Rise up in long array, and one by one
Affright our sense, and make us blush for men
Worse than the fierce hyena in its den,
Which, though it loves the feast of blood to find,
Has some compassion and respects its kind.
Not so the tribes that roam the forest through;—
They eat the victims whom their arrows slew:
Not so the priests of Mexitli the red,
Who strew'd their temple floors with heaps of dead,
Burn'd up their hearts with incense in a pan,
And fed their sacred snakes with flesh of man!
Though black the record, History's fearful page
That cheer the darkness with a brighter hue,
There still remain the dim red spots that show
The strong man's injury, the weak man's woe.
Egypt of old pursued the arts of peace,
And wit and learning bless'd the shores of Greece;
Imperial Rome amid her ruins hoar,
Left proofs of greatness never reach'd before;
But what their triumphs? Whose sad hands were they,
That piled the pyramids to last for aye?
Who rais'd the walls, who built each mighty gate
With which high Thebes girt herself in state?
Who rear'd old Babylon's most gorgeous fanes?
Who shaped of Luxor the august remains?
What were the millions when Athena's name
For art and learning was the first to fame?
What were the multitudes when Rome was great?
What rights had they, or value in the state?—
Uprear'd the pyramids on Egypt's sands;
Slaves built the city with the brazen wall,
And hundred gates more marvellous than all;
Slaves to be lash'd, and tortured, and resold,
Or maim'd and murder'd for a fine of gold.
Helots degraded, scarce esteem'd as man,
Having no rights, for ever under ban,
Were half the world when ancient Homer sung,
And wit and wisdom flow'd from Plato's tongue.
Slaves were the swarming multitudes of Rome,
Having no hope, no thought of better doom;
Fetter'd in body and enslaved in mind,
Their mental eye-balls, sear, and dark, and blind,
They crawl'd mere brutes, and if they dared complain,
Were lash'd and tortured until tame again!
Have been for ever sacrificed for one.
And earth has groan'd with oft-repeated wrong,
And still the many, knowing not their might,
Deep sunk in Error's most appalling night,
Have greeted loudest with the voice of praise,
The greatest scourges born in evil days;
Sang songs of triumph, and their incense burn'd
To honour those whom most they should have spurn'd.
To chase the darkness of our suffering sphere!
Long ages since, thy mild auspicious star
Rose on the world, and bless'd it from afar;
Raised up the humble, heal'd the wounded mind,
Relieved, consoled, and purified mankind.
Beneath the splendour of thy genial ray,
The thick, dark mists began to roll away,
And Hope, long banish'd, raised her head again,
While joyous angels, in triumphant strain,
Rang the loud pæan to the listening sky,
“Rejoice! O man! rejoice! thy God is nigh!
“Knowledge shall reign and truth be brought to light.
“Rejoice, O man! ye seraphim adore!
“Peace and good-will shall rule for evermore.
“A thousand darkling years may pass away,
“Ere this fair twilight brightens into day;
“A thousand more may wing their weary flight
“Ere man beholds the perfect noon of light;
“But still the ray shall penetrate the gloom,
“Still shall this star the suffering world illume.
“Glory to God, the Spirit, and the Son!
“Rejoice! rejoice! the dawning has begun!”
CANTO II.
ARGUMENT.
The dawn of a better Day.—Christianity, by first teaching peace, good-will, and equality, the first great agent of human improvement and the civilisation of the World.—Emancipation of Mind and the first seeds of popular Freedom.—The Progress of Thought.—Discovery of America.—Invention of Printing.— Freedom of Conscience.—Art, Science, and Literature, the off-spring of Peace and Liberty.—The Reformation.—The Abolition of Slavery.—The evils that still afflict Mankind, and Hopes for the future.—The Reign of Peace.
Led the lone shepherds on their weary way,
The beam that rose on this dark world with thine
Since that glad hour has never ceased to shine!
The coarse thick mists that crown the murky sea,
Where Error, snake-like, broods continually,
May have conceal'd from Earth's inquiring sight,
The mild refulgence of its holy light;
The dense hot smoke in dun upcurling spires,
That mounts to Heaven from Hate's incessant fires,
But still the ray was steadfast in the skies;
Still o'er the world it shed a hallow'd glow;
Still shone the cynosure of faith and woe,
To light the path by erring mortals trod,
The beam of peace! the beacon of a God!
By Him, the Saviour, who thy tidings brought;
Thou wert the first, descending from above,
To teach the nations that their God was love;
That ire eternal dwelt not on his face,
But love and pity, and redeeming grace.
'Twas thou first cheer'd the weary and forlorn,
And raised the humble from the couch of scorn;
'Twas thou first told the poor man in his cot,
That Heaven had bliss for him, if Earth had not;
'Twas thou first whisper'd to the sunken slave
That joy and freedom dwelt beyond the grave;
That rich and poor, oppressor and oppress'd,
Fill'd the same grave, obey'd the same behest;
All men were equal in the sight of Heaven.
Springs from this creed, and springs from this alone,
Whatever triumph has been gain'd by mind,
O'er Error, Hate, and Ignorance combined,
Whatever progress man may yet have made—
Owes all its worth to this benignant aid;
The Arts have flourish'd in its genial light,
And daring Science wing'd a bolder flight,
Delved the deep earth and scaled the distant sky,
In search of Truth, and found it ever nigh.
'Twas this that gave the long-enfettered mind
New power to travel free and unconfined;
Upraised the fallen dignity of man,
Relieved his spirit from the oppressor's ban;
Gave Hope new wings to traverse earth and air,
To cheer Humility, to soothe Despair;
To lift the prostrate and the sorrowing heart,
And rob affliction of its direst smart,
That God is kind, though man may be unjust.
The light still shines, and still the truth prevails;
Clime after clime receives the welcome ray;
Rome and her idols totter to decay;
Gaunt Odin claims no victims as of yore,
And Druid rites pollute the groves no more.
The generations rise, and move, and die—
Long ages trace their cycles in the sky—
The steadfast truth advances all the while,
And arid wastes begin to bloom and smile;
Men's hearts, no longer wildernesses bare,
Warm in the light and show their blossoms fair;
Freedom and Peace, exiled from earth so long,
Return with music and triumphant song,
Each scattering widely from her bounteous hands
The fruitful seeds that gladden all the lands.
There is no chance in Heaven's eternal laws.
Forsook their wives and little ones and all,
And at each meteor flashing through the gloom,
Trembled to see the signal-star of doom
That should arise, and, day of woe for them!
Find them still far from dear Jerusalem;
Even they, blind instruments of God's decree,
Advanced the cause they never lived to see;
They left their bones on many a distant shore,
But some return'd less brutal than before.
Wise with the wisdom learn'd in pain and woe,
Pleased with those arts they never thought to know,
They came back wondering, and at home aspired
To reach the luxury they still admired;
The polish'd manners, and the pleasant ease
Of climates fair beyond the Grecian seas.
And, with the wish, the power to meet it rose,
They saw and loved the blessings of repose;
And war, though still their pastime and their joy,
Became no longer life's supreme employ.
And prized the peace consider'd vile before.
That stayed behind to cultivate the lands,
With some faint gleams of rights long-claim'd and spurn'd,
Arose and seized them ere their lords return'd.
Cities and towns, by feudal chiefs oppress'd,
Loosened each one the trammels on its breast,
Or bought from lordlings, with their ready gold,
The rights their masters dared no more withhold—
Freedom from grinding tax and blistering rod—
Freedom to dwell in peace and worship God.
New cities rose, precursors of the morn,
Where Learning flourish'd, with more strength array'd
Than when she roam'd a lost Athenian maid,
Doubting and groping in those alleys blind,
The then sole outlets for th' imprison'd mind.
And Science bloom'd as fostering Commerce smiled;
While busy navies wafted them afar,
With high emprize to guide them like a star,
Hope, dove-like, sitting on their sails unfurl'd,
To light, and cheer, and civilise the world.
New wants arose, new Enterprise awoke,
Discovery turn'd her keen inquiring eye
O'er all the wonders of the earth and sky,
Obscured, or hidden from our mortal sight
Through the long reign of Ignorance and Night.
First of her sons, the daring Genoese
Pierced the bright secret of the western seas,
Of fruitful climates that his sires ne'er knew;—
And at each favouring gale that westward blew,
Pined with an anxious heart that he might roam
Through those wide wastes of circumambient foam,
In search of islands fair and far away,
His dream by night, and all his thought by day;
Unmoved by danger, undisturb'd by fear,
Unswerved by obstacles that friend and foe
Conspired alike around his path to throw,
Bold o'er the waves his banner he unfurl'd,
Friend of his race!—and found th'expected world!
But not the greatest; for to bless mankind
With blessings sweeter and serener far,
Than ever smiled upon their wandering star,
An Art arose, worth in itself alone
More than all arts the world had ever known;
Worth all the monuments of ancient time,
Their buildings high, their chisellings sublime.
In his dark room the lone mechanic stood,
And shaped in letters the obedient wood,
And little thought, what time before his eyes,
He smiling saw the first rude types arise,
What a grand engine his ingenious mind
And ready hands had fashioned for his kind;
How great the good by that sole action done!
That cheers the Christian in the hour of need,
That aim'd the direst and most stunning blow
Against the heads of Ignorance and Woe.
Scared by its light old Superstition shook,
And hid her face before the printed book!
Knowledge walked forth, no longer for the few
Unveiling shy her sweet face to the view;
No longer timid, taciturn, and coy,
But on an errand of unbounded joy,
She roam'd the earth, and show'd her eyes so bright
To all who chose to gaze upon their light.
No more sole visitant to hermit's cell,
Or convent grey, or porch where schoolmen dwell,
She showered her blessings more profusely down
On plodding men, and hinds with labour brown;
Knock'd with her gentle tap at poor men's doors,
And woo'd their sons to taste her bounteous stores;
Taught cheeks to glow and eyes with tears to melt
At joys or sorrows of their fellow men,
Told by the poet's or historian's pen;
And, best of gifts, bore in her bosom fair,
The Book divine, that ransoms from despair,
That cheers the weary with its words of love,
And points to doubting hearts the realms above.
That fruitful time in proper season bore!
Strengthen'd by this, Discovery, bolder grown,
Soar'd to new regions, until then unknown;
Invention's hand acquired redoubled skill
To mould the plastic matter to her will;
And struggling minds their inspiration caught
From lore wide-spread, and interchange of thought.
Great Newton came, and with his eye sublime,
Discover'd secrets hidden from all Time;
Divined, with meek and yet with lofty soul,
The eternal Law by which the planets roll;
Hung in the azure vault by hands divine.
Franklin appear'd, and, arm'd with daring high,
Drew down the lightning vivid from the sky;
Chemists explored the forest and the field,
Delved in the mine, and made each substance yield
The elements that mingle in its plan,
And all the secrets of its use to man.
And later still, Geology, that turns
Her gaze to earth, and in its bosom learns
The buried mysteries of oldest time,
Arose, and told the world her tales sublime,
Of fearful earthquakes and consuming fire,
Of whelming waters and convulsions dire,
And of huge creatures terrible and strong,
That walk'd the earth, a hundred fathoms long;
Or plough'd primeval seas through ages vast,
Ere man arose the noblest and the last.
To air, or earth, or star-bespangled sky;
Spreading beneath the moon its waters wide;
Or tiny dew-drop form'd upon the rose;
The hugest tree or smallest weed that grows,—
Still she exclaim'd, though humble, yet elate,
“Wondrous his works! the Lord our God is great!”
From each new truth new usefulness to gain;
From all the elements Discovery drew
The inmost secrets veil'd from mortal view;
And apt Invention, watchful by her side,
Each, as it rose, to man's delight applied;—
Employed the water, caught th' unwilling wind,
And made strong fire the slave to stronger mind;
Mingled contending elements at will,
Curb'd and restrain'd, and made them each fulfil
Its destined purpose in her curious plan,
All for the service and the ease of man;—
And, chief of triumphs, in a happy hour,
Chanced on the secret of the mighty power
Round the huge earth, or freezes in its snows.
Discovery smiled with wonder at the sight,
And brisk Invention seized it with delight;
And lo! puissant Steam, a servant mild,
Titan in force, but duteous as a child,
Put forth for man a strength unknown before,
And raised with mighty arms the ponderous ore;
Plied the quick shuttles in the weaver's room,
Sparing his strength while it enrich'd his loom;
Whirl'd its great wheels triumphant o'er the deep
Though tides and winds were adverse or asleep;
And on the land, adown the assisting rail,
Drove its hot chariot swifter than the gale.
That serve, improve, and elevate mankind,
Came others, dearer and more glorious still,
Than all th' increase of knowledge or of skill.
Bright though they be, not these alone convey
To eyes that pine, the light of perfect day;
They cannot make him either wise or good;
Deeper conceal'd within the soul's recess,
Lies the great aid of earthly happiness—
The love of Freedom!—since the world began,
Cherish'd and prized by individual man,
But never taught, within its wide embrace,
To clasp with joy the whole of human race,
Until the Christ upraised the welcome call—
“Freedom to slaves!—good-will and peace to all!
“None is too base or lowly to be free—
“None is too poor to be received by me.”
This simple truth has, single-handed, hurl'd
The tyrants down, that in their thralls would bind
The hearts and souls of patient human-kind.
This first great triumph leads to all the rest,
And gives man power to bless and to be bless'd;
This gives the heart the leisure to be wise,
And makes true goodness with its heavenward eyes
It has a mission to fulfil below,
And that he best obeys the Almighty plan,
Who aids, consoles, and loves his fellow-man.
And Peace down showers her blossoms on the ground,
While Knowledge shows her visage beaming bright
In darken'd nooks that never saw the light,
Freedom takes root, and flourishes the more
From all the triumphs that have gone before.
Wickliffe and Luther, and those hallow'd names
Who died for conscience in consuming flames,
Unfurl'd a banner, in the olden time,
Round which have rallied men of every clime;
Pure deeds their weapons, steadfast hearts their wall,
Their cry is “Freedom” for themselves—for all!
“Freedom for worship, rise where'er it will,
“From gorgeous dome, or damp unshelter'd hill,
“Freedom for thought, that shall not know decrease,
“Freedom for prayer and praise, and words of peace.”
Who prize its blessings, rising in the land.
To share their joy with all beneath the skies,
They look abroad with pity-beaming eyes;
The sad they cheer, the ignorant they teach—
To souls in error, purer doctrines preach;
To the lost wand'rer point the way aright,
On mental blindness pour the healing light;
In arms fraternal clasp the injured slave,
And raise their voice to liberate and save.
When England rose, majestic and sublime;
Arm'd with the strength that only arms the just,
The light of Truth flash'd in her eyes august;
Wide o'er the earth her mighty hands she spread,
While rays of glory beam'd about her head—
The listless nations started and awoke,
As with loud voice the cheering words she spoke:
“No more,” she cried, “no more, thou teeming earth,
“For me or mine, shalt thou to slaves give birth;
“Stripes their reward, and pain and hopeless toil;
“No more shall slaves produce vile wealth for me—
“Joy! Afric, joy! thy swarthy sons are free!
“Hear, all ye nations! hear the voice of truth,
“And wake to pity and redeeming ruth;
“The wealth is cursed that springs from human woe,
“And he who trades in men is England's foe:
“Freedom, God's gift, was kindly meant for all—
“Poor suffering slaves! this hour your fetters fall!”
Earth, as she heard the loud majestic voice,
Shouted reply, and bade her sons rejoice:
The wise and good of every clime and caste
Hail'd a fair future, fairer than the past,
And pictured fondly, in the coming time,
Less blood and tears, less misery and crime.
Great was the boon, and pledge of thousands more—
Herald of peace, and days of bliss in store.
And find a curse that still afflicts the ground;
That man's improvement has but just begun.
Still half the world lies groaning in the gloom,
Error their portion, misery their doom.
The light of truth has never shed its ray
O'er fairest climes that blossom to the day;
Beauteous and bright in trees, and flowers, and fruits,
But cursed with savage men and savage brutes.
And o'er those lands where man is more refined,
Where science blooms and learning cheers the mind,
How vast the torrent of the tears that flow,
How vast the amount of ignorance and woe!
Still are the millions doom'd to sweat and moil,
And pass long days in harsh, incessant toil,
Gaining hard bread, while bitterly they rue
That they are doom'd to labour for the few.
Cold Superstition still her chill imparts;
Still ancient Error rankles in their hearts;
And still, all lost and humbled though they be,
They doff their caps, and shout with noisy glee,
Who mowed them down by thousands in a war!
Their own bad passions make them still the prey
Of men designing and more fierce than they;
Still are they slaves to hate, revenge, and lust,
Fiends to their neighbours, to themselves unjust.
And earth awake to happiness and peace?
They err who say that man to grief is born,
That hopeless thousands are but made to mourn;
Heaven has not issued such a harsh decree—
Man's is the guilt, as man's the misery!
They are no dreamers who, with steadfast hope,
Comprise all nature in their love's wide scope,
And see afar that bright approaching day
When human sorrows shall dissolve away.
Great though the evils that affect us yet,
The sun has risen, and never shall it set!
Bright shine its beams upon a world of woe,
To warm, refine, and gladden all below:
Still o'er the earth shall prosper and increase;
Knowledge and Art shall follow in its train,
And darken'd regions smile in light again:
And man become, no more in error blind,
The friend of man, the blessing of his kind.
Shall fail the nations in their hour of need?
Who shall assert that man, for ever lost,
Must wander pining, worn, and tempest-tost?
Forbid the thought! the holy work begun,
Shows the true soul the good that may be done.
The olden prophets saw the coming time—
Isaiah sang it in his chant sublime;
And in the manger when the Saviour lay,
The angels hail'd the dawning of the day.
Traverse the world from Labrador to Ind—
To every clime, go, prospering and elate,
Noble your cause, and be your efforts great:
And all the rest shall follow and increase.
Teach the sad world, and scatter all around
The fruitful seeds upon the ready ground.
Teach! teach the world! and all its mental night
Shall melt away in fulness of the light!
The Hope of heaven shall elevate and cheer,
And Peace and Knowledge strew their blessings here;
Science shall bloom in many a distant isle,
Fierce men grow tame, and wildernesses smile;
War shall no longer dare uplift its hands
To strike the prosperous and happy lands;
Its loud alarum shall the earth forget;—
Men's swords shall rust, or turn to ploughshares yet!
Hark! the glad chorus of the angel choirs
Striking with joyous hands their heavenly lyres!
They sing the anthem that they sang of old
To the poor shepherds watching by the fold;
“On earth good-will, that never more shall cease—
“Glory to God! and universal Peace!”
And hail the hope that brightens in your skies!
Rejoice ye seraphim that pray for man,
He lies no longer under evil ban;
The scales have fallen from his mental sight,
He sees afar and loves th' approaching light.
He, too, perchance, ere ages roll away,
Will join that hymn the angels sing for aye,
And shout the pæan full of love sublime,
In every nook of every distant clime—
“On earth good-will, that never more shall cease—
“Glory to God, and universal Peace!”
NIENTE SENZA L'AMORE.
I. PART I. THE PRAYER OF ADAM, ALONE IN PARADISE.
—Petrarch.
O Father, hear!
Thou know'st my secret thought;
Thou know'st, with love and fear,
I bend before Thy mighty throne,
And before Thee I hold myself as nought.
Alas! I'm in the world alone,
All desolate upon the earth;
And when my spirit hears the tone,
The soft song of the birds in mirth,
Their tender voices blend,
When from the flowery vales
Their hymns of love ascend;
Oh! then I feel there is a void for me,
A bliss too little in this world so fair;
To Thee, O Father, do I flee,
To Thee for solace breathe the prayer.
And when the rosy morn
Smiles on the dewy trees,
When music's voice is borne
Far on the gentle breeze;
When o'er the bowers I stray,
The fairest fruits to bring,
And on Thy shrine to lay
A fervent offering;
Father of many spheres!
When bending thus before Thy throne,
My spirit weeps with silent tears,
To think that I must pray alone!
When peaceful slumber shuts mine eye,
And when the gentle seraphim
Bend from their bright homes in the sky:
When angels walk the quiet earth,
To glory in creation's birth;
Then, Father, in my dreams I see
A gentle being o'er me bent,
Radiant with love, and like to me,
But of a softer lineament:
I strive to clasp her to my heart,
That we may live and be but one—
Ah, wherefore, lovely beam, depart,
Why must I wake and find thee gone?
Almighty, in Thy wisdom high,
Thou saidst, that when I sin I die:
And once my spirit could not see
How that which is could cease to be;
On which the thought forbore to dwell,
But love has oped its secret spring,
And now I know it well!
To die, must be to live alone,
Unloved, uncherish'd, and unknown,
Without the sweet one of my dreams
To cull the fragrant flowers with me,
To wander by the morning's beams,
And raise the hymn of thanks to Thee.
But, Father of the earth,
Lord of this boundless sphere,
If 'tis Thy high unchanging will
That I should linger here;
If 'tis Thy will that I should rove
Alone, o'er Eden's smiling bowers,
Grant that the young birds' song of love,
And the breeze sporting 'mong the flowers,
May to my spirit cease to be
A music and a mystery!
The soft sounds breathing everywhere;
That Nature's voice may cease to hymn
Love's universal prayer:
For all around, in earth or sea,
And the blue heaven's immensity,
Whisper it forth in many a tone,
And tell me I am all alone!
II. PART II. THE DREAM OF THE SHIPWRECKED MARINER.
Lightly o'er the deep we passed,
We thought no more on toil and pain,
For we drew near home at last;
The very sails made music sweet
As they flapp'd against the mast.
The fair-faced moon looked softly down,
Tinging the small waves with her light;
Many a heart beat anxiously,
Many an eye look'd bright,
To catch a glimpse of Albion's shore,
That gleam'd in the distance white.
And thoughts came crowding o'er my soul,
As the welcome wind and tide
Drove to the wish'd-for goal;
And thou, O loved one of my youth!
Remember'd still thy plighted truth.
In fancy's dream I saw thee stand,
All lonely, on the ocean strand,
Straining thy bright eyes o'er the sea,
To catch a glimpse of love and me.
I clasp'd thee to my constant heart,
And swore we never more would part,
When suddenly a shriek
Rose piercing o'er the wave!
We'd struck upon a hidden rock—
The vessel reel'd—the grave,
The billowy grave, with greedy clasp,
Drew us down deep—and then the gasp
Of death, passed quick o'er many a lip;
And the wind began to sob and sigh,
Like a weak man broken-hearted.
I sank into the deep abyss;
But with a desperate strife,
I buffeted the roaring waves,
And fought with them for life.
'Twas but a minute; o'er my soul
A leaden lethargy there stole,
And o'er my frame a sleep;
But ah! not dreamless, for my brain
Conjured a vision full of pain,
Most palpable, most deep.
Had swallow'd up the land.
Methought, with one wide sweep,
Led by Jehovah's hand,
This second deluge had come on,
Ravage and ruin o'er the world.
Methought that Ætna's fires were drench'd
By the devouring sea;
That Chimboraco's mightier peak
Was quench'd eternally;
And that I with an angel's wings
Flew onwards still, and found no rest;
Nought met mine eye,
But the grey-colour'd sky,
And the wide ocean's ever-heaving breast.
Silence was over all,
Except when rose the blast,
Fitfully rushing o'er the sea;
And I claim'd kindred with it, as it pass'd,
Because it mourn'd like me
O'er the departed earth,
And wept that in its course it saw no life
And heard no voice of mirth,
No sound of human passion or of strife.
In the vast world I was alone:
Earth's children were all dead
And buried with their mother in the deep,
Which had claim'd all things for its own,
And left but me to weep.
And yet amid this deep distress,
This utter, utter weariness,
But one desire was in my heart,
One feeling o'er my soul imprest,
One thought all other thoughts above,
And that was the desire of love
Burning for ever in my breast.
How could I love? With weary ken
I turned my gaze across the sea;
But perish'd was the race of men,
There was no living thing but me,
Not even a blossom or a tree.—
And sadly on the sombre sky;
And, in the bitterness of grief,
I pray'd to the Most High:—
“O Father of this dreary world,
“Father of all that is or were,
“Parent of many spheres, to Thee
“I raise the humble prayer.
“Last of my race—a lonely man—
“Nought breathes the breath of life but me;
“The fair, the beautiful green land
“Has found a grave beneath the sea,
“And there is none to worship Thee.
“Sunk, sunk for ever is the populous earth;
“And from the desolate sea there is no birth;—
“No living thing, whose prayer
“May mount with mine above,
“On whom this bursting heart
“May pour o'erflowing love.
“That it should be decreed my doom
“To wander over Nature's tomb,
“That I should only live to mourn
“A world that never can return?
“But sweet would be the task to weep,
“Even on this wide, this endless deep,
“If there were one to share my woe,
“Some gentle one to sigh with me,
“Some heart whose tears with mine might flow:
“Then 'twould be sweet to worship Thee!
“But—as it is—better to die
“Than live alone in this immensity.”
The storm had ceas'd to blow,
And the loud winds, in milder tone,
Began to murmur low,
And floated on the air,
And rais'd me from the dark abyss
Of sorrow and despair.
With lighter heart I look'd again
O'er ocean's boundless scope,
Then turn'd my glance upon the sky
In gladness and in hope.
The dismal clouds had roll'd away,
The sky was clear and blue,
And, Oh! to glad my longing eyes,
One star was peering through.
O lovely star! O welcome ray!
It was a beauteous sight,
Alone upon the waters wide,
To gaze upon its light.
For hours I look'd, until it seem'd
To change upon my view;
While soft sweet sounds came from the sky,
And from the waters blue.
Bent anxiously on mine;
While to a face the bright star changed—
Beloved, it was thine!
I woke—upon the beach I lay,
And thou, my beautiful, mine own,
Wast bending o'er my pallid cheek,
Beside the waters lone,
And smiling 'mid thy tears, to see
That all had not been vain
To call my dreaming spirit back
To consciousness again.
SACRED MELODIES.
I. “AND GOD SAID, LET THERE BE LIGHT!”
And started from her utmost bound;
And Darkness, on his ebon car,
Spread his black wings, and fled afar;
The dun clouds open'd at the sight,
And hail'd the burst of life and light!
“'Tis light! 'tis light!” the valleys sung!
The stars beheld its dawning bright,
The spheres confess'd the Godhead's might,
While Nature's universal voice
Proclaim'd aloud, “Rejoice! rejoice!”
II. WEEPING FOR THE DEAD.
Why sorrow o'er their narrow bed?
Have they not sought the happy shore,
Where human cares oppress no more?
Bewail them not!—more blest than we,
From mortal woes and anguish free,
Their parted spirits rest in peace
In the still land where troubles cease!
Is with a Father and a God:
Freed from Corruption's cold embrace,
They see th' Almighty face to face.
No woes disturb their narrow bed;
In the still land, where troubles cease,
Their parted spirits rest in peace.
III. THE DOVE OF NOAH.
The dove of Noah soar'd,
Far through the dim unfathom'd space,
Where shoreless ocean roar'd.
But, ah! she found no valley green,
No resting-place,—no track,
Until the peaceful ark received
The weary wanderer back.
Beset by grief and pain,
May seek a solace here below,
But ah! the search is vain.
Is only found above;
The ark to which the soul returns
Is the Almighty's love.
IV. REPENTANCE.
And stretch'd along the plain,
Can the tall oak extend to heaven
Its gay green boughs again?
Or when a star hath lost its track,
And faded from on high,
Can aught restore the lost one back
To glory and the sky?
No; the tall oak no more can spread
Its green leaves to the blast,
Nor can the meteor which hath fled,
Recall its splendours past.
And press'd by human ill,
Gain triumph o'er his dark despair,
And find a solace still?
Yes! He who for our ransom bled,
Holds back th' avenging rod,
When meek Contrition bows her head,
Repenting, to her God.
Though dark the sin—though deep the heart
Be sunk in guilt and pain,
Yet Mercy can a balm impart,
And raise it up again!
V. RESIGNATION.
When joy and peace and love depart,
When friends deceive, and hopes decay,
And sorrows press the heavy heart,
O Lord! Thou canst relief impart;
'Tis Thou canst cheer the wounded mind,
'Tis Thou canst heal affliction's smart;—
Teach us to pray, and be resigned.
Or those we love prove true no more,
Should Death's relentless hand strike down
Those who return'd the love we bore;
And seek the peace we yet may find;—
Teach us, O Father! we implore,
To trust in Thee, and be resign'd!
VI. MARINERS' PRAYER,
DURING A STORM.
Around our heads the thunders rave,
And dark, dark is the midnight sky,
Save when the lightning flashes high.
O God whom we revere!
Thy voice can still the raging deep,
Thy mercy lull the winds to sleep—
Then, Father, hear!
In Thee we trust—to Thee we fly—
Guide and protect us, or we die!
And shine in the glare of the lightning's flash;
The billows rush—the breakers roar,
And drive our bark on the rocky shore.
Lord! in this deadly fear,
We have no hope—no help but Thee;
Thy voice alone can calm the sea—
Then, Father, hear!
In Thee we trust—to Thee we fly,
Guide and protect us, or we die!
VIII. SAUL AND DAVID.
Fills the proud monarch's regal hall,
There's madness on the kingly brow,
There's frenzy in the soul of Saul.
Where is the bard whose soothing song
Can solace to the mind impart?
Whose lips can utter words of peace,
And drive the demon from the heart?
His hallow'd fingers sweep the lyre;
He comes, he comes, the holy bard,
All radiant with prophetic fire.
And thus, preluding on the strings,
A bold and joyous song he sings:
To cheer the bosom of the king,
Deep in the goblet let it shine,
And wreathe it round with flowers of spring;
The morn of life is on the wing,
The time that flies returns no more:
Joy hath its grief—love hath its sting—
But wine rejoices to the core.”
But still the song was vain,
It could not calm the frenzy wild
That burn'd within his brain.—
He raves! he raves!—O minstrel mild!
Re-tune thy lyre again.
Find light, if not in Beauty's eye?
Where shall the aching forehead rest,
If not upon her snowy breast?
Love is the balm for care and grief.”
Delicious though it were,
And as its murmurs died away,
His eyes began to glare.
O minstrel! still thy song is vain;
Perchance some sadder air
May drive the fury from his brain.
Hark! how the numbers fall, he strikes the lyre again!
Long doth his loving-kindness last;
The heart that hath for pardon sued,
Ne'er weeps in vain its errors past.
'Tis He can heal the suffering soul,
'Tis He can cheer in sorrow's day—”
The monarch heard—then smiled—then wept—
The evil spirit pass'd away.
IX. OUR SAVIOUR'S LAMENTATION OVER JERUSALEM.
Weep, daughter of Salem, the spoiler is nigh;
Weep, weep and lament, for he comes in his wrath,
And the vengeance of God is the guide of his path;
I see his fierce horsemen prepare for the war,
And I hear their loud shouts as they rush from afar.
And the star of thy glory be blotted from heaven;
Thy towers and thy temples, now gleaming in air,
Shall be low as thy shame in that day of despair;
And the God thou hast scorn'd shall be deaf to thy call.
And mourn'd for thy sons in their blindness and pride!
How often I've pray'd and implored thee in vain
To repent, and return to thy Father again!
Why, daughter of Salem, O why wouldst thou spurn
The grace and the hope that can never return?
The lordly abodes of thy pride and thy mirth;
With the blood of thy sons shall thy altars be stain'd,
And the shrine of thy God shall be rent and profaned;
On the walls of the temple the spoiler shall tread—
Weep, weep! for the beam of thy glory hath fled.
When the fires of thy dwellings shall redden the air,
As the smoke of the Temple ascends to the skies;
When trampled—insulted—rejected—abhorr'd,
Then, Zion, O then, thou'lt remember the Lord.
X. GOD IN THE STORM.
And tortured ocean into foam.
Bending to earth my humbled head,
In solemn and religious dread,
And kneeling on the sod,
I heard a voice proclaim aloud,
Whose echoes sprang from cloud to cloud,
“Great is the Lord our God!”
Repeating, as it roar'd
In chorus with the furious blast,
“Oh, mighty is the Lord!”
While the fierce lightning, flashing high,
Traced the dread accents on the sky,
Writing, as with a fiery rod,
“Oh, mighty is the Lord our God!”
XI. THE INFINITUDE OF MERCY.
Was e'er too great to be forgiven;—
Can we within our little span
Engrasp the viewless winds of heaven?
Shall we attempt with puny force
To lash back ocean with a rod,
Arrest the planets in their course,
Or weigh the mercies of a God?
Small, finite, and ungracious ever,
May spurn a brother's bended knee,
But God's forsake the contrite never;
Vast as Himself they shine above,
To eyes that look through sorrow's tear;
Great though the crime, great is the love,
If those who seek it are sincere.
XII. THE BOW OF PROMISE.
And clouds discharge their rain,
Appears in heaven the radiant bow,
And all is bright again.
Type of the promise kindly given
To man in days of yore,
That the incessant ire of Heaven
Should drown the earth no more.
And all is dark with care,
One cheering beam the gloom dispels,
And keeps away despair.
Athwart the clouds of woe,
A glory shines in human tears,
And gilds them as they flow.
When storms their fury dart,
That other bow appears on high
When storms are in the heart—
“Trust in the promises of God;”
It smiles amid the gloom,
Lightens affliction's heaviest rod,
And cheers the darkest doom.
REVERIES.
TO THE WINDS.
—Ossian.
And whither, oh! whither, art wandering now?
Sad, sad is thy voice on this desolate moor,
And mournful, oh! mournful, thy howl at my door.
Say, where hast thou been on thy cloud-lifted car,
Say, what hast thou seen in thy roamings afar,
What sorrow impels thee, thou boisterous blast,
Thus to mourn and complain as thou journeyest past?
Dost weep that the green sunny summer hath fled,
That the leaves of the forest are withered and dead,
The light-hearted music they teem'd with of yore?
That the song of the lark and the hum of the bee,
Have ceased for awhile on the snow-cover'd lea?
Say, wind of the winter-night, whence comest thou,
And whither, oh! whither, art wandering now?
Spread havoc and death on its pitiless path,
Where the billows rose up as the lightnings flew by,
And twisted their arms in the dun-colour'd sky:
And I saw a frail vessel, all torn by the wave,
Drawn down with her crew to a fathomless grave,
And I heard the loud creek of her hull as I past,
And the flap of her sails and the crash of her mast;
And I raised my shrill voice on the cold midnight air,
To drown the last cry of the sailor's despair,
But it smote on my ear like the tocsin of death,
As he strove with the fierce-rolling waters for breath;
And repent of the fury that caused him to die.
And the cold dreary wastes of the tenantless moor,
Where a hoary old man journey'd on thro' the plain,
To his bright-blazing hearth and his children again;
And I sigh'd as I rush'd o'er that desert of snow,
For I saw not the path where the traveller should go:
For a moment he paused in that wilderness drear,
And clasp'd his cold hands as he listen'd to hear
The bark of his dog from his cot in the dell,
Or the long-wish'd for toll of the far village bell.
Poor weary old man! he was feeble and chill,
And the sounds that he loved were all silent and still,
For vainly he turn'd his dim glance to the sky,
And vainly he sought with his tremulous eye
Some light in the distance, whose pale beaming ray
Might guide him aright on his comfortless way;
And tried to recover the snow-hidden track.
Ah! vainly he strove, and no sound could he hear,
To tell his sad heart that a refuge was near,
When, worn by the load of his toil and his woe,
He mutter'd a prayer, and sank down on the snow;
And I heard the last gasp of his quick fleeting breath,
His last dying groan, as he struggled with death:
And I mourn for him now on this desolate moor,
And tune his sad dirge as I howl at thy door.
Would have frozen the blood in the ruddiest cheek,
And for many a dismal and desolate day,
No beam of the sunshine has brighten'd my way;
But I weep not that winter hath bared the green tree,
And hush'd the sweet voice of the bird and the bee;
I sigh not that Summer hath fled from the plain,
For the Spring will return in its brightness again;
That I've seen on my course as I journey'd below;
For I've heard the loud shout of the Demon of War,
And the peal of his guns as they flash'd from afar,
And heard the lone widows and orphans complain,
As they wet with their tears the pale cheeks of the slain;
And I sigh as I think on the miseries of man,
And the crimes and the follies that measure his span.”
THE SEA-SHORE.
Come, gentle phantasie,Come to my lone retreat,
Beside the rolling sea,
Where the playful billows beat:
Come at still twilight's time,
When the star of evening beams above,
And looks on earth with a look of love,
From her far cerulean clime;
And on the shore
The waters' roar
Shall to our ears rough music make,
And sweet shall be
Their melody,
As the wind doth o'er them break.
And now the struggle and the strife,
The cares and toils of busy life,
Sink for awhile in sleep:
And she, Thought's pallid queen,
Arises on her gentle way,
Scattering far her tremulous ray
With calm and holy sheen.
Now is the hour when Feeling wakes,
Now is the hour when Fancy takes
Her far and heavenward flight;
Now every evil passion dies,
Now Hope lifts up her gentle eyes—
O lovely hour of night!
I gaze upon the roaring sea,
And vague deep thoughts crowd o'er my mind.
There lies the dread immensity,
And o'er the region of the wind
On which the thought can not repose,
Whose secrets we can not disclose—
O! happy, happy dead!
Perchance to you your God has given
To know the secrets of the heaven,
On angels' wings afar to fly,
And scan the wonders of the sky;
And often, 'mid the darkness dim,
The soul forgets its feeble shell,
As if 'twould pierce the ways of Him
Whose ways no human heart can tell.
The soul expands, as if to see
If it can grasp Eternity,
And pass the bounds of time and space—
But, ah! there is no resting-place
For such adventurous flight.
These are the aspirings of the spirit
To the home it shall inherit;
A feeble gleam
Of what the soul may be when pass'd this earthly night.
THE NYMPH OF SOLITUDE.
The festive repast of the fair and the free?
Why leaves he the city,
The wise and the witty,
To roam thro' the woods in communion with thee?
“He flies from the board of the rich and the lovely,
He flies from the wiles of the proud and the vain,
Adown the wood stealing,
He comes to my shieling,
To gain back his peace and his wisdom again.”
Her couch for the shore of the desolate sea?
Why leaves she her pillow
To gaze on the billow?
What charms can she find in communion with thee?
To think undisturb'd on her lover afar;
She seeks the lone shingle,
In sadness to mingle
Her sighs and her prayers for her absent Hussar.”
The sad and the sorrowful, fly to thy side?
With thee do they wander,
In sadness to ponder
O'er joys and o'er hopes which the world hath denied?
“Communion with man can but render them cunning,
Communion with Nature doth render them wise:
Adown the wood stealing,
They come to my shieling,
And find in my bosom the peace which they prize!”
THE WOOD-NYMPH.
Far from bustle, strife, and care,
'Mong the woods I've woo'd her,
And to her secluded nook,
By the margin of a brook,
And by waters bright and blue,
Over meadows wet with dew,
Many a time pursued her:
And far away in forests lone,
Listening to the plaintive tone
Of the windy weather,
She and I, at midnight's time,
Have sat and sung together.
Poor in worldly treasure,
But she hath a smile of light,
And an eye of hazel bright,
Beaming love and pleasure.
A forest maid, she loves to dwell
In her solitary cell,
Nursing, in her still retreat,
All the passions mild and sweet;
And breathing many a plaintive ditty
Of Hope, and Joy, and Love, and Pity.
She is a fair and woodland nymph,
A wild and artless mountain beauty
Whose witching tongue,
Doth lure the young
From lucre and hard duty.
This nymph so poor, and yet so free,
Who can she be but Poesy?
TO AN EAGLE.
To brave the rugged blast,
In spite of wind and storm to soar
O'er mount and meadow vast!
O that I might, like thee,
O'er Alpine summits fly,
And travel, unconfined and free,
The nearest to the sky!
Upon the sun might gaze,
And revel in that living light,
Undazzled by the blaze!
O that my rapid flight
O'er boundless ether driven,
Might never leave, for things of earth,
The brighter ones of heaven!
Would leave the world behind,
Forgetting its affinity
To sorrow and mankind,
With eye like thine, to scan
The wonders of its birth,
Some petty care disturbs its flight,
And draws it back to earth.
O for thy toppling nest!
To dwell upon the mountain tops,
With Nature for my guest:
Fann'd by the rushing wind,
Rejoicing in the blast,
And soaring in the light of morn
O'er woods and waters vast!
NIGHT.
—Byron.
In some sequester'd wood,
When slumbering Echo hears no sound,
When Night and Silence spread around
A holy solitude;
When through the vales,
Capricious gales
Sweep fitfully along in melancholy mood.
When starry Night has flung
Her balmy mantle o'er the dale,
And when the love-lorn nightingale
Her last complaint has sung;
O'er grove and hill,
Oh! then the Spirit wakes, and Silence has a tongue!
Recals the dim years fled.
Before the pensive spirit, move
Visions of friendship and of love,
Thoughts of the peaceful dead,
Who, though they sleep
In darkness deep,
Lie not forgotten in their quiet bed.
Crown'd with consoling light,
Who wipes away the tear of woe,
That Memory might have caused to flow,
And gladdens Sorrow's night;
Like a gay dream,
Her cheering beam
Dispels the gathering mist, and all again is bright.
In converse with the mind;
Beneath your beam, ye silent stars,
Fancy forgets life's petty jars,
And leaves dull earth behind;
With daring eye
It soars on high,
Flies o'er the boundless heaven and treads the stormy wind.
THE LARK.
Soaring so high in the dawning grey?
I see thee not, but I hear thy voice,
Singing aloud, “Rejoice! rejoice!”
The breezes soft, and the sky serene,
Happy art thou, O bird of morn!
Greeting the beam o'er the far hills borne.
To revel and sing in the morning shine!
O for a spirit untouched by care,
A soul unworn by the world's despair!
Pleasant to thee are the days of spring;
Thou hast no sorrow to make thee moan,
For sorrow is man's, and man's alone!
Soaring so high in the dawning grey?
I see thee not, but I hear thy voice,
Singing aloud, “Rejoice! rejoice!”
THE AUTUMN LEAF.
—Arnault.
Upon the blustering gale;
Torn from thy bough,
Where goest now,
Wither'd, and shrunk, and pale?
As list the winds to blow,
Sear, sapless, lost,
And tempest-tost,
I go where all things go.
As suiteth them, not me,
O'er dale, o'er hill,
Through good, through ill,
As Destiny bears thee.
And threescore for thy breath—
I live my span,
Thou thine, poor man!
And then adown to death!
For lofty as thy lot
And lowly mine,
My fate is thine,
To die, and be forgot!”
TO ROMANCE.
Sweet deceiver! who so oftHast lull'd my soul with visions soft;
When the heart is new and young,
Thou dost come with honey'd tongue,
Whispering to confiding youth
Tales of Friendship, Love, and Truth:
In thy mirror, life is seen
Bright and pure, and ever green!—
Alas! and must thy visions fade?
Thy brightness darken into shade?—
The clear, but cold reality
Breathes upon thy reverie—
Straight thy fairy visions fly,
Their gorgeous hues grow pale and die;
We find that in Misfortune's day
Friendship can wither or betray;
The glance of love in Beauty's eye;
That sordid wealth can cover crime,
That merit stoops while blockheads climb!
Romance! thy fairy spell is o'er,
Thy lovely visions charm no more;
Too often by thy wiles betray'd,
I'll woo no more thy gentle aid;—
Yet why?—'Tis pleasing to believe—
Thy dreams are sweet, though they deceive.
SONGS FOR MUSIC.
SONG TO THE HARVEST MOON.
We come, O Harvest Moon!
To dance beneath thy gentle light,
To many a merry tune:
We come, whilst thou in thoughtful sheen
Art beaming from the blue,
Through wild wood lone and meadow green,
When falls the mellow dew!
To pledge at midnight's solemn noon
A health to thee, O Harvest Moon!
In jolly groups we pass,
Among the sheaves of corn and rye,
To drain the brimming glass;
A-roaming through the wheat,
Or whisper love, in thickets hoar,
To many a maiden sweet,
Calling on thee, at midnight's noon,
To hear our vows, O Harvest Moon!
AMERICAN INDIANS AT THE GRAVES OF THEIR FATHERS.
In the woods and in silence deep,
Under the shade of the beech and oak,
The bones of the heroes sleep.
And there we go when the sky is grey,
We go, and we shed no tears,
But bend our heads to the earth, and pray
For the men of many years.
Where the ancient fathers rest;
They are gone to the happy hunting-grounds,
They are gone, and they are blest!
And wise when the old men met;
Their spirits dwell in the pleasant place,
But their sons remember yet.
THE ISLE OF TRUTH.
Sail onwards, my bark, to the isle of the blest,
Where Love blooms for ever in fondness and truth,
And Passion forgets not the vows of its youth;
Where Friendship forsakes not, tho' sorrows subdue,
And the visions of Hope are as lovely as true.
Sail onwards, my bark, to that isle of delight,
Where Joy hath no sting, and Affection no blight!”
As she sail'd to discover the Island of Truth.
The visions of Hope had induced her to stray,
And she knew not the dangers that crowded the way:
At noon saw her tempest-toss'd, sad, and forlorn;
And trusting too far what the charmer had spoken,
Ere nightfall the lone heart was shipwreck'd and broken.
THE LAY OF AN EXILE.
Oh! sadly ye beat on this desolate shore,
And wake, with the voice of your restless commotion,
Sad thoughts of the home I must visit no more.
From the far distant land which has spurn'd me for ever,
The land for whose glory I've struggled in vain,
Ye come, O ye waves, but, like me ye can never,
Oh! never return to behold it again!
How happy, like thee, all unfetter'd to roam!
Each wave-circled rock can afford thee a pillow,
Each isle of the ocean provide thee a home!
And stifle the thoughts which for ever awake;
Must brood o'er my woes, till they drive me to madness,
And teach my proud spirit to bend or to break!
FAR FROM HOME.
TRANSLATED FROM THE BERNESE DIALECT.
And what means thy constant woe?
Lovely are these foreign regions—
Heart! my heart! what grieves thee so?
Quite forsaken here I roam;
True, 'tis fair in foreign regions,
But I'm pining for my home!
Would that I could breathe thine air,
See my father, see my mother,
See thy hills and valleys fair!
Down whose sides the torrents ran!
Crags, that trod by chamois only,
Scorn the foot of mortal man!
As the drover mounts the hill;
With his kine and lambkins browsing,
Or disporting at their will.
Underneath the mountains blue,
With its green and flowery meadows,
And its lake as clear as dew;
Oh! to see them all once more!
And to greet the friendly neighbours,
Each man standing at his door.
Warm and kindly by the hand;
Little children smile not on us
As at home in Switzerland.
Where my happy youth flew by—
Up, my limbs, and bear me thither—
Bear me thither ere I die!
THIRTEEN AT TABLE; A VISION OF DEATH.
IMITATED PROM BERANGER.
And thirteen guests around my table met.
“Alas!” I cried, and gazed around the room,
“Omens of sorrow—warnings of the tomb!”
Scarce had I said, when to my wond'ring sight,
Appear'd a spirit beautiful and bright—
Cheer up, my friends, be merry as of yore;
I've look'd on Death, and fear her face no more.
A broken chain was lying at her feet,
And round her brow she wore a chaplet rare,
Twined 'mid the ringlets of her auburn hair;
Where slept an infant in unconscious rest.
Fill, fill the goblet till the wine runs o'er;
I've look'd on Death, and fear her face no more.
Their kindest friend, their best protector here?
Why should the weary and the slave complain?—
I send one rest, and break the other's chain;
And give weak man, ungrateful for my love,
Immortal wings to waft his soul above—”
Hush'd be thy fears, O maid whom I adore,
I've look'd on Death, and fear her face no more.
Crawls in the mire, a prey to every woe;
But freed by me, on angel pinions borne,
Shall visit worlds beyond the gates of morn,
Shall soar to spheres where sorrow is unknown,
And see the Godhead on his sapphire throne!”—
I've look'd on Death, and fear her face no more.
And till I call, be happy if you can!”
The vision's fled! fill, fill your bumpers high!
Let omens come, we will not fear to die;
Heaven is no foe to innocent delight;
Death has no terror if the heart is right.
Friends and companions! let the wine run o'er!
We've look'd on Death, and fear her face no more!
CONSTANCY.
When Fortune shed her brightest beam,
And thought, should e'er the tempest lower,
Thy love would wither like a dream.
I deem'd that it was feign'd and cold,
Lured like the rest by Fortune's ray,
Inspired by vanity or gold,
To bloom an hour, then fade away.
And grief and sorrow cloud my brow,
When friends have vanish'd in the blast,
Star of my fortunes! where art thou?—
The same as in the prosperous hour,
Striving to heal the bosom's ill—
Oh! this is love—I own its power!
Though Fortune frown, and Hope decline,
Forgive me, if in times more blest,
I dared to doubt a love like thine;
And I will be, whate'er befal,
Unchanging as thou 'st been to me,
And tell, and proudly tell, to all,
One proof of woman's constancy!
THE EMIGRANTS' FAREWELL TO ENGLAND.
Over the wide sea's bounding spray,
Many a league o'er the pelting foam,
We seek a country, we seek a home!
Farewell, England! our native land,
Lingering still on thy verdant strand,
We look our last on thy once-loved shore,
And vow in our hearts to return no more.
Nothing invites us here to stay.
England, our mother, is hard as stone,
And shuts her ear to her children's moan,
Pampers the rich, and grinds the poor!
Farewell, England! a last farewell!
We fly thy shores, but we wish thee well.
We seek a world o'er the ocean spray.
Welcome, O land across the sea,
Where bread abounds, and man is free;
Welcome, the woods and wastes sublime,
And corn-fields of the western clime.
Our sails are set,—the breezes swell,
England, our country—Farewell! Farewell!
THE SCOTTISH EMIGRANTS' FAREWELL TO YARROW.
Adown by thy banks never more must we stray;
No more at the gloaming
Find pleasure in roaming,
To hear thy young nightingales sing on the spray.
No more on thy bonnie braes where the birks blossom
Shall we revisit the scenes loved of yore;
By Yarrow enchanted,
Verse-hallowed, song-haunted,
Our footsteps delighted must linger no more!
In far distant regions to live and to die,
Where our hands may provide us
A blessing denied us;—
The bold independence hard labour can buy.
So welcome St. Lawrence or broad Mississippi,
That flaunt your great waves in the bright western sun,
New homes ye shall yield us,
To shelter and shield us,
And our love shall take root where our bread must be won.
Thou still shalt be prized in our innermost heart;
And never forgetful,
But sad and regretful,
We'll cherish thy memory till life shall depart!
We'll sing the dear songs that we heard in our childhood,
O Yarrow enchanted!
Verse-hallowed, song-haunted!
We'll never forget thee wherever we be!
LOVE AMID SORROW.
Lighter than a feather!
But ours has borne
Contempt and scorn,
And sorrow's wintry weather!
Then never more! never more!
Shall we sever:
I am thine, thou art mine,
For ever and for ever!
Or its touch divide us;
Though Fortune frown,
Or men look down,
And evil days betide us!
Shall we sever:
I am thine, thou art mine,
For ever and for ever!
THE WIDOWER TO THE EVENING STAR.
To her dew-besprinkled nest,
That sendest the hind to his cottage fire,
And givest the weary rest.
Star! O gentle Star!
Beacon of dreams and sleep,
I lie me down
On the cold heath brown,
To gaze on thy light and weep!
With a grief that shall not depart,
For thou wakest the thoughts of times gone by,
And bringest them to my heart:
When thy light was the signal ray,
To the lowly dome
Of my cottage home,
And the side of my partner sweet.
Thou bringest to all things rest;
Thou sendest the bee to its sheltering hive,
The bird to its warm-built nest:
But thou bringest to me, O Star!
Thoughts that are sad and deep.
So I lie me down
On the cold heath brown,
To gaze on thy light and weep!
MOUNTAIN DEW.
And fill up with toddy as high as you please;
We men of the northland should know ourselves better
Than pledge her in liquors so foreign as these!
In whisky that reeks of the peat and the heather,
We 'll drink to the land of the brave and the true;—
Unsullied in honour,
Our blessings upon her!
Scotland for ever, and old Mountain Dew!
Pure as his conscience wherever he goes,
Warm as his heart to the friend he has chosen,
Strong as his arm when he fights with his foes!
So fill up again, and the pledge we'll renew.
Long flourish the honour
Her children have won her;
Scotland for ever, and old Mountain Dew!
Her fame, like her highland hills, last evermore;
May the cold of her glens be confined to the climate,
Nor enter the heart, tho' it creep through the door;
And never may we while we love and revere her,
As long as we 're brave, and warm-hearted and true,
Want reason to boast her,
Or whisky to toast her;
Scotland for ever, and old Mountain Dew!
SEA SORROW;
OR, YEARNING FOR HOME.
And fiercely the wild waves beat,
And a thousand miles away from home,
I toss about on the ocean foam,
And dream of my children sweet.
To one home-sick like me;
The flapping of the wide wet sail,
The moaning of the restless gale,
And the murmur of the sea.
Of the chant of the early lark;
Of the peasant whistling o'er the lea,
And the cow-boy trolling lustily,
Some love song in the dark.
That stands at my cottage door;
I dream of my wife, and prattling boys
Climbing my knees with a merry noise,
All under my sycamore.
And press her to my heart,
Never again shall my footsteps stray;
Never to regions far away,
Shall the sire of her babes depart!
With a small sufficient store;
Bless'd with the love of one true soul,
Let wild winds blow and billows roll,
I'll tempt them never more;—
Heedless of India's wealth;
Careless of empty power or fame,
Rich in my own unsullied name,
And a happy home, with health.
We've a thousand miles to run;
But Hope returns, though long denied,
As I lean upon the good ship's side,
And count them one by one.
A SONG FOR A STORMY NIGHT.
In their midnight rout,
Howl through our casement drearily;
But sweet is our mirth
Round the social hearth,
When circles the wine-cup cheerily,
With a heigh! ho! Nonnie no!
And a heigh! ho! Nonnie nee!
And stir up the coal,
Make the flames mount bright and cheerily;
We've right good cheer,
And a welcome here,
Though the fierce winds whistle wearily.
With a heigh! ho! Nonnie! no! &c.
Perchance there be
Some near us pining wearily;
All nipp'd by the cold,
Some traveller old,
May be trudging through snow-drifts drearily.
With a heigh! ho! Nonnie! no! &c.
From our window to-night,
Let it gleam to guide him cheerily,
We've a chair and a jug,
And a corner snug,
When he comes to our door so wearily.
With a heigh! ho! Nonnie! no! &c.
That we, well fed,
By our fire-side singing cheerily,
The bitter plight
Of the many pining wearily.
With a heigh! ho! Nonnie! no! &c.
To the old and poor;
They shall all be welcome cheerily,
While there's bite or sup
On our board or cup,
They never shall pass by wearily.
With a heigh! ho! Nonnie! no! &c.
THE TRUE GENTLEMAN.
Unswayed by greediness of pelf,
Who worships God without a show,
And loves his neighbour as himself,
May be as poor as Lazarus,
And all deform'd as heathen Pan;
Yet kings might press him to their hearts,
And own him as a gentleman.
Yet gladly shares it with the poor,
Who makes the best of mortal ills,
Slow to complain, long to endure,
May own his fathers have been churls
Ever since pride of birth began,
Yet waive no fraction of his right
To be consider'd gentleman.
Of Nature's nobles he doth stand,
And shines within his lowly sphere
The pride and blessing of a land.
A monarch upon parchment writes
His patents, sold in honour's mart;
But Nature, when ennobling men,
Inscribes her patents on the heart.
THE GREENWOOD TREE.
Must start from his pleasant sleep,
To measure alone his weary round
On the gloomy castle keep.
But we, merry men, in the pathless woods,
Where the nimble wild deer run,
We rise when we will, and sleep when we can,
And bend the knee to none.
Oh! a merry, merry life is ours, I ween;
At morn in the forests free,
And quaffing at e'en the jolly brown ale,
All under the greenwood tree.
To chant his vesper hymn,
And the warder watch from his loop-hole grate,
At the hour of midnight dim:
We own no master's sway;
But live to be happy when we can,
And jolly while we may.
Oh! a merry, merry life is ours, I ween;
At morn in the forests free,
And quaffing at e'en the jolly brown ale,
All under the greenwood tree.
BALLADS.
THE WISHING-GATE.
[In the Vale of Grasmere, in Westmoreland, there is a gate, known by the name of “The Wishing-Gate,” to which popular superstition attaches the belief that all reasonable wishes there formed will be fulfilled.]
The busy village sleeps,
And the pale moon with silver sheen
Her nightly vigil keeps;
The pole-star twinkles in the blue,
The hour is growing late,
Then haste thee, maiden, and away,
And seek the Wishing-Gate:
Thy thoughts serene and holy,
Go breathe thy prayer, go wish thy wish,
And banish melancholy.
And dons her hose and shoon,
And hastens to that ancient gate,
While shines the quiet moon—
“There is a bark upon the wave,
A bark I fain would see,
And one who treads her gallant deck,
Who vow'd to cherish me!
Who vow'd, in spite of fortune's frown,
His love should never vary—
Would he were here in safety now,
Conversing with his Mary!”
The hour was growing late,
The maiden, pensive and alone,
Leant o'er the Wishing-Gate.—
Was it a robber in the dark,
That stole along so weary?—
“'Tis he! 'tis he! my Henry dear,
Restored to love and Mary!”
THE MAIDEN OF RHINE.
Alone by the banks of Rhine,
Whose stream to the dark sea foaming,
Was bright in the red sunshine:
And she wept in bitter sorrow,
As faded the sun's last ray,
And sadly she thought of the morrow,
And her lover, far away!
For empty and pitiless pride,
And morning's beam must behold her
A cold and unwilling bride.
With the white rose wreath they've bound her,
She shines in her fairest trim,
And cold-hearted friends surround her,
To banish her thoughts of him.
The true heart can never forget!
Oh! leave her alone till the morrow!
She mourns for her loved one yet.
From her chamber, the maiden, weeping,
Looks out on the lordly Rhine,
“There's a boat o'er the light wave sweeping—
My Rudolph!—O were it thine!”
'Tis he!—and thy sire in vain
Shall seek for his blooming daughter,
When the morning comes again!
Away with thy loved one, maiden!
Away, thou lover so true!—
They're gone where, sire, grief-laden,
Nor bridegroom can pursue!
THE COUNTRY GENTLEMAN ABROAD.
I care not for its castled steeps, and slopes where grows the vine;
No pleasure upon Switzer lakes or Alpine hills I see,
For my thoughts are far away, in my own countrie.
And the hospitable farm-steads of York's beloved shire;
To see the corn-fields waving, and the cattle feeding free,
In the pleasant pasture lands of my own countrie.
Calling the pious folk to church from every hill and dell;
I long to ask the curate home to dinner and to tea,
And chat on politics and crops in my own countrie.
Their bouillon and their cotelettes, their rôtis and ragouts;
I loathe their harsh outlandish names, and pine again to see
The fine fat beef and pudding of my own countrie.
To relish their choice Burgundy, their claret and champagne;
I'd barter, and right willingly, a dozen of all three
For a pot of foaming ale in my own countrie!
Their vineyards pleasant, and their skies bright, vapourless, and blue;
To breathe the welcome fogs of my own countrie.
Cried out against my countrymen, their manners, and their laws;
Forgetting, thankless that I was, that first among the free,
Stands, and shall stand for evermore, mine own countrie.
I'll never stir from it again in search of realms more fair;
I'll never vaunt of pleasant France or sunny Italy,
But live in peace, and die in my own countrie.
LORENZO.
In chains my gallant lover lies,
A tyrant has pronounced his doom,
To-morrow he is free—or dies!
O Love! if thou hast power below,
Or favour where the angels dwell,
Protect thy maiden votary now—
Jesu Maria! shield me well!”
And clothes her in the priestly stole,
Binds back her locks of auburn bright,
And mutters prayers which save the soul.
The prison portals open wide,—
The holy father seeks the cell—
Lorenzo sees his destined bride—
Jesu Maria! shield her well!
The maiden's heart has much to say;
Lover! for thee she comes to die—
On with her cassock, and away!
Fly! for they come—thine hour draws near—
Already tolls thy warning knell!—
Too late, too late!—Oh words of fear!
Jesu Maria! shield them well!
Together then we'll yield our breath,
We'll be companions in the tomb,
And love shall cheer the hour of death.”
Now hoarsely beats the muffled drum,
And slowly tolls the funeral bell;
Make way! the hapless victims come—
Jesu Maria! shield them well!
THE TWO VULTURES.
Large and fierce as fierce may be;
The one was solemn, plump, and sleek,
Black was his heart, though his look was meek;
The other a haughtier aspect bore,
And his greedy beak was red with gore.
“Brother, where is thy banquet spread?
Say, my brother, I prithee, say,
Where shall we go and dine to-day;
Is there no sustenance for thee?
Is there a lack of flesh for me?”
“Fear not, there's plenty for claw and beak;
For let us travel west or east,
We're sure ere long to find a feast;
Human folly caters for thee,
And Bigotry provides for me.
Have I picked dry and bare as stones;
And of warm and reeking human blood
Thou, my brother, hast drunk a flood;
And let us seek where'er we will
We'll find a great abundance still.
When men themselves our banquets carve?
Good providers, I ween, are they,
And well they feed us night and day;
Fighting and slaying up and down,
Whether they live in field or town.”
I wonder if what they said be true?
And whether the name of the vulture sleek
May have been Intolerance, looking so meek?
And whether the other, haughtier far,
But not so cruel at heart, was War?
THE PILGRIM'S DOG.
An aged man was he,
And he sat him down upon a stone,
And sigh'd most bitterly:
The night was cold,—the fierce winds howl'd
With loud and blustering din,
So, to restore his drooping strength,
We ask'd the good man in.
Here's ale an thou art dry,
And tell us now what troubles thee,
And wherefore thou dost sigh?”—
The aged man he sat him down,
He drank no wine nor ale,
But shook the damp dew from his cloak,
And thus began his tale:
For many years I've seen,
And over many a distant land
My weary feet have been:
And I have braved the summer heat,
And borne the winter cold,
Without a murmur or complaint,
Though poor, and very old.
Companion of my way,
Who jogg'd contented by my side
For many a weary day;
Who shared my crust, when crust I had,
At noon beneath a hill,
And who, when I had none to give,
Was grateful for the will:
And far from barn or bield,
In many a stubble field;
Who, when the world look'd harshly down,
Was never false or cold,
But look'd up kindly in my face,
To cheer the pilgrim old.
In every changeful weather,
'Mid frost and snow, and driving sleet,
We trudged along together;
And now he lies upon the road—
Ah! cold and dead lies he,
And I am in the world alone,
With none to care for me!”
He quickly wiped away—
“My blessing with you!” murmur'd he,
But stay me not, I pray;
The sod all wet with dew,
With a sad heart to make a grave,
And bury that friend so true!”
Of orders grey or white,
To utter for thy parted friend
The solemn Christian rite?”
The old man sigh'd, and shook his head—
No Christian might he be,
Though many Christians that I wot of,
Are not so good as he!
A good one and a bold;
The truest friend that ever I had,
And now he's dead and cold!”
That aged man went out alone,
Alone and sad went he,
Where stands the wither'd tree.
The lark began to sing,
And village girls went forth to draw
Fresh water from the spring;
And when they came beneath the tree,
The tree all dead and sear,
That pilgrim old had written there
The words that ye shall hear:—
For so the sages say;
Though from the right and kindly path
He never went astray.
His head was not devoid of sense,
His heart was ever true;—
Passer! 'twas Instinct guided him,
And Reason shines for you!
Then act, that men may see
As true an epitaph as this
Inscribed at last for thee!”
COUNT CASK-O'-WHISKEY AND HIS THREE HOUSES.
A TEMPERANCE BALLAD,
INTENDED AS A COMPANION TO SIR JOHN BARLEYCORN.
A demon fierce, though frisky,
Who steals the souls of mortal men,
His name is Cask-o'-Whiskey.
He rides through town and village,
And calls the workman from his shop,
The farmer from his tillage.
He holds a mighty bicker,
Whose polish'd sides run daily o'er
With floods of burning liquor.
To taste this liquor greedy;
But chiefly come the poor and sad,
The suffering and the needy.
The dissolute, the lazy,
Draggle-tail'd sluts and shirtless men,
And young girls lewd and crazy.
Give us your burning liquor!
We'll empty fast as you can fill
Your fine capacious bicker.
And make us light and frisky,
Give, give! and we will bless thy name,
Thou good Count Cask-o'-Whiskey.”
Right merrily he laugheth,
And holds his bicker out to all,
And each poor idiot quaffeth.
And drives away their sadness;
The second lights their sunken eyes,
And fills their souls with gladness.
And play each furious antic;
The fourth drop boils their very blood,
And the fifth drop drives them frantic!
Till old Count Cask-o'-Whiskey
Holds his bluff sides with laughter fierce,
To see them all so frisky.
More of that right good liquor;
Fill up, old boy, that we may drain
Down to the dregs your bicker!”
And laughs a laugh so hollow,
Then waves his bicker in the air,
And beckons them to follow.
The eager crowd, exclaiming,
“O Cask-o'-Whiskey, give us more,
More of thy liquor flaming!”
Beside a rushing river,
Whose waters to the palate sweet
Are poison to the liver.
Drink of these waters mellow;
They'll make your bright eyes blear and dull,
And turn your white skins yellow.
By inches to forsake you;
They'll cause your limbs to faint and fail,
And palsies dire to shake you.
And clothe your backs with tatters;
They'll fill your hearts with evil thoughts;
But never mind—what matters?
And social ties dissever,
I'll be your friend in hour of need,
And find you homes for ever.
Three strong and goodly houses,
To lodge at last each jolly soul
Who all his life carouses.
Black are its walls and high,
And full of dungeons deep and fast,
Where death-doom'd felons lie.
Rank, fetid, and unholy,
Where, fetter'd by diseases foul,
And hopeless melancholy,
Pine on their couch of sadness,
Some calling death to end their pain,
And some imploring madness.
To all but sots appalling,
Where, by the parish bounty fed,
Vile, in the sunshine crawling,
And eats the dole of others,
A plague and burthen to himself,
An eye-sore to his brothers.
Drain deep the cup of ruin,
Drink, and like heroes madly rush
Each man to his undoing.
One of my goodly houses,
Is sure to lodge each jolly soul
Who to the dregs carouses!”
And all the crowd leaps after,
While over hill and valley wide
Resound loud peals of laughter.
How vain is all his preaching;—
The ragged crew that round him flock
Are too far gone for teaching.
They cry aloud, quite frisky,
“Here's to thy health, thou best of friends,
Kind, generous Cask-o'-Whiskey!
We live but for the present,
And merry will we make it yet,
And quaff these waters pleasant.”
And lifts his brimming bicker:
“Drink, fools!” quoth he, “you'll pay your scot,
I'll have your souls for liquor!”
The Hope of the World and other poems | ||