Aonian Hours; And Other Poems | ||
Aspley Wood.
7
CANTO I.
“Solo, chi segue ciò che piace, è saggio,
E in sua stagion degli anni il frutto coglie;
Questo grida natura.” ------
TASSO.
E in sua stagion degli anni il frutto coglie;
Questo grida natura.” ------
TASSO.
I
THE breath of Spring is on thee, Aspley Wood!Each shoot of thine is vigorous, from the green,
Low-drooping larch, and full unfolded bud
Of sycamore, and beech, majestic queen!
With her tiara on, which crowns the scene
With beauty,—to the stern oak, on whose rind
The warmest suns and sweetest showers have been,
And soft voice of the fond Favonian wind;—
His thousand lingering leaves reluctantly unbind.
8
II
But of all other trees, a clustering crowdBow their young tops rejoicingly, to meet
The breeze, which yet not murmurs overloud,
But wastes on Nature's cheek its kisses sweet,
To woo her from dark winter;—the wild bleat
Of innocent lambs is on the passing gale,
Blending with pastoral bells, and at my feet,
From yon warm wood the stockdove's plaintive wail
Wins to the curious ear o'er the subjected vale.
III
O Nature! woods, winds, music, vallies, hills,And gushing brooks,—in you there is a voice
Of potency, an utterance which instils
Light, life, and freshness, bidding Man rejoice
As with a spirit's transport: from the noise,
The hum of busy towns, to you I fly;
Ye were my earliest nurses, my first choice,
Let me not idly hope nor vainly sigh;
Whisper once more of peace—joys—years long vanished by!
9
IV
To you I fled in childhood, and arrayedYour beauty in a robe of magic power;
Ye made me what I am and shall be, made
My being stretch beyond the shadowy hour
Of narrow life,—ye granted me a dower
Of thoughts and living pictures, such as stir
In the eye's apple; to the breathing bower,
Here, where bright chesnut weds the towering fir,
Recal fair Wisdom back that I may dwell with her.
V
Visions on visions! how the moving throng,These bright remembrances on fancy press
Buried enjoyments as I pass! the song
Sung in the hushed vale's verdant loneliness,—
The storm—the sun—the rainbow—the vain guess
Of notes heard in the distance,—the advance
Of bells upon the wind,—the loveliness
Of flowers, unwithering in the sun's hot glance,
The thousand hopes that high in Youth's brisk pulses dance:
10
VI
Why, and from what far region come ye backWith bloom and youth all animate? ye seem
Like airy voices on a blighted track,
Peopling my slumber—sybils of a dream.
If of your presence rightly I may deem,
Ye are my better Genii! are ye come
To quicken in my heart each earlier theme
Of innocence, or with alarming drum,
To beat a guilty knell, and strike conviction dumb?
VII
Our first affections are but ill resigned,The blossoms of tranquillity and peace,
For the world's splendid guilt, which leaves behind
Dark fruits and bitter weeds, the blind increase
Of boiling billows from tumultuous seas,
Which beating on a wild and desolate shore,
Horrid with wrecks of innocence and ease,
Behold our bark without or sail or oar,
Drive to the gusty winds, and anchor nevermore.
11
VIII
Shut from the world of beauty and repose,There strive, there toil, there toss we; grasp a shade,
A bubble, and an echo—to the close
Dallying with danger, yet of nought afraid;
Bridling the mad leviathan, yet swayed
By every breath of Fortune, she who mocks
The heart which wooes her, false, coquettish maid!
Till when most seeming kind, her tempest's shocks
Whirl our light boat—a wreck on ruin's lonely rocks!
IX
Ye come—the winning voices of the past,The warners of the future! I receive
The revelations which ye bring, and cast
All meaner broodings earthward, and thus leave
Turmoil to worldly minions; here till eve
With thee, O Nature, will I commune, gain
Godlike impressions, from thy breast receive
Thy milk, celestial aliment! O deign
To take thy truant back, and staunch his wounds of pain.
12
X
A world is at my feet of flowers and fern,Cornfield and murmuring pine, vale, villa, heath,
Aisles through whose sylvan vistas we discern
All Heaven on high, and fruitfulness beneath.
Shades of my love and infancy! bequeath
A portion of your glory to my lay—
A Pilgrim of the Woods; I twine a wreath
Of wildflowers for thy revel, dancing May!
My theatre the woods—my theme one vernal day.
XI
Still floats in the grey sky the moving moon,A crescent—o'er yon valley of black pines
Where Night yet stands, a centinel; but soon
In the far streaky east the morning shines,
The Iris of whose bursting glory lines
With fire the firmament; distinct and clear
'Gainst the white dawn proud Ridgemount high reclines
His mural diadem:—lo! from his rear
The breaking mists unfurl, and Day has reached me here.
13
XII
Here on a solitary hill I takeMy station—days on years thus hurry by,
And of the varying present mar or make
A gloom or bliss in Man's eternity:
Suns rise—ascend—set—darken—and we die,
The dewdrops of a morning, in whose glass
All things look sparklingly;—alas! where I
Now stand, in how brief time shall others pass,
Nor heed, nor see the blade whereon my moisture was.
XIII
E'en as yon flower with hyacinthine bellsPlayful as light, which shivered by my tread,
Is turned to dust and darkness—to all else
It is as though it was not; swiftly sped
Spoil o'er its bruised buds which blossomed
A blending of all sweetnesses—what now?—
A few years hence, and over this bent head,
Dashing all life and gladness from the brow,
The scythe of Time shall pass, and Ruin's silent plough.
14
XIV
Long ages since, upon his mountain-peak,The adoring Persian bent him to the flame
Of the uprisen Sun, the whilst with shriek,
And clang of soaring wings the eagle came
From his precipitous eyrie;—See the same
Vicegerent of the Deity ascend
His watchtower in the zenith! by what name
May I best greet thee? what new honour lend,
Cradle of infant Time—his womb, birth, being, end!
XV
In wonder risest thou, material orb!And youthfulness—a symbol and a sign;
Change, revolution, age, decay, absorb
All other essences, but harm not thine:
In thy most awful face reflected shine
Thy Maker's attributes, Celestial Child!
When shapelessness ruled chaos, the Divine
Looked on the void tumultuous mass, and smiled—
Then startedst thou to birth, and trod'st the pathless wild:
15
XVI
Girt like a giant for the speed, the flight,The toil of unsummed ages; in thy zone,
Charmed into motion by thy sacred light,
The glad earth danced around thee with the tone
Of music—for then Eden was her own,
And all things breathed of beauty,—chiefly Man
Drank of an angel's joy; where are ye flown,
Too fleeting suns? a mortal's thought may span
Your course—for ye returned to whence your race began.
XVII
And we became all shadow—in the abyss,The spirit's desolation, here we stand,
Wrestling in darkness for a heavenly bliss,
And an immortal's essence: brightly grand,
How climbest thou thy skies? nor lend'st a hand
To help us to thy altitude! away
Earthborn repinings—ye may not command
A sparkle of that intellectual ray,
Which yet from heaven descends, and communes with our clay.
16
XVIII
The dark Chaldee, Assyrian, Persian, Mede,The magic sons of pagan Babylon,
Papyrus-scarfed Egyptian, sacred seed
Of Abram—Greek, Goth, Vandal, Roman—gone!
Where are the many worlds ye lost and won;
Fame, laurels, empire, grandeur, glory, guilt,
Sceptres, crowns, diadems? what can atone,
Avengers! for the blood your pride has spilt?
Can crumbled thrones, or swords though shivered to the hilt!
XIX
With heart all ecstasy, and eye all fire,Ye drank the morrow's freshness—haply wove
Wreaths round the steel, and myrtles round the lyre,
And woke with dance and revel the still grove,
And heaped your incense at the shrine of Jove,
And hoped your cinnamon should reach the sky
To purchase fresh indemnities of love
And power to whet your biting falchions by,
Some bloodier field to win, and haughtier foes to try.
17
XX
And built you columns of Corinthian brass,Babels of stone, and pyramids of clay,
And on the applause of millions sought to pass
In apotheosis of light away—
To be like Gods adored, and blest as they,
The Romuli of earth—with Gods to class;
And did your high ambition pave a way
To them?—your pinnacles ye built on glass,—
Dust—dust is all your tomb, and o'er it nods the grass,
XXI
Which sheds its seeds and withers; but the SpringFair as Aurora in her purple cloud,
Descends and wakens in their slumbering,
Life from the ashes, beauty from the shroud,
And speaks of immortality aloud
To mourning man; and thus the flower I trod
To its maternal dust shall issue proud
Of its new birth, and on a greener sod
Bow to the dallying winds—a sign to man from God.
18
XXII
Thus Life is twofold, twofold are our hopes;They die to bloom, they sink but to ascend,
E'en as the hill I stand on downward slopes
To that low vale which with a gentle bend
Again aspires, as though resolved to end
In nothing less than heaven: mark with what sweep
Of proud pre-eminence the trees ascend!
But with a softer grandeur, as to keep
Watch o'er the sea beneath, lone, billowy, wild, and deep;
XXIII
And hollow as the mighty sea's scooped bed,And with a murmur like the mighty sea's,
Heard afar off at intervals—the tread
Of the dark waters breaking by degrees,
To which the ear lists lovingly—but these
Are of the green bough's wafture; here the fir
Sits on its haughty hill, and as the breeze
Vibrates, bids all its thousand branches stir,
And ever as they move the pleasant sounds recur.
19
XXIV
And the lone Mount hath free and ample scopeTo wrap his mantle gloomily around
His mass of shadow, like a misanthrope,
Who breathes a vital scorn on the sweet ground,
And heaven's blue tinct of loveliness, and sound
Of lulling lutes, if chance they meet his ear:
So stern and strict a penance has wrapt round
Its top—it smiles not to the murmurs near,
But loneliest looks and lowers when sunniest is the year.
XXV
And near its summit the funereal yewHath built himself a pinnacle, and stands
The guardian of the vale—whose dropping dew
Binds with a deadly barrenness the sands
Which loathe the weeds they nourish; to the bands
Of its mysterious circle not the bee
Comes, which all blossoms seeks, though it commands
A berry beautiful as eye may see,
Nor there one green herb grows, nor harebell of the lea.
20
XXVI
But well its shade would please the anchorite;There might he build him his monastic dome,
Arch, cell, cave, cloister, altar, minaret,
And moan and patter in that Gothic home
O'er creeds of o'erpast centuries: but to roam
Yon dell with moorland fragrance overspread
In the sweet summer tide would ill become
His ashy cheek, and heart to pleasure dead,
For him that heathy couch were far too soft a bed.
XXVII
But I thereon in the warm luxuryOf an Italian sky will fling me down
Unscrupulously, lightly envy I
The cowled monk's scapulaire or hermit's gown
Woven of sackcloth, and a bed of down
I scorn as lightly; but on Nature's breast,
Mid flowers, and ferns, and freshness all her own,
And soft airs giving sweetness sweeter zest,
O who could slight such charms, who shun so pure a rest!
21
XXVIII
The far-extended prospect—the dim spireWhich bounds the blue horizon—white walls seen
In glittering distance—wreathing from the fire
Of pastoral huts ascending smoke—the sheen
Of hamlets humming in the morn—the green
And beautiful hue of youth on every flower,
And herb where Spring's betraying steps have been—
The bright leaves sparkling in a sunny shower,—
Music on every bough, and life in every bower:
XXIX
The plover's shrilly whistle—the quick callOf pheasants in their devious wanderings,
The heifer lowing from the distant stall,
And sudden flutter of the wild bird's wings,
Invisible in passing—sunrise—springs
Whose crystal gushings momently engage
The babble of an echo—these are things
Too mean, or far too lovely for a Sage
With whom delight is crime, and solitude a cage.
22
XXX
But I not so have read the leaf of lifeIn nature's volume, as to task my powers
In mastery of my pleasures; sorrow, strife,
Sufferings—they may be, as they have been ours,
And our drooped eyes have met them with salt showers
Which spoke without repining—they are gone
Like to a biting viper, and my hours
Somewhat for fruitless anguish would atone,
But with a gentle aim, indulged as then alone.
XXXI
With a more melancholy tenderness,And more subdued intenseness, I would scan
All scene, all life, all pleasure, all distress,
The majesty and littleness of man;
For Melancholy with my youth began,
And marked me for her votary—wherefore not?
Is being bliss? but as my being ran,
My sufferings cherished, and my fire forgot,
With a more placid mind I scrutinize our lot.—
23
XXXII
Sons of a Sire, to whom the earth is dust,And man all ashes, save the immortal part
Which will outlive its sanctuary, he must
Sustain, enjoy, weep, wither, and depart,
To what new sphere he knows not—in the mart
Of worldly selfishness, for him I learn
Pity; 'tis in seclusion that my heart
With aspirations to the skies will yearn,
Imbibing mournful joy from her inspiring urn.
XXXIII
He who hath ne'er invested SolitudeWith an undying beauty, ne'er hath knelt
In worship when her sceptre brought the mood
Of melancholy o'er him, hath not felt
Sweetness in sorrow—is not used to melt
With the humanities of life, nor hears
The whispered lore, the music which is dealt
Invisibly around us from the spheres,
The tender, bright, and pure—the Paradise of tears:
24
XXXIV
The ineffably serene, the kind regretWhich speaks without upbraiding, the mild gloom
Of thought without austerity, but yet
Heavy with pensiveness, our future doom
Seen without fear, presages which assume
The features of an Angel—feelings grand—
Grand, and of incommunicable bloom,
The growth of Eden;—O, he hath not spanned
The soul's infinitude with an Archangel's hand!
XXXV
Storm, wind, clouds, darkness, twilight, and deep noon,Summer and wizard Winter, and thou Eye
Of most mysterious Night, thou moving Moon,
Who yet hang'st out thy cresset in the sky,
Pale, but still beautiful! ye know that I
Have loved her as a Psyche, and have bound
Her sweet zone round my loins when ye were by,
And nought material uttered voice or sound;
Whilst she her face unveiled, smiling when most ye frowned.
25
XXXVI
Spirit of Ossian! thou too from thy shroudDidst come and stand around me, charge with light
The wood, the stream, the cave, the flashing cloud,
The thunder and the loneliness of night,
Charm with thy melancholy harp the flight
Of Time, stern chronicler! and in the leaf
Of waning Spring and the autumnal blight
Of her last flower, subdue me into grief,
To which Morn broke unloved, and woe wished no relief.
XXXVII
Thine was the darker solitude of heart,And solitude of sight—O, pang severe!
Thou felt'st each Loved one, one by one depart
Timelessly, till Time left thee not a tear
To shed o'er all thy kindred, and the drear
Vacuity of sorrow on thee lay;—
But then thou took'st thy harp, Immortal Seer!
And in the reliques of thy song, to Day
Long buried deeds returned, and heroes of old sway.
26
XXXVIII
By tower all green with ruin, vacant hall,Or lonely cataract, I saw thee sit,
Blind Prophet! visions swarming at thy call
Tiresias-like—as fancy gave the fit
To sorrow; their eyes shaded—their brows lit
By an eclipsing moon—all substance passed,
Or melted to a shadowy softness, writ
By Pity's finger, whilst the murmuring blast
Unfurled their airy halls, interminably vast;
XXXIX
And all the music of the elementsStirred in thy bosom, in the cherishing
Of which sublime emotion—which intense
Struggle—the Harp of Passion found a string
Unknown before or after, for the spring
Of harmony was fathomed, and the prize
Was music most unhappy—a sweet thing
Which Melancholy loves to realize,—
Her punishment, pride, pain, gloom, glory in disguise.
27
XL
And at the Voice of Cona, things aroundUttered similitude of grief; the wave
Broke to the sad shore with a mellow sound,
The dew hung on the floweret of the cave,
Which sparkled droopingly; meanwhile the rave
Of gusty winds spake loudly—calm anon
And russet looked the mountain-tops which gave
A smile as of enchanting seasons gone,
And aye the Canna quaked, the cataract flowed on.
XLI
And thy Malvina is a peerless theme,Young, sorrowing, sweet, empassioned and refined,
The embodied image of a poet's dream,
Grace warm with feeling, Beauty fraught with mind—
Fair as her sister-lilies—gentle, kind,
And tempered all to tenderness—but she
Soon flew a shadowy Spirit on the wind,
And left the Last One of his line to be
A single shivering leaf on ruin's hoary tree.
28
XLII
Such as I was in those delicious days,Smit with the love of sadness, see me still—
A lover of the lines on nature's face,
The gloomy forest and the lonely hill,
My haunt the rustling pines—a leaping rill
My Castaly—inspiring as when first
I touched the simple harp with simple skill,
And in its wild tones sought to slake the thirst
Which classic Milton woke, and wizard Ossian nursed.
XLIII
Sunbeams of Song! ye were my waking bliss,The visions of my slumber; in the shade
To steep my light cares in forgetfulness,
Lightly dispersed, I called ye to my aid:
At noontide in the boundless forest laid,
I heard you from its deep recesses fling
Voices like Ariel's musical, whilst played
The bee amid the bluebells murmuring,
Who comes e'en now around with memories on her wing.
29
XLIV
Rise to my thought the shadows and the sheenAs then, of the sought sylvans; the green bough
Waving at will—dun deer at distance seen
Starting, in flight—if but a zephyr blow;
The bittern's sullen shriek—the water's flow
O'er mosses, sauntering idly in the sun,—
A thousand stirring fancies come and go
With thy revisiting sound, but, Murmuring One!
What grieves thy happy wing that thou so soon art gone?
XLV
Why didst thou come to bring those moments back,And make me yet more mournful? severed Friends!
Am I not now companionless? the track
Of innocent boyhood in a desert ends
To which your names are stages;—Youth ascends
The zenith—I review the past with pain;
In what far regions strive ye? my soul blends
In secret with you—Life's elastic chain
Snapt with your parting steps—Fate, join those links again!
30
XLVI
North, on a mild declivity of hill,Stands a hoar oak, majestic root! the growth
Of rolling centuries, and haughtier still,
Unbent beneath their passing pressure, both
Scornful, and scorning ruin; Time looks loth
To smite at it with his devouring scythe,
Nor sends one spoiling canker with fell tooth
To gnaw its core, and in its ashes writhe;
But o'er it Spring looks green, beneath it dances blithe.
XLVII
There isolate it stands, and from its heightSees generations in their ebb and flow;
The mighty tide sweeps on in dark and bright,
Hope, danger, doubt, tranquillity, and woe;—
First, Infancy runs round thee to and fro,
And makes him acorn-cups the dews to sip;
Years pass—the Infant sits a Youth below,
With Beauty in Love's holy guardianship,
Sighs at his beating heart, and kisses on his lip.
31
XLVIII
He glows, and is made wretched! for the spellOf love when most it works is most unkind,
And if its first touch is untunable,
It leaves a blasting ecstasy behind—
Its sweets are changed to wormwood; for the mind
Cannot its dragon-folds at will uncoil;
Is not the passion masterless and blind,
Hoping 'gainst hope, redoubling toil on toil?
Unblessed—the mad tears start, the heart-drops overboil.
XLIX
But give the Youth his angel! on his cheekLet Manhood set his signet, see him blest—
Moons speed, cares thicken, patience waxeth weak,
And all too soon, Age seeks thee in the quest
Of a light slumber—of a little rest,
Or wraps his mantle closer in the chill,
Quick breath of Winter;—shrinking in his vest,
He grasps his staff, and totters down the hill,
His pulse beats, flutters, fails—one throb—and all is still!
32
L
And chattering Infancy assumes againThy acorn-cups, and o'er the turf so late
Trod by her lost sire, sings and weaves a chain
Of bluebells and anemonies—elate,
And forming to her hopes as fair a fate
As the sweet flowers she kisseth; but the noon
Of years, as of the day, with withering weight
And hot breath, passes o'er the twined festoon,—
She blossoms with the flower, and droops almost as soon!
LI
Turn from the thought—the season and the hillsAs yet are breathing beauty; all is Youth
Around, undarkened by prelusive ills,
The fanciful of being with the truth;
And who, whilst yet the current lingereth smooth
And every wave reflects a flower above,
Would mar it with a wrinkle? let it soothe
In spring to shun the raven for the dove
Who cooes, herself untaught, yet ever teaching Love.
33
LII
Hid in a bushy grove, where every windThat stirs showers down new blossoms from its wings,
Like a lorn voice, all querulous but kind,
In love with grief, that turtle sits and sings
To the wood-echoes of a thousand things
To which her bosom beateth; of her mate
From her side too long absent—of the springs,
Her pastime, all unvisited of late,
Since that a mother's cares were added to her state.
LIII
Cares and a mother's transports! fear and joy,Meek gentleness and calm solicitude;
The very breathing winds those fears employ,
And now a voice and footfall in the wood:
Listening, alive to aught that may intrude,
What can a mother-bird so gentle do
But o'er her young more flutteringly to brood,
And kiss them with her bill, and sweetlier coo,
And them not e'er forsake whatever ills ensue!
34
LIV
Peace, fearful one! 'tis but a passer-by,The fond impatience of a village maid,
Who seeks to trace thy dwelling with her eye,
And bless thy tones, then plunges in the shade:
Why of Ianthe's steps art thou afraid?
She threads this lonely thicket but to cull
The ripest flowers on which the sun has played,
Of which this hazel covert is so full,
And now an orchis seek, and now a primrose pull.
LV
And arm in arm with her Viola trips,And with an osier basket on her arm,
A murmured song is on her moving lips,
Her looks with busy hope and rapture warm;
Her eyes the violets which she seeks inform,
Eyes glittering on you like two Naiad founts
Of purest azure—skies without a storm:
Each valley she descends, each hill she mounts,
Springs to her lurking flower, and every one recounts.
35
LVI
And tears down woodbines from the branching planesTo crown her stores, and form her coronal,
That scarce her Sister of the Wood sustains
The heaping coil of leaves which round her fall;
Soon overflowing is her basket small,
But she the more her busy office plies,
And calls Ianthe nearer—to her call
Ianthe comes—fresh flowers rain from the skies,
Then laugheth she aloud, and followeth her who flies.
LVII
And far behind them rosy infants run,Two darling shoots from one sustaining spray—
For one lorn parent rears their youth, and one
Though loved, is as a stranger passed away.
She, when to her sequestered home they stray
Fondling each other, in their deep-blue eyes,
Looks—how endearingly! and seemeth gay,
But for their sweet caresses gives them sighs,
And aye the more they smile, more fast her tears arise.
36
LVIII
But they know not her source of grief, or soonForget all sense of sorrow in the chase
Of fantasies, on which the mutable moon
Stamps all the changes of her wexing phase,
Joy in them all! now with unequal pace
Those virgins of the village they pursue,
But frequent pause them in the panting race,
To seize some fallen flowers besprent with dew,
And prank each other's breast with quaint devices new.
LIX
Small choice make they of what the green-wood bowerScatters so lavishly—the daisy pied,
The purple hyacinth, Apollo's flower,
Fresh kingcups, and sweet cowslips crimson-eyed,
Blushing anemonies which plucked, have died
With the first wind, red lychnis, blue eyebright,
And many a golden cup which loves the tide,
The oxeye pale, the laurel blossom light,
Are gathered all in turn, in turn abandoned quite.
37
LX
For, lo! a wilderness of lilies, whitherThe merry hum of bees attracts their eye!
The rosy boy on tiptoe flieth thither,
His timid sister nothing does but fly
In fear of the winged insects; sad and shy
At length her secret the coy creature tells—
He on them rushes shouting—none are nigh,
They may fall down and fill their lap with bells,
In a delicious dream, unheedful of all else.
LXI
E'en thus, when Delos started from the waveSacred, to blossom in perpetual May,
E'en thus, on myrtles in a pleasant cave,
The infant Phœbus and Diana lay:
A triple crown of sunbeams did the day
Knit round the awful temples of its god,
On her the crescent cast a lunar ray,
And tall trees bowed in homage, whilst the sod
Poured forth a thousand flowers where sportively they trod.
38
LXII
There rest you, Wearied Ones! at pleasure useWhat childhood's Amalthean horn may grant;
If on your lids fall slumber's golden juice,
May wizard Fancy be your pursuivant
Into her fairy halls, around your haunt
Music and floating whispers lull your ear,
But may the noxious adder coil aslant,
Nor grey gnat sound his shrill reveillé near,
With bitter venom wound, or cause one sorrowing tear!
LXIII
Sleeping—perchance the redbreasts may behold,And deem you shapes of beauty passed away,
And with their bills, as beldames oft have told
The tale, aspire to make your pillow gay,
Bringing you odorous herbs and mosses gray,
As to the Innocents of yore, whom grief
Slew without fault, and for your shroud array
The ashy-pale rosemary, mourner chief,
And many a lily-flower, and many a lily-leaf.
39
LXIV
Look on that Flower—the Daughter of the Vale,The Medicean statue of the shade!
Her limbs of modest beauty, aspect pale,
Are but by her ambrosial breath betrayed.
There, half in elegant relief displayed,
She standeth to our gaze, half-shrinking shuns;
Folding her green scarf like a bashful Maid
Around, to screen her from her suitor suns,
Not all her many sweets she lavisheth at once.
LXV
Locked in the twilight of depending boughs,Where night and day commingle, she doth shoot
Where nightingales repeat their marriage-vows;
First by retiring, wins our curious foot,
Then charms us by her loveliness to suit
Our contemplation to her lonely lot;
Her gloom, leaf, blossom, fragrance, form, dispute
Which shall attract most belgards to the spot,
And loveliest her array who fain would rest unsought.
40
LXVI
Her gloom, the aisle of heavenly solitude;Her flower, the vestal Nun who there abideth;
Her breath, that of celestials meekly wooed
From heaven; her leaf, the holy veil which hideth;
Her form, the shrine where purity resideth;
Spring's darling, nature's pride, the sylvans' queen—
To her at eve enamoured Zephyr glideth,
Trembling, she bids him waft aside her screen,
And to his kisses wakes—the Flora of the scene.
LXVII
But O, the thousand charms of this wood-cover,The plain, the steep, the musical, the still,
The sad, the cheerful! here may Nature's lover
For ever taste, yet never have his fill:
The tangled valley now becomes a hill,
The hill a glade, the glade a vista riven
From depth of groves, and then we view at will
Far towns and plains, and where earth blends with heaven
Blue Ocean seems to roll, and mimic waves are driven.
41
LXVIII
And thus we wander, e'en as though a spellClung to our footsteps, and transformed the view;
Making the bosky hill a pansied dell,
And tinging all things with Enchantment's hue.
Small need have we of Ariadne's clue,
To guide us through our labyrinth to-day;
Here, where each step creates a landscape new,
Here, where to linger is a sweet delay,
O, who would not be lost within a maze so gay!
LXIX
Hark to the merry Gossip of the spring—The sweet mysterious voice which peoples place
With an Italian beauty, and does bring
As 'twere Elysium from the wilds of space
Where'er her wing inhabits! give it chace,
In other bowers the Fairy shouts again;
Where'er we run it mocks our rapid race—
Still the same loose note in a golden chain
Rings through the vocal woods, and fills with joy the plain.
42
LXX
Hail to thee, shouting Cuckoo! in my youthThou wert long time the Ariel of my hope,
The marvel of a summer! it did soothe
To listen to thee on some sunny slope,
Where the high oaks forbade an ampler scope
Than of the blue skies upward—and to sit,
Canopied, in the gladdening horoscope
Which thou, my planet flung—a pleasant fit,
Long time my hours endeared, my kindling fancy smit.
LXXI
And thus I love thee still—thy monotoneThe self-same transport flashes through my frame,
And when thy voice, sweet Sybil, all is flown
My eager ear, I cannot chuse but blame.
O may the world these feelings never tame!
If age o'er me her silver tresses spread,
I still would call thee by a lover's name,
And deem the spirit of delight unfled,
Nor bear, though grey without, a heart to Nature dead!
43
LXXII
Thus too the Grasshopper is still my friend,The minute-sound of many a sunny hour
Passed on a thymy hill, when I could send
My soul in search thereof by bank and bower,
Till lured far from it by a foxglove flower
Nodding too dangerously above the crag,
Not to excite the passion and the power
To climb the steep, and down the blossoms drag,
Them the marsh-crocus joined, and yellow water-flag.
LXXIII
Shrill sings the drowsy Wassailler in his dome,Yon grassy wilderness where curls the fern,
And creeps the ivy; with the wish to rove
He spreads his sails, and bright is his sojourn
'Mid chalices with dews in every urn:
All flying things a like delight have found—
Where'er I gaze, to what new region turn,
Ten thousand insects in the air abound,
Flitting on glancing wings that yield a summer-sound.
44
LXXIV
And chief the Fly, upon whose fans are spreadHues with which summer warms the occident
At the rich sunset, epicure in taste,
Beholds the odorous light, and deems it lent
For amorous pastime, and in truth seems bent
To find or form a paradise below;—
With blooms and herbs of every various scent
Dallies her tongue—her wings expanded show
Like ornamented clouds hung round by Iris' bow.
LXXV
O'er mead, moor, river, garden, forest, mount,In her gay search the delicate Lady flies,
Tries every odour, sips of every fount,
Nor trusts her form but to most crystal skies.
Coquettish in her motions, how she tries
Thousand admiring hearts to captivate!
The Swallow too pursues so bright a prize,
Wins, and destroys—so Beauty bows to Fate,
Caught in the toils she spread, to be bewailed too late.
45
LXXVI
That pageant past, comes the quick Squirrel forthFrom his high cedar with a burst and bound,
To sport upon the warm grass of the earth
Feeding, and wave his graceful brush around,
And pause—and prick his ears, and at each sound
List in a breathless attitude, and start
If far away intruding steps resound:
With feet already raised to spring, to dart
On to the nearest pine, but claims a moment's part.
LXXVII
Anon he cowers upon a branch, and thenceLooks deeply down on his pursuer's shape,
And yet alarmed, on his glad eminence
Stamps wrathfully, then looks a laughing ape,
Playing his thousand pranks o'er an escape
Almost too lofty for our eye to reach
Through the thick gloom, then hies he to the rape
Of the pine's cones, or to his nest, the pleach
Of many a wilding bough in the next giant beech.
46
LXXVIII
This his spring-life—e'en when the October windHis firm beech rocks with a sea-murmur loud,
That squirrel the same merry mime I find—
A mariner on his vibrating shroud:
Though darkly glooms the burning thunder-cloud,
And rends with sulphurous bolt some mighty tree,
He hears the roar as fearlessly and proud
As a Fleet-admiral when dark—alee,
The fiery battle joins, and chaos shakes the sea.
LXXIX
Hush! for the most shy Pheasant leaves the brakesTo bask her beauteous plumage in the sun,
Which, as in love with its bright colours, makes
A hundred brilliant Irises of one.
Autumn is past: the desolating gun
Haunts not her dreaming sleep; she now may tread,
A Princess, through the halls she wont to shun,
Silence around, and verdurous domes o'erhead,
More high exalt her crest, her whirring pinions spread.
47
LXXX
She looks down on a swarming multitude,The Commonwealth of Ants—a populace
Moved by one mighty aim, a nation's good;
Instructive lesson to a haughtier race!
For here no selfish ministers efface
The charter step-dame Nature first designed,
The people's independence; nor for place,
Truck to a crown their dignity of mind—
The Emmet's polity leaves Europe's far behind.
LXXXI
They throne prosperity in grainy hives,Her throne has been an armed seignorage;
Their social bond through centuries survives,
Hers homicide infracts in every age;
A spotless quiet is their heritage,
Hers the keen scythe of fierceness and of guilt;
At but a breath—her myrmidons engage
In fratricidal crime, and blood is spilt,
Till Power's all-evil blade is shivered to the hilt—
48
LXXXII
The voice of purple Pride, whose barbarous rod,Shaken o'er vassal-realms, in time became
Consociated with the cross of God,
A bigot torch, lit at revenge's flame,
To be the scourge of nations! of this frame
Empires and thronedoms have been, and are made—
Erewhile to crumble at some mighty name,
Philip or Mahmoud—or that Giant Shade
Who struck at crowns for France, and was by France betrayed!
LXXXIII
O, with what sweet abruptness to this bowerOf woodbine comes the music of those bells,
Blown by the dissolute winds! a marriage hour
Is nigh, that sound can chronicle nought else.
Over the uplands, into the gay dells
Momently sinking, momently to rise,
It rings around a syren-mass of spells—
To the bride-maid some silenced hopes and sighs,
And many a smile and tear in two fond bridal eyes.
49
LXXXIV
To One I deem it brings remembered traceOf a faint dream, a phantasm of delight,
When the fresh morning wore a cherub's face,
And there were tears and sufferings long ere night.
When unsubdued Affection hastes to plight
Long summer-vows to a maid's icy frown,
There is no sun, no shade, no bud, no blight,
He can feel more—albeit, romantic town!
Ring out thy merry bells till yon tired sun goes down.
LXXXV
But the young mourner, his first pangs gone by,Consorted by the sacred Sisters nine,
In their communion finds tranquillity,
Served with nepenthe from their spring divine,
Which laps the soul in gentleness benign,
Reversing what the Fatal Sisters weave;—
This gift, Alonzo, this should now be thine,
Woo thee a kinder Fair and cease to grieve,
Assured no future hope can like the past deceive.
50
LXXXVI
Then still, romantic Town! thy sweet bells ring,Waft it o'er primroses to his lulled ear,
Wind of the south! not one tone scattering,
The pleasant sound might make a desart dear;
What, where of all her charms the virgin year
Wistfully flings the sweetest, as to crown
With mirth the melancholious? Lo! tis here
She builds her bower—then still, romantic Town!
Ring out thy merry bells till yon tired sun goes down.
LXXXVII
Wensdon! up thy sequestered hill I spring,Thy hill of broom, with flowers on every stem;
Of these secluded precincts thou art King,
And mak'st the mountain-pines thy diadem.
Thy yellow sands are an enchasing gem
To those who love thee, for thou dost bequeath
A far pervading vision unto them:—
Here many a sheepbell tinkles on the heath,
Green waves the fir above—a cottage smokes beneath—
51
LXXXVIII
In a blue Pillar to the sky, so calmIs Heaven's high cærule vault!—the palisade
Round the nigh garden sweeping, throws a charm,
A pastoral beauty round the lovely maid
Verduta, culturing roses with her spade,
And watering them erewhile—needs but a fount
Of dulcet waters bubbling in its shade
To make the hill of glorified account,
As Aganippe bursts beneath the Muses' mount.
LXXXIX
But the still Picture far away expandsInto an ampler scope for ear and eye;
Herds low—flocks graze—distant a hamlet stands,
Its steeple tolling as the breeze blew by.
We may discern an antique Library,
Where blossomed lilachs shake in bright relief
Their tassels—with whose grateful tint may vie
The green Corn, rising into lofty leaf
On plains which Ceres piles with a redundant sheaf.
52
XC
Art thou a lover of thy race? advance,And view a nation's opulence in seed;
A child of nature? lo! the woodlands dance,
The vales are vocal with the shepherd's reed.
A patriot? England's garner is thy meed—
A soldier? bear thy idle honours hence,
For on this stage no gladiators bleed;
The patriot's glory and the sage's sense
Inhabit with the lark, and she is Innocence.
XCI
Where the flute warbles, should the war-drums knoll?Where ripen vines, should conflagrations curl?
Should nature's leaf become a shrivelled scroll?
Where wave her pines should bannerols unfurl?
Should Murder her destroying lightnings hurl,
Sweet Freedom! o'er thy populated plains,
To seas of blood transform thy streams of pearl,
And turn thy rosy fillets into chains?
Should e'en a Wellesley tread the turf which yet retains—
53
XCII
Remembrance of our Howard? you have seen,Hung round with delicate herbs, a little rill
Gush into life, and make creation green,
Where'er ‘it glideth at its own sweet will,’
Heaven settles on its face—its course is still,
Nor would betray its currents as they pass,
Did not a livelier colour clothe the hill,
The valley-flowers, the moss of the morass—
Like to that little rill benignant Howard was:
XCIII
A Spirit in our wilderness below,Scattering ambrosial verdure, sanctified
For the severe discipleship of Woe,
Pity's apostle, Duty was his bride.
By him no panacea was denied
Which lulled affliction—Mercy was his tone,
His acts the good man's wish personified—
Lutes—whose sweet strains were touched for heaven alone,
But by the winds betray'd, and o'er far billows blown.
54
XCIV
Aspley! thy pleasant bowers his feet have wooed,The Pilgrim came and loved them, for on thee
There doth repose a holy quietude,
The inspiring Genius of philanthropy:
Within yon simple mansion, where the bee
Murmurs and feeds all June amid the limes,
Paused a few sunny hours the Devotee,
Ere yet again he sought in scorching climes
Each dreadful Lazar-house of sicknesses and crimes.
XCV
His deeds are scions of a nobler stemThan laurels gathered in a nation's tears;
With healthy tenderness we turn to them,
And grey Tradition chronicles for years
The walk where once an age the man appears
Shaped out by deep communings with the sky,
Heaven's Mercury to earth—whom earth reveres:
Bowers fall—yet here thy memory should not die,
But like the Banyan spread, and flower immortally.
55
XCVI
Yes! still amid this beauteous TheatreHis gentle spirit seems to hover round,
The vallies breathe of him; of him the fir,
Vibrating, whispers in a silver sound.
It is his voice which hills to hills resound,
As echo to enchanted echo calls:
I gaze—I rove on consecrated ground,
Where broods his gentleness—his mantle falls;—
Groves, vallies, warbling hills, and ornamented Halls.
XCVII
Such talisman within my mind awakesThe melting sweetness of the Month I sing:
The spirit its own gloom or Eden makes
Whene'er it wills to strike the secret spring
Of Good or Evil: for we have a string
Which touched aright divinely will respond,
Like Love amid blown roses—as we bring
Virtue in sight, of Virtue we grow fond,
We are not of the earth—our spirits soar beyond.
56
XCVIII
Yet here the warrior in his armed hallSate throned in evil state in ages gone,
A powerful prince within his Capitol—
And whensoe'er he blew his Saxon horn,
Corn blazing, hamlets rifled, virgins torn
Weeping away from their paternal cot,
His ravage marked with blood—a little Urn
Of marble now is all the Guises' lot,
They came and passed away—they won and are forgot!
CXIX
Yon Church contains their ashes—enter there!Through arched aisle, low cell, and gallery dim,
To purge the stain from off the scimitar,
Dark murmurs stole of orison and hymn.
There, but no more armipotent of limb,
Some man of many sins recumbent lies
Pillowed on stone, and there antiquely grim,
His hands beseech the offended Deities,
Clasped, as in love with life whilst passing to the skies.
57
C
The crest, the spear, the banner, and the plume,Emblazoned shield, and iron-twisted mail—
Which lent devices to their sculptured tomb,
Pomp to their battles—can they more avail?
Alas for them the maid, the widow's wail,
The morning spoil, the midnight sacrilege!
On high that stony warrior will wax pale
When thousand tongues the heavenly throne besiege,
And the scorned Vassals' wrongs condemn the guilty Liege.
CI
From Jenghis-Kahn to terrible Mahmoud,Trace Slaughter through all chronicles to Cain,
From Cain to Cæsar—from the Hounds of blood,
Peru's fierce spoilers, to the Scourge of Spain—
'Tis the same Tale! first pride, ambition then,
The spur of frenzy, anger's trumpet-call,
Mirth, murder, victory; a boast—a stain—
Last, closing conscience with her snakes and pall—
Enough! the Conqueror bends, and Nations bless his fall!
58
CII
'Tis well! his life was like the Upas-tree,The curse of all his kind! who touched him, drew
Contagion from the contact, they might flee,
But guilt, the Simoom, ever would pursue;
And still around would hang the fatal dew,
Corroding what it poisoned to the core,
Tinging the bough till lividly it grew
All ashes! as the shirt of Nessus bore
Torture, and tears, and shrieks, to Hercules of yore.
CIII
Away! all else is whiteness by his side:A many-chambered Hall before me stands—
The House of Learning flings its portals wide,
And Knowledge bears within his ample hands
The volumes of the dead; at his commands
What busy pupils class the tribes of mind
And banquet upon fruitage! as he scans
The past—long ages will their scrolls unbind,
See Rome her eagles bear, and Greece her clarions wind.
59
CIV
Sages again and legislators buildThe wealth of realms, the policy of states,
Numa, and Solon, and Lycurgus, wield
Their ivory sceptres at the city-gates.
Cumæan Sibyls here aread the Fates,
With holy fillets there the priest divines,
There the grave Senate holds its dread debates,
Here speaks a Cicero, a Cimon shines,
And gay Anacreon bathes his song in Teian wines.
CV
Bends to their sway the ductile soul of youth,Now touched, stung, softened, mellowed, rapt, on fire,
As pity, fervour, eloquence, zeal, truth,
Or music glances on the electric wire
Which moves their passions. Hark they to the lyre
Which Horace, Virgil, and Tibullus strung
To satire, war, and love; or what the Sire
Of verse, divine Melesigenes sung,
Strains—through the lapse of years imperishably young.
60
CVI
O glorious records of the march of Time,Gems of a world in shadow and decay!
Whilst you exist to soften and sublime—
Earth's noblest relics are not passed away.
The birth of Empire seems of yesterday,
Seen through your telescope; lo! cycles, suns
Melt to a span,—man seems a child to play
Beside Creation's waters, yet at once
Pervades her glassy stream, all sweeping as it runs.—
CVII
Yet are those Halls not always dedicateTo Grecian sweetness and Ausonian lore;
Some hours there are when pastime can create
Of simple pleasures an unblemished store—
Pleasures, by past restraint enhanced the more,
Welcomed with smiles, and closed without a sigh:
Why in the noon of manhood evermore
Should the fair flowers of morning-promise die
Around the heart, whose bloom no future can supply?—
61
CVIII
Nor want there happier hours when hours are sweetestWith mirth and music to awake delight,
When eyes the most benign and steps the fleetest,
Do make a dancing vigil of the night.
When the whole room is beautiful and bright,
And on young lips the heart's warm sunshine dwells,
When voices are melodious as the light,
And pleading Love to blushing Beauty tells
Regards in pleasing tones, but pleasing from none else;—
CIX
When in the shadow of each full dark orbHe sees the Morning-star of Passion break,
And the dear smiles which all his soul absorb,
Around her cheeks a warm Aurora make,
Fair as the Sunrise on a mountain lake;
When at each tread of her harmonious toe,
Pendants, like dew-drops on the lily, shake
And odorous tresses negligently throw
Sweets round the breathing room, a twilight round her brow:
62
CX
Then—let the meditative mind retireTo some near region of illumined ground.
The spell begins: fond fairy hands aspire
To deal the magic of emotions round;
The woods are filled with a voluptuous sound
Now floating full, now faint upon the ear,
And tones are heard to swell, and feet to bound,
Which heavenly Dian curbs her car to hear,
And all the sparkling stars which make chaste night so dear.
CXI
The uncurtained window looks a gay recess,A burst of unexampled brilliancy,
And there are forms of finished loveliness
In scarf, and robe, and flowers, seen sweeping by;
A gorgeous crowd is ever in the eye,
Divinest of imaginable things!
The wizard Fancy throws his heavenly dye
On all, and each resounding valley rings
To the rich, kissing touch of instrumental strings.
63
CXII
To sit thus in a blissful solitude,With mirth around and innocence within,
With no disturbing passion to intrude,
To mark the Vision and its rites begin—
The invisible Eye of All—this is to win
The dream o'er which ecstatic Milton smiled
Ere yet he communed with the Cherubin;—
It hath a sense, sweet, wonderful, and wild,
And well may suit the vein of a poetic Childe.
CXIII
He who is wise will gather joy from joy,And bid the busy brain of sadness sleep,
When Life has no amusement to employ
Thought in her chambers, it may soothe to weep.
But the Lethean stream should not be deep,
To drown reflection is but to alarm—
We have a few Elysian drops to steep,
And this is one, our sadnesses with balm,
No Moralist need frown on a so simple charm.
64
CXIV
But the shade shortens: 'tis the sultry hour,The hush of noon—siesta of the day;
The wind has left the field, the dew the flower,
The gathered flower droops witheringly away.
Where have I wandered? whither do I stray
With half-shut eye, in wildering reverie?
Leave thou thy air-built palace to the Gay—
Thy spell is broken—broken let it be,
Winningly waves the Wood, to its Lycæum flee.
CXV
Hail and farewell, sweet Valley! though farewellsAre vainly given to grieve o'er thine and thee,
For thou dost colour the mind's secret cells
With prism-tints, from which we cannot flee,
Most vivid still in absence! and our knee
Devoutly bent beneath a vault so blue
To the Great Spirit, never can be free;
We pause—turn—linger—love—admire anew,
Hallowing the ground where first our inspiration grew.
65
CXVI
Hail and farewell! farewell a little while,Vision of beauty! with the yellowing leaf,
I come to watch thy melancholy smile,
The music of thy features spent in grief
O'er their decay, a glory bright but brief,
Pathetic sweetness to the heart applied;
Who could view Winter—a Plutonic thief,
Coming to claim thee for his Mourning Bride,
Nor shed few parting tears of passion and of pride?
CXVII
The scene recedes. Welcome these aisles of larch,The walk of happy spirits! so the mind
May fitly deem, that views the heavenly arch
Hung o'er it like a Sapphire: look behind!
Earth shows a mossy Eden just resigned
By Adam, no more mingling with the blest,
For they are vanished—and a wandering wind
Comes with its whispering dirges from the west,
And the green shady bank is wooing to be pressed.
66
CXVIII
'Tis sweet to throw at will, as now I throwMy limbs upon the dainty lap of May,
And hold in dalliance the ripe flowers which grow
Confusedly among the lichens gray.
Is this Titania's bower, where fairies play
Their antique revels in the glowworm's sight?
Moss and wild thyme are all the weeds which stray
To pave her palace with a green delight—
Thus then for dulcet dreams and slumber's soothing rite.
END OF CANTO I.
67
CANTO II.
69
“O Primavera gioventù de l'anno,
Bella madre di fiori,
D'herbe novelle, e di novelli amori;
Tù torni ben, ma teco
Non tornano i sereni
E fortunati dì de le mie gioie.”
GUARINI.
Bella madre di fiori,
D'herbe novelle, e di novelli amori;
Tù torni ben, ma teco
Non tornano i sereni
E fortunati dì de le mie gioie.”
GUARINI.
I
'Twas sweet I said to throw yourself at noonLoose on May flowers and placidly repose,
Whilst twine o'erhead in many a fair festoon
The gadding woodbine and the sweet-briar rose.
But sweeter far, as airy music flows
From the grove's orchestra above, around,
In the open sky to wake. He only knows
How laughs the sun, and on the grassy ground
What chequering shadows lie, and what bright tints abound.
70
II
I was still dreaming when I heard the boughsParted asunder with a gentle noise,
But yet the falling blossoms could not rouse
My soul entranced, though conscious of its joys.
I heard the low of kine, but 'twas my choice
Not to be stirred, and thus I slumbered still;
Till high methought I heard Acasia's voice
Call me with songs up her dear native hill—
Why did I wake so soon? 'twas but the linnet's bill;
III
Which breaks the crystal air in sounds that gushClear as a fountain from its jasper base,
And warm as if its little heart would rush
To ruin with the music. From the face
Of the pure firmament light shadows chase
Each other o'er our world, as flies the rack,
Softening the sunbeam for a little space,
And saddening all the landscape in its track,
Till the cloud parts like snow, and the sweet ray comes back.
71
IV
On my hot brow, diffuse, delicious breeze,The coolness of thy chalice! thus to lie
In the fresh shadow of the flickering trees,
Gloom on the grass but glory in the sky;
And mix with idlesse a calm dignity,
Which finds a moral in the slightest thing,
The whisper of a leaf—a lulling fly—
All changes which the cuckoo-seasons bring,
Is to draw bliss from toil, sounds from a tuneless string.
V
I cannot wrap in hideous vacancyMind's glorious faculties—upon the stream
Of Thought my gondola I love to ply
In search of greener shades, a fresher dream.
Drive wheresoe'er it will, let shade or beam
Glance on its painted prow from cloud or sun,
There fails not solemn or romantic theme
To light the gorgeous waters as they run—
Awake, ye mighty Shades! my vigil is begun.
72
VI
And O, what page can charm the lingering noonLike thine, wild Master of the mask and pall,
Shakspeare! prince, patriot, wizard, mime, buffoon,
All—all in turn, and great alike in all.
The cold, the loved, the crowned obey thy call,
Now Passion thrills us and now Terror shakes—
The bridal now becomes a bloody Hall,
The feast a couch from which no sleeper wakes,
Where Murder plants her stab, the Furies coil their snakes.
VII
The sweet, the grand, the fair, the terrible,The foul, the fond, the hideous and the bright,
The summer's vision, the magician's spell,
The stars, and the proud thunders of the night;
The sightless steeds of agonised affright,
Whispers of love and battailous uproar,
Burn in thy thoughts and radiate into light,
Which Time repeats and Feeling must adore;—
What new sublimer worlds shall Genius hence explore!
73
VIII
Here Cæsar, recent from barbaric wars,Leads Rome in chains—the purple robe assumes;
There a loud shout thrice strikes the golden stars,
The deed is done, and Liberty resumes
Her march: to horse! to horse! a thousand plumes
Wait round the midnight Brutus in his tent.
Wan in the midst his warning Genius glooms
With finger to Philippi! a lament
Floats round the seven-hill'd Town—its last lorn pennon rent.
IX
There stands the gentle-musing misanthrope,The Prince of faded passions, on whose breast
Sorrow writes madness—he whose sweetest hope
Droops like narcissus, when the winds o'the west
Gather its willing leaves; forlorn his vest—
The fool of Fortune, with keen feelings cursed,
To be a proud King's terror and his jest:
The dark grave crops his rose—the rose he nursed,
What can his heart do now but wither, bleed, and burst!
74
X
O for a love like thine, dear Imogen,Unchanged in absence, undeprest by ill!
Those rueful storms which shake the faith of men,
Left thee the same fond, trusting woman still.
Tears for thy tale! the elder grows at will
Rank o'er a crumbling ruin with the rose,
Which then her essence sweetest does distil,
Like Virtue run to wildness with her woes—
So, through thy weeds of grief, Love's mossy buds unclose.
XI
Or, we will climb the mountainous cliff which hangsO'er the mad surge, unheard so high, with Lear.
He is a chaos of all passions—pangs
Have hurled presiding Reason from her sphere:
His eyes are stormy, but without a tear—
Them wrath has scorched! his majesty but brings
The fiery-flying lightnings yet more near,
To strike the Tower round which one sweet root clings,
Whilst the wolf howls beneath, and the hid scorpion stings.
75
XII
Proud as those fires, dallying with nought but clouds,Wild as their will, and blasting as their stroke,
His brooding, bright ambition Richard shrouds
Beneath a painted mask—a muffling cloke—
Till works his poison, and all bonds are broke
Which kept him from his dazzling wish; when won,
Glideth the subtle aspic from his Oak,
To rear his soldier-crest unto the sun,
And flesh his fangs in blood—avenged ere day be done.
XIII
But May is ripe with roses virginalUnplucked of summer, where no serpent's tooth
May bubble forth its venom; ere the fall
Was sweetness and the stainlessness of truth,
And unpresuming love—and it may soothe
To mark their rays of radiance meet in thee
Cæsario or Viola—maid or youth—
Thy love is unsunned honey, which the bee
Cells beneath briery boughs that eye may never see.
76
XIV
Break off! a Phantom moves through marble hallsIn gloomy stateliness—night's shrieking bird
Flaps the friezed window with her wing which falls
Hollowly on the ear—my brain is stirred—
But she who bears the taper hath not heard,
With fearful visions her wild eye is glassed
Staring in slumberous trance, and many a word
Of guilt from her divining lips have passed,
Whilst the Weird Sisters laugh astride the groaning blast.
XV
Sweet winter-blossom, by a wind too rudeTossed on the waters of a stormy sea,
Which Heaven with greater tenderness endued
Than thy sire's heart—alas, that such should be!
Young Perdita! O let me walk with thee
Through all thy fortunes; exiled as a thing
Of ill—a worm from a degraded tree;
But thee erewhile the handmaids of the Spring
Transplant to rosy bowers on Pleasure's April wing.
77
XVI
Gold in a rock! who hides his casket so?Timon of Athens; mark his gloomy stare—
A yellow Lion glaring on his foe—
His soul was bountiful and trusting, e'er
That trusting bounty wove itself the snare,
In which all rage is powerless. To the cave
He shouts his wrongs—it babbles his despair;
He hath betook him to the savage wave
Of the resounding sea, and dug him there a grave.
XVII
Or to the ‘modern Timon’ let us turn,Whose deep misanthropy winds like a spell
Around our young affections, till they burn
With feelings—visions which no tongue can tell.
Harold! with thy dark grandeur I will dwell
All mad and moody being as thou art,
In the eye of fiery zealots, who compel
Thy Prince to wrap a mask about his heart—
With smiles we ever meet, and 'tis with sighs we part.
78
XVIII
Whether in Rome we hear the authentic voiceOf her sad Genius, or in Athens mourn,
In sweet Egeria's mossy grots rejoice,
Or wildly weeping clasp dear Thyrza's urn;
Now briefly kind, now stoically stern,
Censor or soph, the scorner or the sage,
To thee we cling, and drink at every turn
Freedom, and fire, and pathos from thy page,
Through every varied scene which marks thy Pilgrimage.
XIX
In naked gloominess the Pilgrim stands—No hope to woo, no danger to appal,
In Christian, Turkish, and Barbaric lands,
Without his like, and saturnine in all,
His honey-drops of pleasure turned to gall,
Raising the fever which they sought to slake—
A Statue on its marble pedestal,
Whose nervous limbs some unguessed passions shake,
Where Grief seems to repose or Agony to ache.
79
XX
There is one golden chord in Being's lyre,One trembling string to finest issues wrought,
If a beloved finger touch the wire,
It deals around amid the heaven of thought
Elysian lightnings with like music fraught:
Once snapt—no hand re-strings it, or can steal
The vestal flame which visits it unsought,
But on the instrument Gloom sets his seal—
This stroke the poet's heart hath felt—doth hourly feel.
XXI
What marvel then if Fancy should rebelAgainst her first creations, and thus shape
Shadows on canvass—Tasso in his cell,
A Corsair anchoring off a Turkish cape,
A fiery Giaour, a Selim in escape
Bleeding in death—or Hugo's fatal flame?
The cup which sparkled with the bright blue grape
If filled with wormwood to the brim, will claim
A harsh and bitter hue—the spirit does the same.
80
XXII
Then to its first romantic dream recurring,Recals the fugitive which Pride exiled;
Its first emotions in the pulse are stirring,
And roses fix and flourish in the wild.
Hence Love, pure, warm, and guileless as a child,
Rises from the Pactolus of his mind—
Leila the lovely, and Medora mild,
Zuleika—a mimosa from the wind,
Folding her shrinking leaves, and Florence fair and kind.
XXIII
A dream to wake from, and to weep that suchWas not accorded to his lonely lot,
Dark Disappointment! at whose withering touch
The past—all but the present is forgot;
And the mind colours all things with a blot
Of midnight, in whose depth no star may burn,
Making that seem to be, which yet is not—
And hence it is dull Hatred will discern
Him in his Pilgrim's vest, the sternest of the stern.
81
XXIV
Meanwhile, by Adria's sunny sea thou rovest,Heartsick with sorrow whilst in life's best bloom,
The pensiveness thou woo'st, the face thou lovest,
The eye of azure, and the cheek of gloom,
Her waves to please thee silently assume;
And in them and in thy benevolence
Which speaks a better and a brighter doom
Than envy grants thee, is some happiness—
For her calumnious wrong will pity love thee less?
XXV
O no, no, no! nor vainly hast thou sungThy hidden griefs, the blighting thoughts which tear
The heart they torture—Minstrel! many a tongue
Repeats thy echoes to the charmed air,
And eyes there are have mourned o'er the despair
Which made thy breast the home of bitterness;
The great, the good, the noble, and the fair,
Albeit their blessing could not make it less,
Have bent them from their bliss to pity and to bless.
82
XXVI
We see, but cannot heal the stanchless wound,We share its gushing sorrow, still it bleeds;
Man plucks from out the garden's ruinous ground
The baleful nightshade, though it shed its seeds
With lavish bounty, but the bitter weeds
Of rooted sorrow mock his arm—ah why,
When the stung heart on its own sickness feeds,
Can we not wring from out compassion's eye
One potent silver drop to hush its agony?
XXVII
And is there then no talisman to quellThe thousand dark soliloquies entwined
With the soul's sufferance, and from out its cell
Expel the spirit which enthralls the mind,
Which from the void of years long left behind
With Ariel voice evokes from their abode
The pulseless phantoms of delight? to bind
Those airy shapes, O can no pitying God
Wave the subduing charm of his Lethean rod?
83
XXVIII
Yes! though the mind by Memory's scathing sharePloughed—waxes flowerless, black, and withering,
Like fields o'er which the desart's burning air,
Simoom or Samiel, passes with hot wing,
Fountains there are which for a season fling
Freshness around, and with their gentle dews
Charm wearied nature to a second spring—
Hope, and the sweet voice of the prompting Muse,
Both stirring still to joy, nor thou their gifts refuse!
XXIX
'Tis true the one but seems to draw its dyesFrom the orbed rainbow in the dark storm bending,
Beautiful Visitant! to mortal eyes
Our gloom with the first light of Eden blending;
Beautiful, but how brief! too soon descending
In gentle tears that seem to weep our woe;
But still the colours are of Mercy's lending,
And presage of her future fiat—Go
To your own home, ye Clouds, thou swelling Deep reflow!
84
XXX
And who from out the dim abysmal skyWould pluck the lovely Crescent of the night,
Because she has not all the majesty
And arrowy brightness of the God of Light,
Nor cull the blossom ere decay or blight
Feed on and spoil its damask beauty? so
Shall we not seize the sybil of delight
Because she has a fairy's fleetness? No—
Pluck the fair flowers of Hope whilst yet her roses blow.
XXXI
Or, if her fleeting visions be too weakTo silence thoughts that ill with pleasure suit,
Again the Muses' hallowed region seek,
And touch the string of that Elysian lute
Whose sound might charm the Furies—as the foot
Of Orpheus trod the downward path, and they
With all their thousand hissing asps grew mute
In listening to his song—griefs dark as they
The Eolian talisman of Music will obey.
85
XXXII
There is another and a purer fount,There is a sweeter and a happier meed
Than e'er was gathered on the Muse's mount,
A plant for sorrow and for pain decreed,
Comfort the fruit—Religion is the seed.
She calls us with mild voice, which to repel
Must cause the wounds of sorrow still to bleed;
Obeyed—the waters of delight will swell
From an unfailing spring. ‘Sweets to the sweet, farewell.’
XXXIII
Ye that are weary of the world, come hereAnd drink a Lethe to your cares—its stream
Flows through these alleys silent, deep, and clear,
Making the toil of human passions seem
A restless vigil or a shifting dream.
It is not in the stirring haunts of men
That peace resides, the ever-pleasing theme
Of our desire—her nest is in the ken
Of some religious wood, or dim romantic glen.
86
XXXIV
'Twas in a grove retiring far awayOf blackening pines, and on a hill like this,
Silent and sweet, I've heard Alonzo say,
He felt the first thrill of enamoured bliss,
That lured him to the fatal precipice
From which he fell as in the flowers he played.
'Tis a sad tale, and suiteth not amiss
With the deep umbrage of this placid shade,
Wherein his feet so oft have languishingly strayed.
XXXV
A youth—he rarely mingled with the rest,His chosen friend was solitude, among
Vallies, and woods, and waters, he was blest;
To him, earth, heaven, and ocean found a tongue,
And told their mysteries—to them he clung
Like a vine's tendril, till his spirit grew
Shy, silent, and reflective, and so hung
On what was wild, and wonderful, and new,
Till it seemed coloured all with their enchanting hue.
87
XXXVI
With this severe reservedness of mienWas mixt a fervid and a gentle mood,
Which ever seemed to shun, yet charmed if seen,
By him the mossy rock, the wave, the wood,
Were peopled with affections, them he wooed
In every season; in the summer wind,
And snows of winter, it was joy to brood
On nature's volume, where the Almighty Mind
Pictures his awful face, magnificently kind.
XXXVII
'Twas Summer; scarce upon the aspin tallThe small leaf trembled—in the noon's repose
He sought from far a hospitable Hall,
Which dimly peeping, from the woodlands rose;
Not uncompanioned—arm in arm with those
Who most had met his warmth with warmth sincere;
Hid from his sight a neighbouring river flows,
Hung with fresh bowers, which murmuring cool and clear
Down many a rich cascade, stole sweetly on his ear.
88
XXXVIII
The Genius of the Place poured all his prideAt his advance upon the hanging grove.
Sparkled in light the ever-flashing tide,
A sound beneath—a silentness above;
Of brightest blue that day the skies were wove,
Its hue was magical—the Hall he found
In whose high porch now first he saw his Love,
Pouring sweet medicine in a brother's wound,
Which as the more he wept, more tenderly she bound;
XXXIX
And from the busy fingers wiped the blood,And soothed his sorrow for a father's sake;
Her form, her pity secretly subdued
His gazing eye—he knew not what could make
A stranger look so dear, and prisoner take
His soul in sighings he could not explain;
Kind was their greeting, and his heart could ache
With hers to see the suffering and the pain,
One moment linked it there in a familiar chain.
89
XL
And in the garden sitting by her side,When all was blissful, solitary, sweet,
He found the voice he ne'er before had tried,
And taught the warbling echoes to repeat
The name of Ion. In that dear retreat,
Musing or smiling she was ever by,
Or if she strayed to some romantic seat
Unknown, a shout was in the crystal sky,
“Ion?” the hollow cliffs and mossy walks reply.
XLI
Whatever flowers she cropped him were preservedIn his best volume with a miser's care,
Whatever were the praises she deserved,
He deemed she was the fairest of the fair;
Perfect each word, look, motion, gesture, air—
And I have heard him say, her native tone
Was a pathetic simpleness so rare,
It fell like music o'er deep billows blown,
That such another voice was—O no, never known!
90
XLII
And in their long, long walk at summer-eveBeside the temple, in the accustomed wood,
Whose was the leaf which opened would relieve
Alonzo's fearful and desponding mood?—
To her he read, with bosom too subdued
By what it felt, sweet-stirring at the core,
What Campbell's happy hand, benignly good,
Drew of the tenderness which Gertrude bore,
Ajut's departing sail, or weeping Ellenore.
XLIII
And ever from his lid a tear would slideWhich he could not repress, he knew not why,
And Campbell, Ion, valley, temple, tide,
Swum in a Paradise of beauty by.
And on the air would fall the unbidden sigh,
Till Ion trembled, and no more the page,
Bent at the passage wet by either eye,
The excess of praise or pity could engage,
Too dear the glancing war which their dark pupils wage.
91
XLIV
Are they on earth or in the court of heaven?A thought to be imagined, not expressed!
But with their rapture a decay is given,
Or bliss would so annihilate the blest.
Love is the Aloe of an age at best,
Its leaf may for a century be green—
That for which Youth is ever on the quest,
Its present flower—tomorrow but has been,
So must it fare with those who linger in that scene.
XLV
It came at last, the melancholy hourDreaded so long, and it was death to part;
O had he never known the passion's power,
Than feel the struggles of a bursting heart!
He passed away and never told his smart,
One kiss he stole, and thrice returned to tell
By nought but sighs, a gaze, a pause, a start,
A gushing tear, the mastery of the spell—
Scarce spoke his wild white lips articulate farewell.
92
XLVI
The world hushed not his agony of thought,The peopled city was to him a wild
Whose vital barrenness before him brought
The face—the idol from its shrine exiled.
Yet were there things which oft his grief beguiled,
The moss-rose given when it began to blow,
The tale o'er which she wept, or sighed, or smiled,
Her folded leaf, her profile—these could throw
Sunshine on his despair, deliciousness on woe.
XLVII
I see him join the gay—his brow is knit,I know his thoughts, to Ion they belong;
There is no charm can overpower his fit,
But pity, and the harmonies of song.
Once hid the laurels and the pines among,
In his love's youth I heard him touch a strain
Liquid with tenderness, to which his tongue
Trembled, as though prophetic of his pain,
As I his form recal, his spirit sings again.
93
To Ion.
1
The waves we traced, the walks we trod,I cannot help but build in air,
When Ion seeks their lonely sod,
Say, does she wish Alonzo there?
Upon my fancy graved I bear
The flowery wood, the mossy hill,
And that forsaken Temple, where
We sat, and sighed, and looked our fill,
And e'en the sunshine and the shade
Which robed the paths wherein we strayed.
2
How darkly have the journeying yearsO'er me their stormy shadows cast,
Since in a war of hopes and fears,
Sweet Ion, from thy bower I passed!
It soothed the tears which rose so fast
And gushingly when thou wert by,
In thy dear eyes to see them glassed
Like rain-drops in a sunny sky.
I would not that one drop of pain
Thy tranquil spirit then should stain.
94
3
But now so changed in love or ruth,I guess not how, I know not why,
These weeping eyes 'twould more than soothe,
To know that Ion's are not dry.
The woods are wild with harmony,
I hear it, but I am not glad,
I ask if in as blest a sky,
The heart of Ion is as sad;
To think such things I know unmeet
From one so fond, of one so sweet.
4
But oft the fondest thing assumesA moodiness from others' glee,
These waves will frown, when fall the blooms
Upon them of the lilach tree—
They waft a sound of joy to me
I would not feel, I would not hear,
Ion! alone I'd gaze on thee,
And wrestle for a bursting tear,
One sunny tear, to prove at last
Thy constancy through all the past.
95
5
But if thy maiden truth I wrong,Here as I kneel where I have knelt
In prayer for thee so oft and long,
Look on this heart and thine will melt.
In desolation it hath dwelt,
And mourned o'er its uncertain lot;
O if the half of what it felt
Be thine, I am not all forgot.
This bosom could not then repine,
Convinced it held one pulse of thine.
XLVIII
Years passed with years; unchanged his spirit was,A virgin volume filled with Ion's name,
In whose pure sound he read as in a glass,
A kindred feeling, an unbroken claim,
Perfect as when without a farther aim
He listened to her tones—and now the blast
Of winter blew, spring fled, and summer came,
And with a beating heart and footsteps fast,
Filled with a thousand thoughts he trod that Hall at last.
96
XLIX
She was still beautiful, and gazed on himWith a bewildered eye of kind regard,
And prayed the youth to ease his wearied limb—
What toil would not that winning voice reward?
Nor were the woods, the rushing waves debarred
To their soon-seeking sight—his love he told,
A feeling pity in her eyes was starred,
She could not listen with a bosom cold,
But—an usurping root had flourished o'er the old.
L
He heard—he felt, wept, chided, pardoned, passedA hurried hand across his burning brow,
And in unutterable wildness cast
The dark thought back—perhaps it was not so,
Her love might yet awaken to his woe,
A wronging Angel he could never hate;—
I know not—for her tears refused to flow;
He still against all hope would hope await,
Again he passed away, again he sought her gate.
97
LI
The reckless stream flowed as it flowed before,The lychnis budded, and the forest bowed
With blossoms all unsparing as of yore—
He asked of Ion, but the wave was loud,
And the rock would not answer—'twas too proud
To bear the question—Ion was a bride!
He knew it not. A voice amidst a crowd
In pity to his ignorance replied—
Enough! a broken heart what hand can heal or hide?
LII
He could not—to the place of many graves,Rushed like a driven deer the unconscious man,
To pour forth groans of which the innocent waves
Prattled, as smooth and tranquilly they ran.
He wished his life were fettered to the span
Which they, the buried held—it might not be;
The winds were charged with gentleness to fan
The fever of his agony, as he
Bent to the Power above his supplicating knee.
98
LIII
Thence Mercy, radiant as an angel flew,And shook a flower of comfort in his bowl,
Torn from the amaranth; in the bowl it blew,
And shed a sovereign balsam o'er his soul.
Beside her mother's turf, it could console
Him of past hopes forsaken, even there
To wish, that as the varying seasons roll,
No portion of his pangs might Ion share,
He turned and passed away—'twas more than he could bear!
LIV
Peace to thy banished, but enduring breast,Alonzo! as the woodbine round the tree
Twines sweetly, may the Star which rules thy rest
Diffuse its choicest influences on thee;
Sorrow the path, in heaven thy bridal be,
A glory faintly shadowed forth on earth,
Hallowed with seraph songs and jubilee;
Peace to thy troubled spirit, in the dearth
Of thy once promising hopes, and dear domestic hearth!
99
LV
Advancing to the steep wood's southern side,A glimpse comes on me of the glittering Town,
Far off o'er trees and level lawns descried,
In midst a Tower with ivies overgrown
Starts from a mass of shadow. Taste has strown
Her verdant web o'er chancel and o'er aisle;
On buttress, turret, Gothic mullion, stone,
Creeps the dark weed in beauty, to beguile
With its religious shade the horror of the pile.
LVI
Thence widely winding down a sylvan dell,Fenced from the touch of each ungentle wind,
I reach methinks Love's Delphic oracle,
For many a long-forgotten name is shrined
In sculpture on a beech's glossy rind,
And whispered vows, and words of tender sound
Are heard they say to float, when suns are kind,
From viewless forms, now near, above, around,
Blessing their steps whose feet its solitude have found.
100
LVII
The air is delicate, and pure the place,The tall tree's foliage casts a pensive shade,
Its boughs depend with inexpressive grace,
The last to wither, and the first arrayed
When April dances in each opening glade;
And far and wide is seen Adonis' flower
Stained from his ancient wound, and born to fade,
Which Venus mourning many a summer-hour,
Here drives her turtle car from Acidalian bower.
LVIII
Steep is the acclivity which now my foot,Ambitious of its scene, aspires to scale;
A hawk flies round it, and the Wood grows mute,
Conscious that evil pinions load the gale.
But look! what loveliness is in the vale,
Solemnly beautiful! that golden light
Eve's curtain is. Plato, I bid thee hail,
Did not thy spirit move before my sight?
Haunt'st thou not now these groves, thine own uprooted quite?
101
LIX
Where are thy olives and thy laurels now,Frequented Porch and holy Academe?
Owls haunt the ruin, axes lop the bough,
Fallen is the column, shrunk Ilissus' stream!
And is it so? is Science too a dream
Baseless as they, the echo of a sound?
The sage's precept, rhetorician's theme,
Fall they with tower and temple to the ground,
Periods which charmed and lit assenting nations round?
LX
Twined with the ivy of despoiling years,The fane of Pallas to the dust may sink;
But She is co-eternal with the spheres,
And Wisdom is the soul's ethereal link
Which binds it to its God. With thee to think,
Pure Plato! though in error, is a fit
More glorious than from other founts to drink
The stream of truth. If falsely Tully writ,
It is a bright deceit which she may well remit.
102
LXI
I did not err, for Science can evokeE'en from their urn the ashes of the wise,
The thoughts they cherished, and the words they spoke,
The key of life within her volume lies;
And thus that sea of bowers before my eyes,
Where blooms the unfading bay, the cypress weeps,
Is populous with earth's divinities;
They well may be where thought such silence keeps,
And from the gloom she loves the bird of Wisdom peeps.
LXII
Within the shade a ruined temple standsTo sight conspicuous, navelled in the pines,
Speaking of Grecian art, since Vandal hands
Defaced her structures, and despoiled her shrines.
As here, the weed of ruin darkly twines
Her marble walls now verdant with decay,
As here, on roofless floors her sunbeam shines;
As here the fox, the jackall howls for prey
There, where Minerva shone, and Pericles bore sway.
103
LXIII
Too clear a type of thy degraded state!And there are lovely things which haunt thee still,
Land of immortal relics! in thy fate,
Though fallen Colonna strews Tritonia's hill,
Forms such as those which rapt Apelles' skill
Made breathing in thy high and happy hour,
Thy olive shores with classic beauty fill,
But chained beneath the Vandal Slavery's power,
We love and start away—the wasp is in thy flower!
LXIV
But round the princely coast of Albion, sheWho starting from thy ashes, keeps thy fire
Of Vesta in her temples of the free,
The wise to win, the coldest to inspire
With the mild pulse of elegant desire,
With more than Grecian beauty, Woman roves;
Her wit Aspasia, Sappho gives her lyre,
Penelope her cestus, veil, and doves,
And Helen the dear smile which dimpled Hebe loves.
104
LXV
And as the brilliant halcyons seek the shades,And fluttering upon azure wings, appear
Loveliest above secluded waters, maids
At the calm sunset walk in beauty here;
Wise but not grave, correct but not austere,
The harmonists of life, who scatter round,
Benignant as the Pleiads in their sphere,
Mirth in their smiles, and music in the sound
Of tones which sweeter fall than dews on starlight ground.
LXVI
Saw you those eyes which sparkled as they passed,Bright with excessive feeling? they belong
To warm Euanthe, in whose soul are glassed
The love of nature, and the love of song.
The mirthful form which gayly shot along
With her whose look was an ingenuous grace,
Fluttering with sweet confusion, was the young
Ianthe with Verduta; next in place
Is one whom from your mind no season can erase.
105
LXVII
Her eloquence of figure seems to startPure from the Grecian chisel, and to claim
A kindred with those statues which impart
Awe to the eye, and rapture to the frame.
Warm from her cheek the Promethéan flame
Of what from heaven was stolen might be caught,
And dignify the Rhodian artist's aim;
The blended charms which he all vainly sought
Throughout the shores of Greece, in Isaline are wrought;
LXVIII
And graces which they had not—the gazelleSprings not in glorious liberty more free
To the far palms which shade some Syrian well,
Or almond-bowers in happy Araby.
Thoughtful beside the bright laburnum-tree,
Her hours devoted to some glowing page,
Combines the fanciful Euphrosyne,
Youth's flowers of freshness with the fruits of Age,
Then Phryne golden-tress'd, and Sophonisba sage.
106
LXIX
But than the quivered Dian far more shy,With modest beauty, in her sable veil,
Sulmalla in the loneliest walk will fly
The breath of praise. Listening the nightingale
Too late, has made Medora's face so pale,
So like the jasmine, innocent and sweet;
The mild-eyed Arethusa seeks the vale,
And gay Janeira and Janessa's feet
Have too their share of joy in this beloved retreat.
LXX
Nor pass unsung the fair Genevra by,Whose hand, disporting with the silent strings,
Draws sounds which make us watchful, and the eye
Melt, as when Israfil the angel sings,
And to some holy Imaum's vision brings
The beauty-peopled bowers of Aden near:
Hark! for his flute the shut of blossoms rings,
From the far vallies creeping in the ear,—
Vallies, in whose cool depth the first blue mists appear.
107
LXXI
It is the dying hour of day which growsSweeter in setting—all is shadow round,
But where afar the tall trees part in rows,
The West burns like a ruby, and the ground
Is tinctured with its brightness to the bound
Of the soon-purpling East. I will away
And gaze once more upon the ancient mound,
Where with stern hands embrued in civil fray,
Roundhead and Cavalier usurped alternate sway.
LXXII
The point is won: how balmily the breezeBreathes from the sky-aspiring larch! this hill
And all its vales of tributary trees
Are gathered in one scene, which asks the skill
Of Poussin's beauty-breathing hand to fill
The fancy of a stranger; but to wreak
Such love upon the task as to instil
The immortal tints of nature's changing cheek,
Art must exhaust her stores, and leave the rainbow weak.
108
LXXIII
We move—the expressive Picture will assumeA more endearing aspect, we recur
To Tempe and to Vall'ombrose—a gloom
As holy falls from the umbrageous Fir
Which shades these vallies, and the vallies stir
With as white flocks; nought else is seen to leave
Its fixt repose—the statued clouds scarce err
Over the marbled skies, which to them give
Hues which dispute in love, and discords which relieve.
LXXIV
Such pastoral quiet marks this evening scene;But where conspicuous o'er yon Eastern vale
Hill undulates on hill, the roar has been
Of Battle, ('tis Tradition tells the tale,)
The neigh of snorting steeds, the trumpet's wail,
Whilst civil banners flouted the blue sky,
Stained with devices proud, which seldom fail
To fan the fire of feud and anarchy,—
“The Commons and the Cause”—their watchword and reply.
109
LXXV
Answered with taunts the gallant Cavalier,The battle joined—where then was your renown,
Frenetic zealots! when in mid career
The kingly squadrons hewed your pennon down?
Then might you hear “The Crosier and the Crown”
Pass o'er both armies, in a shout which took
The air in thunders to the distant town,
League after league, and into vapour shook
Craulee! the startled waves of thy pellucid brook!
LXXVI
'Tis done! the strife is over on the plains,The years revolve. Yon subterraneous tower
Holds now within its heart, but not in chains,
The daring Regicide who mocks the power
Of swords that seek him, Argus-eyes that lower
To trace his haunt, and what is now his doom?
To shroud, year after year—hour after hour,
His helmed head within a living tomb;
How brooks that rebel Chief his cell's sepulchral gloom?
110
LXXVII
E'en as the Lion-leader of the Gaul,Took in the toils of nations, to become
A vassal to the tyranny of all,
Once trembling at the thunders of his drum;
E'en as he bears in rocks his martyrdom,
With a despair which would annihilate
The past, and the eternity to come
Of his dark doom, but with an eye elate,
Steeled with the pride of scorn, the apathy of hate.
LXXVIII
How oft, stern Tower, did thy enclosing vaultEcho the whispers of his powerless rage,
And the vain wish that a more hot assault
Might loose his soldier-spirit from its cage,
On an arena—on a wider stage,
To wreak his fury, not on walls but men!
Gold conquers all—and gold has won his page
To snare the hunted Lion in his den;—
There lies the slayer slain—what boots it how or when?
111
LXXIX
The moral is the same—a truth enshrinedIn this wild tale for subject and for king;
The ruler and the ruled are entwined
In blest concordance by a golden string.
Whose keen sword cuts the Gordian knot, doth bring
Wrath on himself, and ruin on his race,
Ambition's suicide—he dies, a thing
For scoffing Time to point at with his mace,
Avouch it, Thou who fell at Pompey's marble base!
LXXX
Man did not draw his birth from heaven to beIn turn the tyrant and the tyrannised,
His Maker formed him like the eagle free,
To spurn at slavery, howsoe'er disguised
By cowl or crown; but freedom realized,
Is to be guarded with an eye more keen
Than of the fabled Dragon, erst surprised
By Hercules. England, inviolate queen!
Guard well thy golden fruit—thy spoiler works within.
112
LXXXI
Beside that Tower of ages past I roveAt summer-eve, when dews and twilight fall;
It is a foolish fancy, but I love
To gather from the mosses of its wall
A flower—and ask the winds if this be all
The poor, poor blossoms of a warrior's fame?
'Tis fragile! the next blast which round the Hall
Resounds—will scatter it to whence it came;
Was it for such ye fought? O greatly-glorious aim!
LXXXII
These peaceful times behold the peasant passUnconscious o'er your ashes, see his plough
Glide where bones whiten, and where carnage was;
O'er embrazure and ruined rampart now
The adjacent garden waves its wilding bough,
And bees hum round the untended mignionette;
And thither, ere the spring's first roses blow,
Do young lambs bound, and village-girls are met,
To cull from nettles rank the snow-white violet.
113
LXXXIII
But not like those, unwept and unbeloved,Whitbread! to Lethe shall thy spirit pass,
Whose Attic lips majestic senates moved,
Thou in whose bosom Freedom sought to glass
Her beauty, all she is, and ever was,
The nurse of glory, and the scourge of wrong,
A kindling Ray breathed in the Statue's mass—
The electric fire of life: as Pallas sprung
Armed from the Thunderer's head, immaculate and young,—
LXXXIV
And grasped the writhen lightnings in her hand,The heart of guilty princes to appal,
But with her olive making green the land
Where Truth and Mercy flourished free from thrall:
So, when his moral thunders shook the wall
Of Senates, Wisdom from his councils burst—
Illumining the grove, the camp, the hall,
And breathing freedom when none other durst
Impugn the guilty great, whom pride in purple nursed.
114
LXXXV
There has been One on whom the snaky breathOf Hate would breathe pollution, but who stood
Unsullied as Alasnam's glass beneath
What sought to taint it, innocently good,
The applause of millions!—when the venomous flood
Hissed in its bubbling caldron to o'erboil,
His was the awful Ægis which subdued
The Dragon which her garments would despoil,
And stiffened it to stone, though heaping coil on coil.
LXXXVI
How, when your hand unfurled the historian's scroll,How have ye pictured Cato, he who fell,
Wept by a world? whose thunders sought to roll
If aught like Cæsar shot athwart the cell
Where jealous thought sate like a centinel
On his high watch-tower, and whose trumpet blew
In every danger an alarming knell,
Till hushed by agony? in what bright hue,
Phocion, the good, the great, adoringly ye drew?
115
LXXXVII
Say, was it not with a majestic brow,Lit by the blaze of His electric eye,
Whose fascination won, we knew not how,
The key-note of the soul's ascendency,
Whose music was the appeal of Liberty,
The Greek's philippic in the Roman's tone;
Say, was it not with his despairing sigh,
And arm whose pulse was eloquence alone,
Which throbbed at Genoa's wrongs and Saxony o'erthrown?
LXXXVIII
Silenced for ever! but his glorious nameHath aye become a watchword, to combine
All hearts that fly for freedom or for fame
To freedom's ark—the threshold of a shrine,
Hallowed by many an oracle divine.
The Ship may wrestle with the enemy,
Whilst whirlwinds battle with its groaning pine,
It strikes not—ne'er shall strike, whilst such as He
Nails with determined hand her colours to the tree!
116
LXXXIX
The westering Sun has reached his distant goal,He looks an idol robed in scarlet weed,
And heaven, from the horizon to the pole,
Is massed in fire, as recent from the speed
Of snorting Ethon and each other steed
Which whirled to Hades his descending car;
I must away, in Nature's book to read
One other page, ere evening shadows mar
Her glittering leaves—though blessed by planet and by star.
XC
I stand where I was standing in the morn,And all has changed around me—time has come,
And passing, scattered fruitage from his horn,
The bashful maid has found a bridal home,
The anchored vessel launched in ocean foam,
Oceans themselves have flowed since morn began,
And bright orbs ebbed in the aerial dome,
Moving the pendulum of heaven; to Man
Figuring what glorious hours to joy or ruin ran.
117
XCI
So dies the Good as nature now assumesThe mask of night, to dwell a little while
Amid the shadow of funereal tombs,
Until the bright To-morrow! such the smile
Which radiates round his soul to reconcile
The shrinking body to its dark sojourn,
A beam which Mercy deigns us to beguile
The eyes which weep o'er lost Affection's urn,
Sphered in some happier star, for ever so to burn.
XCII
This leaf recals to earth my wandering thought—Beneath the setting sun's illuming shower,
Its lines are into life and language wrought,
As Memnon's harp, beneath his rising power,
Woke into sound. On Temple and on Tower
Hangs in a glory the last flake of light,
For now the clock tolls forth the curfew-hour,
The rippling lake flows rosily, and bright
The windowed Abbey shines, part melting into night.
118
XCIII
Looks not that Structure, in the hues of eve,A palace of enchantment? a recess
Shaped for a prince, where Birth and Beauty weave
The net of conquest of a golden tresse—
A dance perchance—or song, at lute or chess?
Of such, Arabian minstrelsy has sung
Erst in the halls of Bagdad, these no less
Might furnish dreams, lovelier than Fiction's tongue
Hath over Tigris' waves magnificently flung.
XCIV
Of pictured heroes might description speak,The pride of Albion, glorious in their strife;
Of freedom's banner, weeping beauty's cheek,
The martyred husband, and the sainted wife;
Statues whose look is loveliness and life,
On which Canova has his spirit poured
Creative—for of each these Halls are rife;
But weary falls my finger on the chord,
And the first stars are met, and Twilight walks abroad.
119
XCV
With twilight wakes the nun Mnemosyne,Parent of pensive pleasure! at whose wand
The vanished are compelled again to be,
And wear a robe whose Painting is beyond
The touch of Rubens. Questioned they respond,
Albeit but shadows from Trophonian cave;
With them the loved, the absent, and the fond
Commune, and thus defraud the silent grave,
Long as the Goddess will her ivory sceptre wave.
XCVI
Most amiable in sadness is her mien,Her magic cell a mild sequestered grot,
Hung round with shells and mosses evergreen—
Of shells the fount, of shells the walls are wrought.
Thither, 'tis said, her nymphs one summer brought,
And to her arms consigned a truant boy,
Wandering beside the cell; she smiled, for Thought
Sate on his brow, and melancholy Joy,
In sooth she loved the child so beautifully coy;
120
XCVII
And gave him Fancy for a nursing mother,The Sister of her Vigils! with his guide
He ever wandered, he would seek no other,
She was his consolation, he her pride.
And in the Grotto sitting by her side,
Of all their fairy wonders he would ask,
The waving sceptre and the pictured tide,
Of her own magic dress and painted mask,
And of the Elysian Maid, and her mysterious task.
XCVIII
The lore she taught him, and the tales she toldSunk on his heart—it was a bliss to stand
Near where the fountain's bubbling waters rolled,
And see the wild, the wonderful, and grand,
Called into being by the nun's command;
And sometimes as the floor he darkling trod,
The smiling Goddess trusted to his hand,
His little and—the waving of her rod,
Then waxed he pleased indeed, and deemed himself a God.
121
XCIX
It chanced, while watching by the noontide lymph,When the mild nun had sought the bower of sleep,
Came running to his side a babbling nymph
On airy toe, who nothing does but peep
At what the renovating Sisters keep
Guarded, locked, covered, caverned, veiled, and hid,
All heedless if it make her smile or weep;
'Twas she who erst the sweet Pandora chid,
Till she her hest obeyed, and oped the fatal lid.
C
He was yet bending thoughtful o'er the fountain,Which nothing did but sparkle, play, and curl,
And in the mirror of his mind was counting
Each brilliant drop which fell like orient pearl,
Kissed by the sunbeams—when that prying girl,
Young Curiosìta rushing to the well,
Her blue and busy eyes fixt on the whirl
Of waters, bade him seize a chorded shell
At the fount's base, on which a mimic rainbow fell.
122
CI
Seizing, he drew from forth the conch a sound,Clear as the silver of the warbling wave,
Were nought but heavenly numbers heard around,
To fill the coral vault, the shelly cave;
The stir of his ambitious fingers gave
A voice to echo—at the grateful song
The wondering Infant now looked glad, now grave,
New thoughts broke on him in a glorious throng,
As stole the pensive strains melodiously along.
CII
Mnemosyne awoke, nor knew what handCould make so sweet her slumber; 'twas too sad
For viny-crowned Thalia, for the grand
Melpomene too innocently glad.
Urania sometimes played so, but she had
As 'twere a starry music of her own,
Yet her belov'd Euterpe could not add
A more sonorous and engaging tone—
She rose to see by whom her daughter's flute was blown.
123
CIII
But who may paint her transport and surprise?She started—'twas the infant Rogers drew
The tears which rushed to her rejoicing eyes,
In strains to pathos and to pity new.
To the dear sound all birds of beauty flew,
And hovered round, and fanned him with their wing;
There sunny halcyons spread their pinions blue,
The tender wren, the turtles of the spring,
And to her new-blown rose the bulbul ceased to sing.
CIV
In her maternal arms she clasped the youth,And on his forehead printed many a kiss,
And called up all her shadowy shapes to soothe
His pensive mind with images of bliss.
Him too the Muses with their melodies
Inspired, instructed, softened, and entranced;
“Framing loose numbers,” in Parnassian skies
His boyhood fled—but as his years advanced,
A more pervading power within his pupil glanced.
124
CV
And in his foster-mother Memory's praise,He woke a grateful, a Virgilian strain,
Which told the secret of his boyish days,
Making grief beautiful, and teaching pain
To smile, and talk of happy hours again.
Anon to Human Life his string was given,
He drew it pure in precept, free from stain,
A Sail which glides from infancy to Heaven,
By many a willing wind down glassy waters driven.
CVI
Nor deem his triumphs foreign to my song—Not now through shade is seen the Abbot's Tree,
But chasing there the moral hours along,
The poet wove his recent minstrelsy,
Near to the waves which, from my infancy,
I called the Lake of Rogers! for the beech
Shades with such loveliness its placid sea
In autumn noons, I could not chuse but teach
Loud to the golden Woods his sweetnesses of speech.
125
CVII
But whilst Mnemosyne awakes, and lovesTo picture forth the absent, where art Thou,
N******, of late my partner of the groves?
Thou treads't not Syria's holy mountains now,
Nor seest in Greece unfading myrtles blow,
As in sweet seasons past—but it is thine,
Whilst round me Night descends, and waves the bough,
To mark through breaking clouds the morning shine,
Sweeping with orient keel the many-coloured brine.
CVIII
From the wild depth of woods, from silent hills,And vallies by the maiden moon made pale,
Shrined in the solitude which most instils
The tenderness of thought, I bid thee hail:
Health to my friend! where'er thy Indian sail,
By cliff or cape, in haven or in bay,
Waves to the influence of the tropic gale,
The blessing of that Spirit on thee lay,
Whose voice the absent forms of past delight obey!
126
CIX
The stars are gathered thick in Heaven—I passBeyond their limits on Devotion's wings,
Albeit as in a multiplying glass,
In them we read unutterable things.
Thou Wood! where now the bird of Evening sings,
To thee shall I devote my silenced shell,
With no ungrateful breast: to Rapture's springs,
And to the threshold of Urania's cell,
Thou hast thy Votary brought—all hail, and fare thee well!
Aonian Hours; And Other Poems | ||