Minor Poems, including Napoleon | ||
MINOR POEMS.
To freeze the blood I have no ready arts:
'Tis my delight alone, in summer shade,
To pipe a simple song for thinking hearts.”
Wordsworth.
TO ELIZA.
I would not, love! prefix a name like thineTo verse that dwelt on ills which flow from strife;
That name is one Affection would entwine
Among those lovelier things that sweeten life.
But these, with feelings of fraternal love,
And with an author's mingled hopes and fears,
These I to thee would offer—May they prove
Dear to thy heart for “days of other years!”
TO THE SUN.
I
Monarch of day! once rev'rently ador'dBy virtuous Pagans, if no longer thou
With orisons art worshipp'd, as the lord
Of the delightful lyre, or dreadful bow;
If thy embodied essence be not now,
As it once was, regarded as divine;
Nor blood of victims at thine altar flow,
Nor clouds of incense hover round thy shrine,
Yet fitly may'st thou claim the homage of the Nine.
II
Nor can I deem it strange, that in past agesMen should have knelt and worshipp'd thee; that kings,
And laurell'd bards, robed priests, and hoary sages,
Should, far above all sublunary things,
Have turn'd to thee, whose radiant glory flings
Its splendour over all. Ere Gospel light
Had dawn'd, and given to thought sublimer wings,
I cannot marvel, in that mental night,
That nations should obey, and nature own thy right.
III
For man was then, as now he is, compell'dBy conscious frailties manifold, to seek
Something to worship. In the heart, unquell'd
By innate evil, thoughts there are which speak
One language in Barbarian, Goth, or Greek;
A language by the heart well understood,
Proclaiming man is helpless, frail, and weak,
And urging him to bow to stone, or wood,
Till what his hands had form'd his heart rever'd as good.
IV
Do I commend idolatry? — O no!I merely would assert the human heart
Must worship: that its hopes and fears will go
Out of itself, and restlessly depart
In search of somewhat which its own fond art,
Tradition, custom, or sublimer creed
Of Revelation brings, to assuage the smart
With which its inward wounds too often bleed,
When nature's boasted strength is found a broken reed.
V
Can it be wondrous, then, before the nameOf the eternal God was known, as now,
That orisons were pour'd, and votaries came
To offer at thine altars, and to bow
Before an object beautiful as thou?
No, it was natural, in those darker days,
For such to wreathe around thy phantom brow
A fitting chaplet of thine arrowy rays,
Shaping thee forth a form to accept their prayer or praise.
VI
Even I, majestic Orb! who worship notThe splendour of thy presence, who control
My present feelings, as thy future lot
Is painted to the vision of my soul,
When final darkness, like an awful scroll,
Shall quench thy fires;—even I, if I could kneel
To aught but Him who fram'd this wondrous whole,
Could worship thee; so deeply do I feel
Emotions, words alone are powerless to reveal.
VII
For thou art glorious! when from thy pavilionThou lookest forth at morning; flinging wide
Its curtain clouds of purple and vermilion,
Dispensing light and life on every side;
Brightening the mountain cataract, dimly spied
Through glittering mist, opening each dew-gemm'd flower,
Or touching, in some hamlet, far descried,
Its spiral wreaths of smoke that upward tower,
While birds their matins sing from many a leafy bower.
VIII
And more magnificent art thou, bright Sun!Uprising from the ocean's billowy bed:
Who, that has seen thee thus, as I have done,
Can e'er forget the effulgent splendours spread
From thy emerging radiance? Upwards sped,
E'en to the centre of the vaulted sky,
Thy beams pervade the heavens, and o'er them shed
Hues indescribable — of gorgeous dye,
Making among the clouds mute, glorious pageantry.
IX
Then, then how beautiful, across the deep,The lustre of thy orient path of light!
Onward, still onward, o'er the waves that leap
So lovelily, and show their crests of white,
The eye, unsated, in its own despite,
Still up that vista gazes; till thy way
Over the waters, seems a pathway bright
For holiest thoughts to travel, there to pay
Man's homage unto Him who bade thee “rule the day.”
X
And thou thyself, forgetting what thou art,Appear'st thy Maker's temple, in whose dome
The silent worship of the expanding heart
May rise, and seek its own eternal home:
The intervening billows' snowy foam,
Rising successively, seem steps of light,
Such as on Bethel's plain the angels clomb;
When, to the slumb'ring patriarch's ravish'd sight,
Heaven's glories were reveal'd in visions of the night.
XI
Nor are thy evening splendours, mighty Orb!Less beautiful: and oh! more touching far,
And of more power thought, feeling to absorb
In silent ecstacy, to me they are;
When, watchful of thy exit, one pale star
Shines on the brow of summer's loveliest eve;
And breezes, softer than the soft guitar,
Whose plaintive notes Castilian maids deceive,
Among the foliage sigh, and take of thee their leave.
XII
Oh! then it is delightful to beholdThy calm departure; soothing to survey
Through opening clouds, by thee all edged with gold,
The milder pomp of thy declining sway:
How beautiful, on church-tower old and grey,
Is shed thy parting smile; how brightly glow
Thy last beams on some tall tree's loftiest spray,
While silvery mists half veil the trunk below,
And hide the rippling stream that scarce is heard to flow!
XIII
This may be mere description; and there areWho of such poesy but lightly deem;
And think it nobler in a bard, by far,
To seek in narrative a livelier theme:
These think, perchance, the poet does but dream,
Who paints the scenes most lovely in his eyes,
And, knowing not the joys with which they teem,
The charm their quiet loveliness supplies,
Insipid judge his taste, his simple strain despise.
XIV
I quarrel not with such. If battle fields,Where crowns are lost and won; or potent spell
Which portraiture of stormier passion yields;
If such alone can bid their bosoms swell
With those emotions words can feebly tell,
Enough there are who sing such themes as these,
Whose loftier powers I seek not to excel;
I neither wish to fire the heart, nor freeze;
But seek their praise alone, whom gentler thoughts can please.
XV
But if the quiet study of the heart,And love sincere of nature's softer grace,
Have not deceiv'd me, these have power to impart
Feelings and thoughts well worthy of a place
In every bosom: he who learns to trace,
Through all he sees, that hand which form'd the whole,
While contemplating fair Creation's face,
Feels its calm beauty ruder thoughts control,
And touch the mystic chords which vibrate through the soul.
XVI
Majestic Orb! when, at the tranquil closeOf a long day in irksome durance spent,
I've wander'd forth, and seen thy disk repose
Upon the vast horizon, while it lent
Its glory to the kindling firmament,
While clouds on clouds, in rich confusion roll'd,
Encompass'd thee as with a gorgeous tent,
Whose most magnificent curtains would unfold,
And form a vista bright, through which I might behold
XVII
Celestial visions — Then the wondrous storyOf Bunyan's Pilgrims seem'd a tale most true;
How he beheld their entrance into glory,
And saw them pass the pearly portal through;
Catching, meanwhile, a beatific view
Of that bright city, shining like the sun,
Whose glittering streets appear'd of golden hue,
Where spirits of the just, their conflicts done,
Walk'd in white robes, with palms, and crowned every one.
XVIII
Past is that vision:—Views of heavenly thingsRest not in glories palpable to sense;
To something dearer Hope exulting springs,
With joy chastis'd by humble diffidence;
Not robes, nor palms, give rapture so intense
As thought of meeting, never more to part,
Those we have lov'd on earth; the influence
Of whose affection o'er the subject heart,
Was by mild virtue gain'd, and sway'd with gentle art.
XIX
Once more unto my theme. I turn againTo Thee, appointed ruler of the day!
For time it is to close this lingering strain,
And I, though half reluctantly, obey.
Still, not thy rise, and set, alone, though they
Are most resplendent, claim thy votary's song;
The bard who makes thee subject of his lay,
Unless he would a theme so glorious wrong,
Will find it one that wakes of thoughts a countless throng.
XX
For can imagination upward soarTo thee, and to thy daily path on high,
Nor feel, if it have never felt before,
Warm admiration of thy majesty?
Thy home is in the beautiful blue sky!
From whence thou lookest on this world of ours,
As but a satellite thy beams supply
With light and gladness; thy exhaustless powers
Call forth in other worlds sweet Spring's returning flowers!
XXI
Yes — as in this, in other worlds the same,The Seasons do thee homage — each in turn:
Spring, with a smile, exults to hear thy name;
Then Summer woos thy bright, but brief sojourn,
To bless her bowers; while deeper ardours burn
On Autumn's glowing cheek when thou art nigh;
And even Winter half foregoes his stern
And frigid aspect, as thy bright'ning eye
Falls on his features pale, nor can thy power deny.
XXII
Yet though on earth thou hast beheld the swayOf time, which alters all things; and may'st look
On Pyramids as piles of yesterday,
Which were not in thy youth: although no nook
Of earth, perchance, retain the form it took
When first thou didst behold it: even thou
Must know, in turn, thy strength and glory strook;
Must lose the radiant crown that decks thy brow,
Day's regal sceptre yield, and to a Mightier bow!
XXIII
For thou thyself art but a thing of time,Whose birth with thine one awful moment blended;
Together ye began your course sublime,
Together will that course sublime be ended.
For, soon or late, have oracles portended,
One final consummation ye shall meet:
When into nothingness ye have descended,
This mighty world shall melt with fervent heat,
Its revolutions end, its cycle be complete.
XXIV
And then shall dawn Heaven's everlasting day,Illum'd with splendour far surpassing thine;
For He who made thee shall Himself display,
And in the brightness of his glory shine.
Redeem'd from grief and sin by Love Divine,
Before his throne shall countless thousands bend;
And space itself become one holy shrine,
Whence in harmonious concord shall ascend
To God, and to The Lamb, praise, glory without end!
TO JOHN BOWRING, ESQ. ON HIS TRANSLATION OF THE RUSSIAN ANTHOLOGY.
I
Bowring! it was an honourable taskFrom the bleak regions of the north to bear
A wreath, whose beauty well deserv'd to bask
In brighter sunshine, and in balmier air.
II
And well hast thou perform'd it. Thanks to thee,Poets, whose names had grated on my ear,
Till thou hadst made them musical to me,
Are now fireside companions, priz'd, and dear.
III
Derzhavin's noble numbers, soaring high,Replete with inspiration's genuine force,
And Batiushkov's milder melody,
Warm from domestic pleasure's sweetest source:
IV
These, and with them names dissonant and direTo English ears, are now delightful things;
Awakening thoughts congenial to the lyre,
And, better still, hope's warm imaginings.
V
Yes, hope for the extension of that goodWhich cultivated taste and thought dispense;
For these, if rightly train'd, and understood,
Must nourish virtue and benevolence.
VI
Therefore do I rejoice: believing this,That poesy's enchanting art was given
To be, on earth, the source of blameless bliss,
And cherish thoughts which lift the soul to heaven.
VII
Nor am I lonely in this cheerful creed,For thou art one who know'st the purer power
Of lofty song, and I have heard thee plead,
With eloquence, the Muses' noblest dower.
VIII
Not for its literary worth alone,Hast thou, with generous emulation, brought
This flow'ry wreath from Russia's frigid zone;
To thee with deeper charms its bloom was fraught.
IX
A heart like thine delightedly must dwellUpon those liberal feelings, tranquil joys,
Which, in the peasant's cottage, student's cell,
May bless the mind that thus its power employs.
X
Thou couldst not but rejoice to find in haunts,“Where Winter sits upon his throne of snow,”
Those thoughts and feelings Nature kindly plants
In hearts that stifle not her genial glow.
XI
To thee it was refreshing to behold,In realms where slav'ry mars man's better powers,
Those germs of mind, thus vent'ring to unfold,
Which may hereafter burst in beauteous flowers;
XII
Flowers of delightful fragrance; fit to twineAround the capitals in Freedom's fane;
When Freedom there shall find an honour'd shrine,
And knowledge break the links of slav'ry's chain.
XIII
Russia may yet be free! Nor frigid clime,Nor autocrat's decrees, can e'er impede
Of mental energy the march sublime;
Its glorious records he who runs may read.
XIV
In rising states, if pure each hidden sourceOf knowledge, and of freedom, every hour
Aids their resistless, animating course;
Strong, in the weakness of opposing power.
XV
Triumphant, not through force of arms, but byThe power of truth, the silent lapse of time;
Bloodless and glorious is their victory,
The fame their votaries win — indeed sublime.
XVI
And well may thy benignant bosom feelThat such achievements richly merit more
Than to be hail'd by trumpet's loudest peal,
Or echoing artillery's thundering roar.
XVII
They should hand down the deathless names of thoseWho may accomplish them, to distant years;
Adorn'd with brightness truth alone bestows;
Renown unpurchased but by grateful tears.
XVIII
Russia some future Alfred yet may boast,Whose deeds may truly dignify her throne;
She yet may own of honour'd names an host,
And shine, the glory of a frigid zone.
XIX
Meanwhile be thine the praise of having borneSome of her early flowers of poesy
To blossom in a region less forlorn,
“Beneath our Albion's more benignant sky.”
TO C. B. T.
I
High hopes, and noble thoughts, are thine;These Fortune could not take,
Nor would her gifts adorn the shrine
That such will not forsake.
Defying Fate's and Fortune's will;
What first was fair, is glorious still.
II
But what is Fortune? what is Fate?The Christian knows them not:
He knows a Being, good as great,
Controls his earthly lot:
No fabled phantom's vain caprice
Assails his joy, or mars his peace.
III
What though, dear Charles! thy morn so bright,Ere noon be somewhat shaded:
Its tenderest bloom, its truest light,
Remain undimm'd, unfaded:
These brightly shine, and sweetly glow,
And, keeping them, how rich art thou!
IV
Before I met thee, what I heardHad waken'd vain regret,
And sympathy within was stirr'd
For thee; but, when we met,
I should have blush'd to own that I
Had ever thought of sympathy.
V
I could have look'd at thee, my friend!With envy and with pride,
But names so odious ill may blend
With feelings gratified:
And mine were such, for I was taught
To bless thee, in my inmost thought.
VI
Whom the Lord loveth, in his loveHe chasteneth. Every son
Adopted by our Sire above,
That sonship thus hath won:
Nor was the chastisement severe
Which left thee much most truly dear.
VII
Am I too serious? surely not:If so, what may we trust?
Hast thou not chosen as thy lot
An office most august?
And enter'd on its functions, now,
Where much should sanctify each vow?
VIII
The altar where thou minist'rest,The walls that echo round
Each syllable by thee express'd,
Stand they on holy ground?
It is regarded so by thee,
In one sense it is such to me.
IX
Forgive me if I honour not,As thou may'st, outward things;
Or if, while standing on such spot,
My recollection clings
To one, whose memory, in my sight,
Eclipses the most splendid rite.
X
No consecrating ritual's art,No anthem's echoing peal,
Could, to the feelings of my heart,
That hidden spell reveal,
Which, though thy creed is not my own,
Here wakens thought's sublimest tone.
XI
Thy creed not mine! the thought recal;Its essence is the same;
On truths most awful unto all,
We differ but in name:
And these enjoin us to revere
A spot by martyr'd worth made dear.
XII
Not to revere, as may have beenThe case in days gone by,
With superstition's darken'd mien;
But with a heavenward eye
To Him, the Giver of all good,
For whom that martyr nobly stood.
XIII
Thou bear'st his name; thou standest whereHe stood; — his worth recal;
May'st thou his deep devotion share,
On thee his mantle fall:
For unto it more virtue clings
Than to the ermin'd robes of kings!
TO C. H. TOWNSEND, ON HIS VERSES TO THE SETTING SUN, INCLUDED IN THE VOLUME OF HIS POEMS RECENTLY PUBLISHED.
I
Yes! Bard of Nature's vesper hour,Of day's superb decline;
There are who own its thrilling power
With feelings such as thine.
II
Who view that orb as thou hast done,When sinking from our skies;
Who, when his westward goal is won,
Gaze there with wistful eyes.
III
Were it not thus, thy touching layBy none were understood,
Nor would it human bosoms sway
To thought's most soothing mood.
IV
But breathing, as it does, a toneTo Nature's votaries dear,
It falls with magic all its own
Upon the spirit's ear.
V
And on their hearts, whose eyes have dweltOn day's declining light,
Its gentle music seems to melt
Like softest dews of night;
VI
Which nourish by their genial powersThe meadow's emerald green,
The loveliness of languid flowers,
The charm of every scene.
VII
And thus it surely ought to be;Still, in these worldly days,
There are who have not bow'd the knee
In Mammon's venal praise.
VIII
Who have not barter'd mind's true health,Feeling's exhaustless dower,
Imagination's glorious wealth;
For riches, pomp, or power!
IX
These love, unto the world unknown,To live in Nature's eye;
And, feeling Nature's God their own,
In peace with Him to die!
X
To them, in ocean, sky, and air,Exist unnumber'd spells;
In every thing, and every where,
One mighty Spirit dwells!
XI
His brightness makes more truly brightThe beauty of the morn;
When dew-drops, gemm'd by rays of light,
Bespangle every thorn.
XII
The stillness of the noontide hourIs Nature's silent hymn
To God; without whose mighty power
Her splendours all were dim.
XIII
And, in the Sun's serene decline,Its loveliest hues reprove
Those who can view its beams benign,
Nor feel that “God is Love!”
XIV
Who, gazing on the Sun's last beams,Feels not that they impart
More than the Poet's sweetest dreams,
Or proudest works of art?
XV
He seems to say, “Fair world, adieu!“I have fulfill'd my trust,
“And given my glorious light unto
“The just, and the unjust.
XVI
“My bounty may have been abus'd,“Unfelt, or unconfess'd;
“And all my glory but amus'd
“Hearts which it should have bless'd.
XVII
“But I reproach not: yet one more“Last effort would I make,
“And win the thoughtless to adore
“Our Maker, for my sake!”
XVIII
And then, magnificently bright,Benignantly serene;
All that can lure the wond'ring sight,
Gives beauty to the scene.
XIX
Well might'st thou, Minstrel! own how weakThe power that words supply;
Well might “a smile be on thy cheek,”
“A tear be in thine eye.”
XX
For, oh! the most subduing power,The most harmonious tone,
Of such an harmonizing hour
Can but in thought be known.
XXI
But unto thought that Sun then seemsA type and emblem true
Of Him who gave its brightest beams,
Its softest radiance too.
XXII
Like Him, it sheds its warmth and lightOn all that breathes and lives;
Though they forgetfully may slight
What hour by hour it gives.
XXIII
Like Him, before its beams depart,On eyes long turn'd away,
It opens scenes to touch the heart,—
Would man confess their sway.
XXIV
And those who own their deepest spell,With thoughts that upward soar,
Feeling far more than words can tell,
Must silently adore!
[While this sheet is passing through the press, a notice of Townsend's Poems in the Monthly Review has fallen in my way: in it the Reviewer observes, “Mr. Townsend writes like a gentleman, a scholar, and a poet.” On his claims to the two former characters, however consonant to my feelings, I do not affect to offer an opinion; for his poetry, I return him, most cordially, my thanks.]
STANZAS ON THE APPROACH OF WINTER.
I
'Tis Autumn! and the short'ning day,The chilly evening's sober gray,
And winds that hoarser blow;
The fading foliage of the trees,
Which rustles sere in every breeze,
The approach of Winter show.
II
Adieu to those more cheerful hours,Spent amid Spring's unfolding flowers,
Or Summer's soothing shade;
A few short weeks, — and then adieu
To fields and groves of changeful hue,
By Autumn's hand array'd!
III
But welcome — welcome unto Thee!Whose undisputed sov'reignty
Must briefly be confess'd;
Who, though thou wear'st a look austere,
Of all the seasons of the year
By me art lov'd the best.
IV
I own that I shall somewhat missThe quiet and secluded bliss
Autumnal eves supply:
When meadow, valley, hill, and grove,
Disclose, to those who o'er them rove,
A harvest for the eye!
V
And deeper is the hush'd delight,When, with her mild and mellowing light,
The full-orb'd moon on high
In gentle majesty comes forth,
Shedding her beauty on the earth,
Her glory through the sky.
VI
Yes; I have felt the charm serene,Yielded by such delightful scene;
Yet not the less I prize,
Stern Winter! pleasures all thy own,
Or which, in fullest zest, are known
Beneath thy frowning skies.
VII
Even abroad, thy short-liv'd dayAt times will loveliness display,
To me as truly dear,
As that, more palpable to sense,
Spring, Summer, Autumn, can dispense,
To deck the changeful year.
VIII
How beautiful thy frosty morn,When brilliants gem each feathery thorn!
How fair thy cloudless noon!
And through the leafless trees, at night,
With more than Summer's soften'd light,
Shines thy resplendent moon.
IX
To me thy snowy landscapes teemWith beauty, though no sunny beam
Illume their aspect chill;
They have a beauty to the heart;
In the deep quiet they impart
Stillness appears more still!
X
But thou hast other joys than these,Which they can scarcely fail to seize
Who most improve thy sway;
Joys which are found and felt within,
And home-born pleasures, that begin
With thy departing day.
XI
Thou gath'rest round the cheerful fireDaughter and Mother, Son and Sire;
Names which themselves express
Some of our nature's dearest ties;
Whose influence to the heart supplies
Its choicest happiness.
XII
Yes; “King of intimate delights,Fire-side enjoyments!” stormy nights
But aid thy potent thrall;
Thou holdest then thy regal court,
With tale and converse, laugh and sport,
Christmas, thy Carnival!
XIII
But from each jocund festive scene,Whose charms delightfully have been
Described in many a strain,
I turn me to the silent cell
Of him who feels that hidden spell
Which binds the Muses' train.
XIV
Look in that room, if it may beSo term'd, where little room we see;
And mark the medley there;
With scraps of paper, scribbled o'er,
Strew'd are the table, desk, and floor,
And one else vacant chair.
XV
Its master in the other sits;Ransacks his memory, racks his wits
For simile, or rhyme;
Now writes a line, now rubs it out;
Now o'er another hangs in doubt;
Nor heeds, nor thinks of time.
XVI
Turn'st thou from such a scene with scorn,Reader! or does such lot forlorn
Thy sympathy awake?
The former he would scarcely heed;
The latter might too fondly feed
A flame 'twere wise to slake.
XVII
'Tis past the noon of night, and yetHe seems, while writing, to forget
The silent lapse of hours;
And that a tenement of clay,
Prone to derangement and decay,
Contains his mental powers.
XVIII
But he is happy, for the time,Thus bodying forth in simple rhyme
Feelings and thoughts, which seem
To bring before his spirit's eye
Scenes, objects, persons, long gone by,
Each, in its turn, his theme.
XIX
Not “cribb'd in, cabin'd, and confin'd,”By that small closet's bounds, his mind,
In winter's long dark night,
Unfolds its wings; and fancy flies
Where landscapes, under summer-skies,
Bask in its sunshine bright.
XX
Perhaps some haunt, to boyhood dear,Unvisited for many a year,
In fancy he surveys;
Or, dearer still, he seems to greet
Those whom in thought 'tis joy to meet,
The friends of former days.
XXI
He holds delightful converse, too,With some whom he no more may view,
The lov'd, the long-since dead;
Yet such exist to him, thus brought
Before the vision of his thought,
Though they from earth are fled.
XXII
What is to him, in such an hour,The frown which may hereafter lower
Upon a critic's brow?
It then may mortify his pride,
Or be with keener pangs supplied;
But it is harmless now.
XXIII
For he but fancies, now, how suchA thought, or sentiment, may touch
The fancy, or the heart
Of friend, or more than friend, from whom
He, by life's chance, or darker doom,
Has long liv'd far apart.
XXIV
Perhaps a half-encourag'd thrillOf hope, more elevated still,
May cause a transient glow;
Thoughts undefinable, which seek
For words in vain; he dares not speak
Of what to him they show.
XXV
They whisper to his willing ear,(Whose could be clos'd to sounds so dear?)
That when his mortal frame
Shall be to kindred dust consign'd,
He yet may hope to leave behind
The relic of a name!
XXVI
A name, not held in splendid trustBy trophied urn, or sculptur'd bust,
'Mid statesmen's, chiefs', and kings',—
But one that some few hearts may prize,
When death has darkly seal'd his eyes,
Among their cherish'd things.
XXVII
Not as the name of one who soar'dTo realms or regions unexplor'd;
But who was well content
To trace those humbler veins of thought
And feeling, which to him were fraught
With pleasures innocent.
XXVIII
And thus is he absorb'd, and thisTo him is intellectual bliss;
By sympathy intense
To feel that intercourse which binds
Heart unto heart; with other minds
To hold intelligence.
XXIX
“Luckless enthusiast! enjoy,As best thou mayst, thy fond employ;
Give thought and fancy scope:
Explore imagination's source;
And hold delightful intercourse
With that sweet flatterer—Hope!
XXX
“But know thou this! the dreams that blessThese hours of silent loneliness,
So cherish'd by thy heart—
Have little in them to engage
Those who, on life's more busy stage,
Perform an active part.
XXXI
“Can retrospections of the past,Before existence was o'ercast
By vain anxiety,
Be priz'd by any, but the few
Who oft look back, with pensive view,
To cloudless infancy?
XXXII
“Can those lov'd haunts, which muse of thineWould give in artless verse to shine,
By tourists all unknown;
Delightful as they are to thee,
In other eyes expect to be
Lovely, as in thine own?
XXXIII
“Can passions chasten'd, feelings curb'd,Thoughts, by no feverish dreams disturb'd,
Aspire to gratify
Those, whom 'twere easier to beguile
By writhing lips, demoniac smile,
And lightning of the eye?
XXXIV
“Or, ‘last, not least;’ what chance is thine'Mid loftier votaries of the Nine,
Who fill the trump of Fame;
That thou the idle wish shouldst own,
By rank, wealth, fashion, all unknown,
To raise thyself a name?
XXXV
“Resign the bootless task! nor keepThose wakeful eyes from balmy sleep;
Leave, leave thy close-pent room!
Curtail not thy brief span of life,
By useless, thankless, hopeless strife;
Oblivion is thy doom!
XXXVI
“But 'tis in vain! Then fare thee well!I can but mourn that such a spell
Resistless seems to be:
Yet, since it is so, may thy toil
Repay thee with an ampler spoil
Than mine e'er brought to me.
XXXVII
“And may those purer hopes, that cheerThy winter evenings, else most drear,
Not pass like phantoms by;
But mayst thou, when to earth consign'd,
Some blameless record leave behind,
Which shall not wholly die!”
SONNET, WRITTEN ON THE FIRST LEAF OF A VOLUME OF CHARLES LLOYD'S POETRY.
Reader! if thou wouldst know the genuine worthOf the rich treasures that await thee here,
Thou first must have thy mental eye and ear
Anointed, and unseal'd; must know the birth
Of better feelings than belong to earth,
And breathe in thought's sublimer atmosphere:
Be such thy mood, and thou wilt find no dearth
Of pure delight, thy heart may long hold dear.
But if thou art a worldling, and hast never
Felt joys and sorrows, which are not of time,
But born of feelings that must be for ever!
Betake thee to some more amusing rhyme,
Which has no shadowy clouds for light to sever,
Nor holds high colloquy with thoughts sublime!
BENHALL.
A SONNET.
Benhall! although I have not lately sought,As I had purpos'd, thy delightful shades,
Their charms survive; and oft by memory's aids,
In living beauty are before me brought.
No breeze that sweeps their flowers with perfume fraught;
Nor sun, nor moon-beam, whose soft light pervades
The coy recesses of thy loveliest glades,
Sweeter, or fairer, than thou art to thought!
Yet, not thy scenery only thus endears
Thy memory,—deeper spell remains behind:
Rich art thou in the lore of long-past years,
The songs of bards, whose brows by Fame are twin'd
With deathless bays: and, worthy such compeers,
A poet of thy own — of taste refin'd.
SONNET.
When I was privileg'd with Thee to roam
The maze of fairy-land which guards thy home,
Nor will its memory lightly pass away.
A sonnet's narrow bounds can ill portray,
Nor could a fashionably printed tome
Of slender size, how lovelily heaven's dome,
Earth's softest charms, shone forth in sweet display!
O! many an object which then met my view,
Memory has since by her delightful thrall,
In brighter tints than its then lovely hue
Of sabbath sunshine, failed not to recal;
And with them, evermore, are present too
Thou, and thy happy boy, my guides through all!
TO --- ---, ESQ.
I
Can I publish a volume of verse, and refrainFrom recording one tribute to thee,
Who hast long been, in moments of pleasure and pain,
Unchang'd in thy friendship to me?
II
O, no! though forbidden to utter thy name,But one thought of it seems to give birth
To each wish the most grateful affection can frame,
In rememb'ring thy kindness and worth.
III
How can I be silent? In deserts forlornThe flowers ope their leaves to the Sun,
Whose beams give them beauty and life every morn,
Though their homage be witness'd by none.
IV
And though night-dews, which foster their fragrance, may seemAll unthought-of to fall from the sky,
Yet their pearl-drops, emblazon'd by morning's glad beam,
Will betray them when night have pass'd by.
V
Thus hearts, which in friendship's warm sun-shine have flourish'd,Must revive when its brightness appears;
And feelings its soft dews have silently nourish'd
Must break forth,—if it be but in tears.
VI
And this rude harp of mine, if I dar'd not to pourFor thy virtues the song I now frame,
Might, touch'd by the murmuring breezes, say more,
And reproachfully whisper thy name!
TO THE AUTHOR OF “MAY YOU LIKE IT.”
I
No vulgar boon does he bestow,Who thus to manhood's stormy strife
Recals those feelings, whose first glow
Blest early life.
II
O, many a blast has blighted mine!Yet seem'd I, as I linger'd o'er
These pages which develop thine,
To feel once more!
III
To feel how holy is the dowerOf love, and truth, and tenderness;
How godlike is their gentle power
The heart to bless.
IV
Thou art not one of those who deemThat all our nature's dearest ties
Are things which, on the Gospel scheme,
Man should despise.
V
Thou wouldst unto religion giveEach winning charm, that can supply
Our happiness while here we live,
Hope—when we die.
VI
Believing that the human heartTo him who made it still is dear,
Thou wouldst allure its better part
By love sincere.
VII
Even in many—stain'd by sin,Lost, in the rigid bigot's sight,
Thou seest a feeling yet—to win,
Which would do right!
VIII
Thou know'st how such, at times, recal,With bitterness of soul, the past;
And how they loathe, at times, the thrall
Which binds them fast.
IX
And thou wouldst gently loose each bond,By painting, to their wistful view,
Feelings as tender, pure and fond,
As once they knew.
X
Then, while contrition melts the heart,And purer joys the hopes allure,
'Tis thine, with blameless, childish art,
To point the cure.
XI
Well—“He who winneth souls is wise;”Wise in that wisdom from above,
Which to the wrath of man replies
That “God is love!”
XII
And he who labours thus may prove,Though some may wonder at his weakness,
The power that lurks in simple love,
The might of meekness!
TO A ROBIN.
I
Mild melodist! whose artless note,At foggy eve, at chilly morn,
From nature's quiet haunts remote,
Here seems a harmony forlorn;
Fain would I give thee, for thy song,
A carol simple as thy own;
For thou, sweet bird! awak'st a throng
Of thoughts which rise for thee alone.
II
It is not that thy lay is fraughtWith music, like the sky-lark's strain,
Or nightingale's, so sweetly caught
By listening ear, in midnight's reign;
Nor has thy note that deeper sound,
O which my heart has felt the thrall,
When I have heard, from groves profound,
The lone wood-pigeon's frequent call.
III
But these, each one, and all, give ventTo song, where song is wont to flow;
Thou, thou art sweetly eloquent,
With nothing near to wake that glow
Of music, in the haunts of men,
Which, amid buildings cluster'd round,
From time to time arrests my pen,
And makes me listen to its sound.
IV
Oh! hearts that feel, and eyes that seeAll as it truly is, can find,
Ev'n in an object mean as thee,
Food for the meditative mind:
But thus it is,—we close our hearts,
Our ears, our eyes, to things which, view'd
With the keen sense that truth imparts,
Might fill our souls with gratitude.
V
And this absurd and frigid pride,By which our nature is disgrac'd,
Philosophy has dignified
With the proud name of manly taste.
It seems a proof of childishness
Thy song to love, thy praise to speak,
And he who should its power confess
Must be the weakest of the weak.
VI
Well! be it so:—if life have taughtTo me one truth distinctly clear,
'Tis this, that unto wakeful thought
The humblest source of joy is dear.
The lowliest object that can wake
Our better feelings by its power,
The minstrel for his theme may take,
In contemplation's musing hour.
VII
Canst thou not waken such, sweet bird?Yes; while I listen to thy lay,
Thought's hidden stream again seems stirr'd
By breezes, which were wont to play
Over its current's dimpled course,
As once it flow'd so sweetly wild,
In happy childhood, when its source
Was by no worthless weeds defiled.
VIII
For then thy song to me express'dAll I conceiv'd of harmony;
And the red plumage of thy breast
Was beautiful to childhood's eye.
While tales, by infancy held dear,
Of funeral rites by thee perform'd,
Made, what was music to my ear,
A spell that deeper feelings warm'd.
IX
And since thou now bring'st back againThe memory of such hours to me,
Shall I, beguil'd by that sweet strain,
Blush for this tribute paid to thee?
No, never! if on wisdom's plan,
(All worldly precepts far above,)
“The child be father of the man,”
I justly owe thee praise and love.
X
But not for me, alone, thy songDost thou at eve and morn awake;
On other ears, amid this throng
Of buildings, it may sweetly break:
Bed-ridden age, perchance, may hear
Those soft and simple strains of thine;
And scenes, and hours long past, may cheer
Its grief, as they have lighten'd mine.
XI
One more reflection yet remains;Or wise, or foolish, 'twill intrude;
I trace in thee, and in thy strains,
My own, my song's similitude.
Like thee, in scenes adverse to song,
I act the minstrel's humble part;
Like thine, my numbers, weak or strong,
Nor seek, nor own the aid of art.
XII
And I, methinks, were well content,Like thee, to be by most unheeded,
If with my artless strains there went,
As with thy own, a charm that pleaded
For Nature, Tenderness, and Truth,—
Which childhood's innocence possesses,
Which beautify e'en blooming youth,
And honour age's silver tresses.
DEATH.
I
Since time the awful hour will bringWhich must receive our parting breath;
'Tis no unwise, or useless thing
To fix our earnest thoughts on Death.
II
To place before our mental viewA crisis — which we cannot shun,
When we, in bidding Time adieu,
Shall find Eternity begun.
III
It must an awful summons prove,E'en to the best, — to leave behind
All we have found to cheer, to love,
In human life, in human kind!
IV
Then, in the looks of those around,Who never seem'd so dear before,
Doubt has a silent answer found,
And feels that earthly hope is o'er.
V
Then, spite of fond affection's thrill,That fain would linger—follow fast
The dizzy faintness,—sick'ning chill,
Which lead us onward—to the last!
VI
The filmy eye, with vacant gaze,Views not the things it rests upon;
The fluttering pulse more feebly plays,
And feeling, hearing, sense—are gone.
VII
If hands are clasp'd, the heart, unstirr'dBy that last pressure, feels no glow;
If sobs are indistinctly heard,
The ear their meaning does not know.
VIII
Thus dead unto “the life of life,”All it can give we feel no more,
But wait the last unconscious strife,—
And soon that struggle, too, is o'er.
IX
Is this a scene we all must proveIn the short lapse of days or years?
And round our couch the friends we love
Thus pour their unavailing tears?
X
No — Faith dispels the awful gloom,And bids the mourner's weeping eyes
Behold, from yonder bursting tomb,
The Sun of Righteousness arise.
XI
No more on man's expiring hourImpervious clouds of darkness fall;
Death has now lost his boasted power,
Nor dares the ransom'd victim thrall.
XII
Why should we fear his transient sway,Since Jesus broke the tyrant's chain?
Because He lives, our slumb'ring clay
Shall wake to light and life again.
XIII
Oh, who may hope that awful hour,That righteous Judge in peace to meet?
They who on earth confess'd his power,
And cast their crowns at Jesus' feet.
XIV
Weak though they are, by nature frail,Hopes, fix'd on him, their hearts possess;
Faith bids them look within the veil,
And Christ becomes their righteousness.
XV
Can I such blissful state attain,Who, long in doubt and darkness bound,
Have felt that all my works are vain
As tinkling cymbals' empty sound?
XVI
Yes—for in conscious weakness springsSincerest trust in Power Divine;
Then rest beneath His guardian wings,
And hope, and faith, and peace, are thine.
XVII
No more than this I ask, or need,Secure, since near th' eternal throne
He ever lives, and still will plead
For all who his dominion own.
XVIII
On Him then cast each anxious care,To Him thy secret griefs confide;
His hand shall point the latent snare,
And aid thee when severely tried.
XIX
And when life's closing hour draws nigh,May no vain fears thy bosom chill,
But, though unseen by mortal eye,
That heavenly guide be with thee still.
XX
Oh, be it thus! and visions bright,Blest foretaste of a life divine,
Triumphant songs, and crowns of light,
The parting soul may well resign.
XXI
I would not o'er a brighter mindThan I can boast, a shadow fling;
Nor would I doubt the bliss they find
Whose dying lips can praises sing.
XXII
But unto me earth's holiest hymnWould float, I fear, unheeded by,
When earth itself was growing dim,
And ‘things unseen’ were drawing nigh.
XXIII
Nor, if I now can rightly viewWhat my own feelings then may be,
Could aught that man might say, or do,
Afford availing strength to me.
XXIV
The most that I presume to think,Through boundless mercy, may be mine,
When plac'd on being's trembling brink,
Is humble trust in grace Divine.
STOKE HILLS.
I
It may be lovely, from the heightOf Skiddaw's summit, moss'd and grey,
To feed the inexhausted sight
On the magnificent array
Which such a prospect must display:
On Keswick's lowly, peaceful vale;
On Derwentwater's scatter'd isles;
On torrents, bright with morning's smiles,
Or mark'd by mist-wreaths pale.
II
I never gaz'd on such a scene;Yet, if I give my fancy wings,
I half could think I there had been,
By force of her imaginings;
She in such witching beauty brings
The landscape to my mental eye;
I feel almost as if I stood
In its romantic solitude,
Beneath a cloudless sky.
III
But not in the exultant blissOf such a fascinating hour,
Hath scenery sublime as this,
Where lakes expand, and mountains tower,
Upon my heart so deep a power,
Or wakes in it such tender thrills,
As when, immers'd in busy thought,
And reveries by Memory brought,
I stand upon Stoke Hills.
IV
It is not that the landscape thereCan vie with Skiddaw's ampler scope;
Nor can Stoke Hills, so soft and fair,
With Cumbria's giant mountain cope:
What seest thou, standing on their slope,
Or loftiest eminence, to fill
The eye with rapture, or the mind
With transports, that thou might'st not find
On many another hill?
V
Outstretch'd beneath, indeed, may be,In loveliness diversified—
A prospect beautiful, which he
Who has most frequently descried,
Still finds with many a charm supplied,
And lingers, as if loath to leave it;
Whether it bask in morning's glow,
Or evening's shades, succeeding slow,
Of softer charms bereave it.
VI
But a mere town, a pond, a river,And meadows, sprinkled o'er with trees,
Whose light leaves in the sunshine quiver,
When stirr'd by each low, rustling breeze,—
Such objects, though they well may please
A heart that unto beauty clings;
Yet could not, of themselves, excite
Emotions, dearer than delight,
The well-known prospect brings.
VII
O! nothing is more true than this;It is not through the eye alone
We gather either bale or bliss,
From scenes which it may gaze upon:
Their sweetest tint, their deepest tone,
That which most saddens or endears,
Is shed on them by thoughts and feelings,
Which rise, at Memory's still revealings,
From dreams of former years!
VIII
The scenes that met our early gaze,The very turf we trod on then,
The trees we climb'd; as fancy strays
Back to those long-past hours again,
Revive, and re-appear, as when
The soul with sorrow kept no strife;
But, in its first imaginings,
Unfurl'd its own ethereal wings,
And sprang to light and life.
IX
Can ev'n the bright and fairy dreamsOf fiction wrought in poesy;
Or visions, with which fancy teems,
Of love, in love's idolatry,
Compare with childhood's memory?
No! these, ev'n when most pure their birth,
Have something in their loveliest guise,
Which, half instinctively, implies
They are of lower earth.
X
But the soul is not:—some, indeed,Have said, that ere on earth it came,
(As by a power Divine decreed,)
To animate this mortal frame,
It pre-existed, still the same;
And more will own to man is given
A spirit, whose young life within,
Ere tamper'd with by conscious sin,
Was fed by thoughts from heaven!
XI
And its first joys, and hopes, and fears,Were such as never more can meet
A parallel in after years;
Well may their memories be sweet!
'Tis more than earthly bliss to greet
Even a silent thought—which brings
Some token by its soothing powers,
It comes back from those happier hours,
With healing on its wings.
XII
Then wonder not that I preferSuch scene to Skiddaw's prouder height;—
It is a still interpreter
Of more than meets the outward sight;
I look through vistas far more bright,
More fair, than outward vision gives;
And feel, when plac'd on such a spot,
My spirit's present griefs forgot,
As in the past it lives!
THE GRAVE.
I
I love to muse, when none are nigh,Where yew-tree branches wave,
And hear the winds, with softest sigh,
Sweep o'er the grassy grave.
II
It seems a mournful music, meetTo soothe a lonely hour;
Sad though it be, it is more sweet
Than that from Pleasure's bower.
III
I know not why it should be sad,Or seem a mournful tone,
Unless by man the spot be clad
With terrors not its own.
IV
To nature it seems just as dearAs earth's most cheerful scite;
The dew-drops glitter there as clear,
The sun-beams shine as bright.
V
The showers descend as softly there,As on the loveliest flowers;
Nor does the moonlight seem more fair
On Beauty's sweetest bowers.
VI
“Ay! but within—within there sleepsOne, o'er whose mould'ring clay
The loathsome earth-worm winds and creeps,
And wastes that form away.”
VII
And what of that? The frame that feedsThe reptile tribe below,
As little of their banquet heeds,
As of the winds that blow.
VIII
Once more upon my musing strainA voice appears to break:—
“But if he sleep to rise again!
Should that no awe awake?”
IX
And yet, perhaps, the voice that nowThus breaks on fancy's ear,
When life was thron'd upon that brow,
Spake not one word of fear.
X
But now, when fear and hope are thingsWhich can do nought to save;
Each starts to life, and vainly clings
Around the silent grave.
XI
'Tis strange! we know we live—to die!And die—again to live!
Yet, while these truths might good supply,
We slight what they would give.
XII
But, were we wise, our serious thoughtBeside the spot we fear,
Might make it one with blessings fraught,
To hallow'd feelings dear.
XIII
To have it such, we must not viewThat spot with slavish dread;
Nor paint in fancy's darkest hue
The chambers of the dead.
XIV
A grave-yard is a school to teachThe living how to live;
And has a silent power to preach,
Which pulpits cannot give.
XV
But its most eloquent appealIs not to fear alone;
To hearts that deeply, justly feel,
It has a gentler tone.
XVI
A tone too gentle far to breakOn ears that hearken not!
But known to hearts that inly ache
To share that quiet spot.
XVII
To such it says, “With patience bearYour load of life awhile;
With meek submission shun despair,
And view me with a smile.
XVIII
“If friends desert, if foes oppress,But brief their power can be;
Look unto Him, whose love can bless,
Triumphant over me.
XIX
“To those by Him redeem'd, my bedIs softer far than down:
Here you may rest the aching head,
Nor heed each worldly frown.
XX
“Enfolded in my calm embrace,The heart can heave no sigh;
The mournful glance no longer trace
‘Unkindness’ alter'd eye .'
XXI
“No more upon the wounded earReproach or taunt can fall;
Nor accents cold, from friends once dear,
The keenest pang of all!
XXII
“No longer tutor'd lips must feignThe smile more sad than tears;
Here cheeks are pale, but not with pain,
Hearts cold, but not with fears.
XXIII
“To them who die in peace with Heaven,Its gates of pearl I ope;
And am, like Achor's Valley, given
To be the door of hope!”
TO MRS. HEMANS.
I
Lady! if I for thee would twineThe ivy-wreath, can feeling trace
No cause why, on a brow like thine,
The Muse might fitly place
Its verdant foliage—“never sere,”
Of glossy, and of changeless hue?
Ah! yes, there is a cause most dear
To truth, and nature too.
II
It is not that it long hath beenCombin'd with thoughts of festal rite;
The cup which thou hast drunk, I ween,
Not always sparkled bright!
Nor is it that it hath been twined
Round victory's brow in days gone by;
Such glory has no power to blind
Thy intellectual eye.
III
For thou canst look beyond the hourElated by the wine-cup's thrall,
Beyond the victor's proudest power,
Unto the end of all!
And therefore would I round thy brow
The deathless wreath of ivy place,
For well thy song has prov'd, that thou
Art worthy of its grace.
IV
Had earth, and earth's delights alone,Unto thy various strains given birth;
Then had I o'er thy temples thrown
The fading flowers of earth;
And trusting that e'en these, portray'd
By thee in song, would spotless be,
The jasmine's, lily's, harebell's braid
Should brightly bloom for thee.
V
But thou to more exalted themesHast nobly urg'd the Muse's claim;
And other light before thee beams
Than fancy's meteor flame;
And from thy harp's entrancing strings
Sounds have proceeded, more sublime,
Than e'er were waken'd by the things
Which appertain to time!
VI
Yes, lady! Thou hast truly set,Even to the masters of the lyre,
An eloquent example!—yet
How few have caught thy fire!
How few of their most lofty lays
Have to religion's cause been given,
And taught the kindling soul to raise
Its hopes, its thoughts, to heaven!
VII
Yet this at least has been thy aim;For thou hast chosen that better part,
Above the lure of worldly fame,
To touch, and teach the heart:
To touch it, by no slight appeal
To feelings in each heart confest;
To teach, by truths that bear the seal
God hath himself imprest.
VIII
And can those flowers, that bloom to fade,For thee a fitting wreath appear?
No! Wear thou then the ivy-braid,
Whose leaves are never sere!
It is not gloomy; brightly play
The sun-beams on its glossy green;
And softly on it sleeps the ray
Of moonlight, all serene.
IX
It changes not, as seasons flowIn changeful, silent course along;
Spring finds it verdant, leaves it so;
It outlives Summer's song;
Autumn no wan, or russet stain
Upon its fadeless glory flings:
And Winter o'er it sweeps in vain,
With tempest on his wings.
X
“Then wear thou this”—the ivy-crown!And though the bard who twines it be
Unworthy of thy just renown,
Such wreath is worthy thee.
For hers it is who lends her powers
To virtue's sacred cause alone;
Whose page not only teems with flowers,
But may by fruit be known.
VERSES ON THE GATEWAY
STILL STANDING AT NETTLESTEAD, SUFFOLK.
I
Thou art noble yet, for thy ruins recalThe remembrance of vanish'd glory;
And Time, which has levell'd the ancient hall,
Still spares thee to tell of its story.
II
O'er thy crumbling arch the sculptur'd shield,In spite of spoil's bereavement,
Is left as a relique, on which are reveal'd
The insignia of bold achievement.
III
When first they were graven, to honour's eyeTheir emblazonment shone forth brightly;
But now the rustic passes them by,
And thinks of their legend lightly.
IV
It boots but little. To rise, and fall,And leave but a wreck to outlive them,
Is as it should be, the lot of all
Who trust in what pride can give them.
V
There are thoughts more touching than those which riseFrom pride's departed splendour;
And thine is connected with countless ties,
Which waken ideas more tender.
VI
The heart, with its griefs, joys, hopes, and fears,Changes little in passions and powers;
And theirs, who sojourn'd here in distant years,
Cherish'd feelings the same as ours!
VII
For they liv'd, and they lov'd like us; and thisWas their home, in pain and pleasure;
And the best of them hoarded here their bliss,
As the miser his hidden treasure.
VIII
And now, when the trappings of glory fade,And its sunniest heights are shrouded,
The beams of affection, that brighten'd its shade,
Are to Memory's eye unclouded.
IX
To the heart, to the heart, we must turn at last,For all that endures the longest;
Its better feelings no blight can blast,
For their strength is in storms the strongest.
X
But in storm, or sunshine, 'tis theirs alone,To leave that enchantment behind them,
Which gives them an influence all must own,
By Nature herself assign'd them.
XI
Thou art noble yet, thou desolate pile!For the trophies of fame enwreathe thee;
But that fame is not worth one tear, or smile,
Of some who have pass'd underneath thee.
THE CONTRAST.
I
I stood, in thought, on Shinar's plain,And saw that tower arise,
Whose height so vast, by builders vain,
Was meant to reach the skies:
It seem'd to stand before my sight,
Like phantoms which, in dreams of night,
We see with wond'ring eyes;
Distrusted, when they meet our view,
But gazed at, till we think them true.
II
I will not say that thought could cheatMy judgment so to deem
Of this ideal counterfeit;
Nor was it slumber's dream:
But in imagination's hour
The past, by her creative power,
May like the present seem;
And make us for the time compeers
Of them who lived in distant years.
III
And thus I thought before me stoodThat tower of early fame,
Rear'd by the erring multitude
To make themselves a name:
Of lofty height and ample base,
Though boasting little finished grace,
Seem'd its gigantic frame;
Surpassing, in its wondrous size,
All Egypt's later prodigies.
IV
It rose, until its massy formFar length'ning shadows cast;
Bidding defiance to the storm,
And smiling at the blast:
And even to Euphrates' wave
Its lofty summit lustre gave,
The loveliest, and the last,
Which, borrow'd from the sun's last gleam,
It shed upon that distant stream.
V
And Shinar's plain was throng'd aroundWith earth's primeval race,
Who all alike intent were found,
Each lab'ring in his place,
To rear the tower, whose deathless fame
Should be their own enduring name,
Their city's chiefest grace:
For to one common home they clung,
And spoke but in one common tongue.
VI
But God came down to see the tower,And city they had made;
And by his overwhelming power
Their policy gainsay'd;
Giving to each a tongue unknown,
Their plans and counsels were o'erthrown,
His sovereignty display'd;
And what they eagerly had sought
To shun, their own presumption wrought.
VII
O then, in that discordant crowd,What wild confusion rose!
As each, in accents fierce and loud,
Attempted to disclose
The aid he proffer'd, help he sought;
Till they who were together brought
As friends, were turn'd to foes;
Desirous but apart to roam,
And seek a widely sever'd home!
VIII
The vision pass'd! crowd, tower, and plainFleeted in thought away:
Imagination's power again
Resum'd her dream-like sway;
And as her magic spell prevail'd,
I stood amid the throng who hail'd
The church's earlier day;
Nor greater contrast could be known
Than was by such transition shown.
IX
Around me were the gathered hostWho came to seek their Lord;
Owning, that solemn Pentecost,
One place with one accord:
And, for the time, I seem'd to stand
Spectator of that Christian band,
By Gentile tribes abhorr'd,
Chosen to publish, far and wide,
The Gospel of the Crucified!
X
When, on a sudden, came a sound,As of a wind from heaven,
Which sweeps o'er ocean's depths profound,
Or is through forests driven!
And on each head, in rev'rence bar'd,
Bright cloven tongues of fire declar'd
The gift which God had given:
The power, in tongues unknown till then,
To make salvation known to men.
XI
Well might that miracle then pleadWith hearts untouch'd before;
As Parthian, Elamite, and Mede,
Crete, Arab, Roman, Moor,—
Each in his native tongue address'd
With deep surprise and awe confess'd
That every doubt was o'er;
And eagerly preferr'd his claim
To be baptiz'd in Jesus' name.
XII
This vision also pass'd away;Yet did it first disclose
How diff'rent is the scope and sway
Of boons that God bestows.
The varying tongues which, heretofore,
On Shinar's plain, with loud uproar,
Converted friends to foes,
Here seem'd like manna to descend,
And made a foe far more than friend!
XIII
Thus talents, gifts, and graces proveOf present good, or ill,
As given by God in wrath, or love,
To work his gracious will:
Man cannot claim them as his own;
They come from God, and best are known
His purpose to fulfil,
When the Receiver's humble aim
Would glorify the Giver's name!
STANZAS.
I
It is sweet to give birth to the harp's flowing numbers,When the heart of the minstrel beats high to their sound;
It were madness to waken its strings from their slumbers,
When the shadows of darkness encompass him round.
II
There are feelings which cannot by words be imparted,And moods of the mind where expression is pain;
When despondency sinks down the desolate-hearted,
And even the Muses' high mandates are vain.
III
Such clouds are around me, sweet Fancy enthralling,Creating dark visions where bright ones should dwell;
Every whisper of Hope into silence appalling
Is hush'd by their baneful and fear-breathing spell.
IV
The butterfly, flitting from jasmines to roses,May be welcom'd wherever he folds his soft wings;
Let him light where he will, while on sweets he reposes,
Of the odours he came from, some vestige he brings.
V
While the reptile that creeps over Spring's fairest blossom,When its beauty and fragrance are both in their prime,
But poisons the perfume he finds in its bosom,
And mars all its glory by traces of slime.
VI
Thus it fares with the bard who delighted to hover,In the spring of the soul, o'er the Eden of mind,
And but seem'd to descend on its sweets to discover,
Or dispense by alighting, some pleasure refin'd.
VII
When that Eden, once cloudless, is darkly o'ershaded,Or seems so to him (bitter fruit of our fall):
No longer with beauty its flow'rets are braided,
“But the trail of the serpent is over them all.”
VIII
Then vain is the glory of noon's brightest splendour,The stillness of evening, morn's rapturous hymn;
The lustre of moonlight no longer seems tender;
And a star-sprinkled sky to his vision is dim.
IX
Existence itself, then, in his estimation,Appears but a blank, where enjoyment is not;
And the words of the monarch, that “All is vexation,”
The legend inscrib'd on mortality's lot.
X
Can he, then, give birth to the harp's flowing numbers,When his soul can no longer rejoice in their strain?
It were weakness to waken its visionless slumbers,
When the memory, alone, of its music is pain!
XI
No, no; let him hang on some yew-tree, all blasted,The pride of past moments, to which he still clings;
Be its mouldering frame by the midnight winds wasted,
And ivy and aconite twine round its strings.
XII
Even then, by the hand of its master forsaken,It may prove that its music was truly its own,
As the winds sweeping by it may fitfully waken
Its echo-like dirge, with their tenderest tone.
THE RECANTATION; TO --- ---.
I
I will not yield to gloom! since thou,With Friendship's soothing tone,
Turn'st kindly tow'rd me, even now,
'Mid sorrows of thine own:
Magnanimously kind to one
Whom lighter hearts might coldly shun.
II
My thanks, thy praise, should I express,Such might but give thee pain;
Thy worth, thy gentle tenderness,
Require no votive strain;
Nor is thy own that petty pride
Which is by plaudits gratified.
III
If brighter days should ever beMy brief allotment here,
Unless their brightness reach'd to thee,
To me they must be drear:
Since thou, in grief, hast thought of mine,
Could I be blest if grief were thine?
IV
No, never! and if hours more brightOn earth I may not know;
I will not think it starless night,
While yet around me glow
Those twilight gleams of softest dye,
Which looks, words, deeds of thine supply.
V
O! none can feel, but wounded hearts,Which only throb to ache,
What genuine sympathy imparts,
What feelings it can wake:
That such within my bosom dwell,
I owe to thee. Farewell! Farewell!
VERSES TO A CHILD TWO YEARS OLD.
I
Could I, sweet child, invoke for theeA blessing of transcendent worth;
Such might'st thou justly claim from me,
And this dark day might give it birth.
II
Thine it should be, because I oweTo thee, at times, the blest recal
Of being's earlier, brighter glow,
And nature's tend'rest, sweetest thrall.
III
For who could look upon thy face,Whether in smiles, or tears array'd,
Nor feel the soft, resistless grace
By early innocence display'd?
IV
O! many a time its soothing powerHas charm'd me from myself awhile;
And shed on sorrow's sunless hour
Something like joy's remember'd smile.
V
Nor least delightful is its swayNow, when the winds that sweep around,
On dark December's shortest day
The closing year's deep dirge resound.
VI
In such a season, smiles like thineAround them more of brightness fling,
Than outward sunbeams, when they shine
Upon the sweetest flowers of Spring.
VII
They flow from feelings far aboveWhat Spring's gay beauties can impart;
They speak of tenderness and love,
Warm from a glowing, guileless heart.
VIII
What are, to thee, the noise and strifeOf this world's tumult?—Things unknown!
Love is thy polar star of life,
Thou livest now to love alone.
IX
In those around, who hold thee dear,Thy smiles reflected pleasure wake;
Thy love imparts that power to cheer,
And theirs are sweet for love's dear sake.
X
And most of all to her fond heart,Who views thee with as fond an eye,
Each transport thou canst there impart,
Or share, love only can supply.
XI
'Tis this that makes thy smiles and tearsCall forth her deepest tenderness;
'Tis this that unto thee endears
Her silent glance, her soft caress.
XII
Long, long may such appear to theeThe light of life's intelligence;
And may thy true affection be
In future years their recompense!
DAYS OF DARKNESS.
I
I have not yet lived many years,Nor have those years been calmly bright;
For many cares, and griefs, and fears,
Have darkly veil'd their light:
Yet, even now, at times I deem,
To contemplation's pensive eye,
Symptoms exist, by which 'twould seem
That darker days draw nigh.
II
The early flush of sanguine hope,Which once, elate in confidence,
With disappointment well could cope,
And wrestle with suspense;
The vivid warmth of fancy's glow,
Which by its own creative powers
Could body forth, on earth below,
The forms of brighter bowers:
III
The young imaginings of thought,Freshness of feeling,—all that made
Existence with enchantment fraught,
At times seem wrapt in shade:
And moods of mind will come unbid,
When dark and darker grows the gloom,
Within whose depths obscure, half hid,
Appears the opening tomb!
IV
I will not say that all is night;For reason's pallid lamp,—the ray
Of revelation's glorious light,
At seasons let in day;
And by its beams, in mercy given,
That soul-enthralling, fearful gloom
Unfolds, when thus asunder riven,
A vista through the tomb.
V
But O! within, above, around,Enough is darkly overcast,
From which this painful truth is found—
Life's brightest days are past:
And many a mournful sign appeals
Unto my musing spirit's eye,
Which, to my pensive thought, reveals
That darker days are nigh.
VI
And let them come!—Shall man receive,In this probationary state,
Good from his God, yet weakly grieve
When He, as wise as great,
Sees right, with merciful design,
To send that salutary ill,
Which, meekly borne, through love benign,
Effects his gracious will?
VII
The cloudless glory of morn's sky,Which ushers in a beauteous day,
What time the viewless lark, on high,
Chaunts forth his cheerful lay,
Is beautiful; but clouds, and showers,
And mists, although they may appear
Less lovely than those sun-bright hours,
To Nature are as dear.
VIII
The lavish luxury of Spring,When flowers are bursting into bloom,
And tints upon an insect's wing
Out-rival Ormus' loom;
The Summer's radiance;—Autumn's sway
Of matron majesty and grace;
Enchant in turn, then pass away,
And give stern Winter place.
IX
Thus is it with the outward frameOf wondrous Nature; changing still,
And yet unchangeably the same —
Obedient to his will,
Alike in every season shown,
As each proclaims its author's praise;
Nor is this silent in the tone
Of Winter's stormiest days.
X
No; in the voice of mighty winds,At intervals to stillness aw'd,
Has it not seem'd, to thoughtful minds,
A spirit was abroad?
And thus the same Eternal Power,
Though viewless unto mortal eye,
When skies are bright, when tempests lower
Is still for ever nigh!
XI
Is there no lesson taught to manBy that which unto outward sense,
Through vast creation's matchless plan,
Proclaims benevolence?
Shall man distrust his goodness, who,
Spring after spring, with vital breath,
Revives the universe anew,
Educing life from death?
XII
Say not within thy inmost soul,When mental darkness veils its light,
And clouds, more dense than winter's, roll
Before the spirit's sight;
Say not that light will ne'er return;
That thou art of thy God forgot;
His lamp, within, may feebly burn,
Though thou discern'st it not.
XIII
To journey on from day to day,Yet scarcely catch one trembling gleam
Of that more glorious sun, whose ray
Within, was joy supreme;
To feel the more than wintry chill
That orb's eclipse must ever bring,
Is but thy portion to fulfil
Of human suffering.
XIV
'Tis no peculiar lot of thine,Thy sole, irrevocable doom;
Others have seen that splendour shine,
And seem to set in gloom:
The pang its absence now imparts,
Though painful it may be to bear,
Has been endur'd by aching hearts,
Endur'd without despair.
XV
But not in human strength alone!The strength of man is weakness here;
His wisdom, follishness is shown
In trials so severe:
The outward ills, which all must feel,
Man's spirit may perhaps control;
God only can illume and heal
The darken'd, wounded soul.
XVI
His mercy never yet assign'd(Can we conceive it could be so?)
To any one of human-kind
The cup of hopeless woe.
Life's goblet may, to some, be brimm'd
With more than wormwood's bitterness;
Much of its day by clouds be dimm'd;—
Yet all design'd to bless.
XVII
There is a sorrow—better farThan noisy mirth which spurns control;
For Folly's raptures often mar
The flow of Pleasure's bowl:—
There is a sadness of the face,
By which the heart is better made;
A brook to bless the desert place,
A gourd to cast its shade.
XVIII
That brook, that gourd, are theirs alone,Who meekly place their hopes on Him,
Before whose glory-circled throne
The stars of heaven are dim!
Then trust in God! his name thy tower!
Who by his own resistless might,
Can overcloud Life's brightest hour,—
Make days of darkness—light!
THE POOL OF BETHESDA.
I
Around Bethesda's healing wave,Waiting to hear the rustling wing
Which spoke the Angel nigh, who gave
Its virtue to that holy spring,
With patience, and with hope endued,
Were seen the gather'd multitude.
II
Among them there was one, whose eyeHad often seen the waters stirr'd;
Whose heart had often heav'd the sigh,
The bitter sigh, of hope deferr'd;
Beholding, while he suffer'd on,
The healing virtue given and gone!
III
No power had he; no friendly aidTo him its timely succour brought!
But while his coming he delay'd,
Another won the boon he sought;
Until The Saviour's love was shown,
Which heal'd him by a word alone!
IV
Had they who watch'd and waited thereBeen conscious who was passing by,
With what unceasing, anxious care
Would they have sought his pitying eye;
And crav'd, with fervency of soul,
His Power Divine to make them whole!
V
But habit and tradition sway'dTheir minds to trust to sense alone;
They only hoped the Angel's aid;
While in their presence stood, unknown,
A greater, mightier far than he,
With power from every pain to free.
VI
Bethesda's pool has lost its power!No Angel, by his glad descent,
Dispenses that diviner dower
Which with its healing waters went.
But He, whose word surpassed its wave,
Is still omnipotent to save.
VII
And what that fountain once was found,Religion's outward forms remain—
With living virtue only crown'd
While their first freshness they retain;
Only replete with power to cure
When, Spirit-stirr'd, their source is pure!
VIII
Yet are there who this truth confess,Who know how little forms avail;
But whose protracted helplessness
Confirms the impotent's sad tale;
Who, day by day, and year by year,
As emblems of his lot appear.
IX
They hear the sounds of life and love,Which tell the visitant is night;
They see the troubled waters move,
Whose touch alone might health supply;
But, weak of faith, infirm of will,
Are powerless, helpless, hopeless still!
X
Saviour! thy love is still the sameAs when that healing word was spoke;
Still in thine all-redeeming name
Dwells power to burst the strongest yoke!
O! be that power, that love display'd,
Help those—whom Thou alone canst aid!
TO THE MEMORY OF EMMA FULLER.
The dark, unfathom'd caves of ocean bear;
Full many a flower is born to blush unseen,
And waste its sweetness on the desert air.”
Gray's Elegy.
I
Yes; flowrets unseen their rich perfume may shed,And bright gems be hidden in ocean's dark bed;
But more touchingly tender than either, to me,
Is the life and the death of a being like thee.
II
Thy brief span of life, like a vision, is fled,And thine is the peaceful repose of the dead;
For the slumber of those who in innocence die,
Can scarcely an image of anguish supply.
III
It is true that the blight of a flowret in May,Ere its beautiful blossom the eye can repay,
Awakens some feelings approaching to grief,
Which haunt not the slow fall of Autumn's sere leaf.
IV
And yet, if we calmly reflect on thy lot,It seems like a bright page which sorrow would blot;
And he who would sully that page with a tear,
Is blind to its beauty, so spotless and clear.
V
For me, I could envy thee! thus in the bloomOf the heart and the soul to go down to the tomb;
While the first knew not anguish, and sin had not cast
Those clouds which more darkly o'ershadow the last.
VI
Hadst thou died in thy childhood, I scarcely can tellIf thy death had been fraught with so potent a spell;
For, with much of its purity, now are combin'd
Reflections with far deeper feelings entwin'd.
VII
Thou hadst liv'd long enough to acknowledge the swayOf the softest of passions our hearts can obey;
The purest—in bosoms where innocence keeps
Its watch o'er the heart, like a star o'er the deeps.
VIII
Thou didst love, and wert lov'd; and the future was bright,At times, with the hues of imagin'd delight;
But thou didst not, when call'd on such hopes to resign,
At the will of Omnipotence, vainly repine.
IX
Unto Him, who can humble the lofty and pround,With gentle submission thy meek spirit bow'd;
And the merciful love of thy Lord and thy King
Robb'd the grave of its victory, and death of its sting.
X
Thus wert thou enabled, when dying, to blessThe name of thy God, and his goodness confess;
And thy spirit, prepar'd for its joyous release,
Pure, gentle, and pious, departed in peace!
XI
Although, in thy life-time, thou wast unto meBut as one of Earth's daughters, delightful to see;
A form which, in passing, attracts by its grace,
And features, whose mildness 'tis soothing to trace;
XII
Yet when thou wast dead, while remembrance still dweltOn the image its mirror reflected,—I felt
A desire, which I could not and cannot explain,
Gentle girl! to behold those mild features again!
XIII
They were chang'd! O! how much, since I look'd on them last!From the cheek, wan and wasted, its faint bloom had pass'd;
O'er the sunk eye, all lustreless, darkness had roll'd;
And the lips, pale and bloodless, as marble were cold!
XIV
But, contemplating these, in defiance of allDeath had done to disfigure, disease to appal,
I thought, as I gaz'd on the charms that remain'd,
How imperfect the triumph which both had obtain'd!
XV
For O! there was meekness and loveliness yet,Like the west's mild effulgence, when day's orb has set;
And we know from the twilight, so soft and serene,
How calm, and how cloudless his setting has been.
XVI
On thy features still dwelt, what life cannot disclose,An expression more touching than that of repose;
Which silently spoke, unto hearts that could feel,
What the tongue of the living can never reveal.
XVII
“Peace! Peace!” it proclaim'd, or it seem'd so to me,“To an innocent spirit, thus early set free;
Unto which, in compassionate goodness, are given
The bless'd and enduring enjoyments of heaven!”
XVIII
Farewell, then, sweet girl! who hast thus, in the bloomOf the heart and the soul, met mortality's doom;
And long may I cherish the feeling and thought
Which the last sight of thee o'er my hush'd spirit brought.
EARLY RISING AND PRAYER.
MODERNIZED FROM VAUGHAN'S SILEX SCINTILLANS.
I
When first thy opening eyes receiveThe glorious light of day,
Give thy awakening spirit leave
To be as blest as they.
II
Our outward organs well may teachIts duty to the soul;
And thoughts ascend, that need not speech,
Unto their heavenly goal.
III
For hearts, whose love to God is true,Should open with the day:
As flowers impearl'd with morning dew
Their tenderest tints display.
IV
Give God thy waking thoughts, that He,Throughout the day, may keep
Thy spirit company, and be
Its guardian while asleep.
V
Yet sleep not when the sun has risen,For prayer with day should rise;
And holiest thoughts, set free from prison,
Should soar above the skies.
VI
There are appointed hours betweenOur souls and love divine;
Nothing of earth should intervene
To mar their blest design.
VII
The manna's heavenly charm was goneWith morning's stainless dews;
And flowers on which the sun has shone
Their sweetest perfume lose!
VIII
Then let not needless slumber glutMorn's glories by its sin:
When this world's gates are closest shut,
Heaven's open:—enter in!
IX
Walk out beneath the roseate skies,Eye, ear, and heart awake;
List to the melodies that rise
From tree, from bush, and brake.
X
Each fluttering leaf, each murmuring spring,The great I AM doth own;
To Him the soaring sky-larks sing
In music's sweetest tone.
XI
Canst thou not sing? O! leave thy caresAnd follies; go thy way!
And morning's praises, morning's prayers,
Go with thee through the day!
XII
Serve God before the world below;Nor suffer, unimplor'd,
That blessing from thy path to go,
He only can afford.
XIII
This done, to him resign thy will,Who never will forsake
Those who, like Jacob, wrestle still,
As day begins to break.
XIV
Weep for thy sins,—to Him applyWho can those sins forgive;
But know that self and pride must die
Before thy soul can live.
XV
Mornings are emblems, shadowing forth,Unto the spirit's eye,
Man's resurrection, and the birth
Of hopes that cannot die.
XVI
The glorious star which speaks them near,Like that of Bethlehem,
Is life, and light!—its rise more dear
Than crown or diadem.
XVII
But when the morning's prime is past,And worldly cares are rife,
May thy soul's harmony outlast
The daily din of life!
XVIII
Keep well thy temper;—mingle notWith aught that thou shalt find,
Which may its lingering brightness blot,
Or chase it from thy mind.
XIX
Despatch whatever must be done;Life hath a load to bear,
Which may be borne; a path to run,
Beset with many a care.
XX
Keep such without; and let thy heartBe still thy God's alone;
And He, thy spirit's better part,
Shall bless thee as his own!
THE TWELVE MONTHS OF HUMAN LIFE.
I
Twelve months compose each fleeting year;And, unto those who rightly scan,
Twelve brief compartments may appear
Compris'd in life's accustom'd span:
Nor need it be a waste of time
To trace this parallel in rhyme.
II
The first six years of human lifeLike the year's opening month are found;
Commenc'd in being's natal strife,
With little obvious produce crown'd;
For when six years their course have run,
Existence scarcely is begun.
III
'Twas thus, we find, in Mirzah's dream,That bridge which human life portray'd
Was veil'd from sight at each extreme
As by impenetrable shade;
And only what the Genius told
Could its beginning—end, unfold.
IV
The next six years of life lead onTo boyhood's hopes, and boyhood's fears:
And February, ere 'tis gone,
An emblem of this age appears:
No fruit we find, no lasting flowers,
But mind begins to feel its powers.
V
As outward nature now preparesFor finite man the face of earth,
And length'ning day to sight declares
The laughing Spring's approaching birth;
So does the glance of boyhood's eye
Betoken youth is drawing nigh.
VI
March follows next; the voice of songIs heard, and gardens brightly bloom;
Though stormy winds may sweep along,
Their sound inspires no moody gloom;
Though clouds, at times, perchance may lower,
We look beyond the present hour!
VII
And thus does youth, with eye elate,At blithe eighteen existence view;
Nor stormy winds, nor clouds abate
The wild bird's music, flow'ret's hue:
Life is to him a waking vision,
And earth a paradise Elysian.
VIII
Now April lavishly unfoldsThe violet's bloom, the chesnut's flowers;
And, amid weeping clouds, beholds,
With smiling eye, her verdant bowers;
And, ere she bids those bowers “farewell!”
Woos Love to bless them with his spell.
IX
Now too the youth to manhood grown,From fond eighteen to twenty-four,
Thinks time mis-spent, if spent alone,
Or flies to solitude the more,
As ardent and romantic love
A source of pain or bliss may prove.
X
Then May comes on! delightful May!Dispensing, ere she bid adieu,
More genial airs, and skies more gay,
Than waken'd April's changeful hue:
The days have nearly reach'd their length,
And beauty its more lusty strength.
XI
Man too, at thirty, may be found,For intellectual powers at least,
In his best prime, with vigour crown'd,
His earlier ardours scarce decreas'd,
Although he may not now enjoy
Much that gave pleasure to the boy.
XII
In June some earlier fruits have caughtTheir ripen'd glory from the sun;
And other joys to sense are brought
Than can from sight alone be won;
Beauty with usefulness combines,
And from such union brighter shines.
XIII
And thus, when man is thirty-six,Some ripening fruits of sager reason
Should with life's lingering blossoms mix,
To dignify that prouder season;
Nor should we then, in friendship, choose
The man who only could amuse!
XIV
The sultry noontide of JulyNext bids us seek the forest's shade;
Or for the crystal streamlet sigh,
That flows in some sequester'd glade:
Sated with sunshine and with flowers,
We learn that life has languid hours.
XV
And he who lives to forty-two,Nor has this needful truth been taught,
That calm retirement must renew,
From time to time, the springs of thought,
Or who would such renewal shun,
Is, by his folly, half undone!
XVI
'Tis not enough to say, “We know,As yet, no chilling, wintry blight;”
For noontide's fierce, unshaded glow
May wither, when it beams most bright;
He that hopes evening's tranquil smile,
Must in his zenith pause awhile!
XVII
The husbandmen in August reapThe produce of their labours past;
Or, if the ling'ring season keep
Their recompense delay'd, will cast
A frequent glance around, and try
To guess what harvest may supply.
XVIII
Thus too should man, at forty-eight,Turn inward to a harvest there;
His mental crops should calculate,
And for their gath'ring-in prepare;
'Tis prudent to look round, and see
What such a harvest-home may be!
XIX
September's morn and eve are chill,Reminding us that time rolls on;
And Winter, though delaying still
His wither'd features, wo-begone,
On day's decreasing length encroaching,
Gives token of his sure approaching.
XX
And let not man at fifty-four,Though, like September's noon, he may,
At times, be cloudless as of yore,
O'erlook its dawning, closing day;
But by the length'ning nights be taught
Increasing seriousness of thought!
XXI
The sere leaf, flitting on the blast,The hips and haws in every hedge,
Bespeak October come! At last
We stand on Winter's crumbling edge;
Like Nature's opening grave, we eye
The two brief months not yet gone by.
XXII
And he who has attain'd three-score,Should bear in mind that sere old age
Must, in a few years, less or more,
Conclude his mortal pilgrimage;
And seek to stand aloof from all
That meditation might enthral.
XXIII
November's clouds are gathering round,Dispensing darker, deeper gloom;
And Nature, as with awe profound,
Waits her irrevocable doom;
Watching the pale sun's fitful gleam
Through the dense fogs that veil his beam.
XXIV
And thus, in human life's November,When sixty years and six are by,
'Tis time that man should oft remember
“The hour approaches he must die!”
True, he may linger to four-score,
But death is waiting at the door!
XXV
December closes on the scene;And what appear the months gone past?
Fragments of time, which once have been!
Succeeding slowly, fled too fast!
Their minutes, hours, and days appear
Viewless in that small point, a year!
XXVI
The man, too, with the year has fled,Three-score and twelve pronounc'd his doom;
As nature's beauties now seem dead,
His relics rest within the tomb;
Yet both a future life shall see;
His—prove an Immortality!
TO A DILATORY CORRESPONDENT.
I
Much as thy silence I admire,Yet taciturnity may tire,
By its protracted tedium;
And make one wish, in words, to find,
For intercourse 'twixt mind and mind,
A more congenial medium.
II
I ne'er profess'd, with learned ease,To understand dead languages;
And, to my cogitation,
That language is most truly dead,
Which, leaving every thing unsaid,
Conveys no information.
III
Silence is eloquent, I own,While looks can make its meaning known
In tête-à-tête communion;
But paper, pen, and ink possess
No power, a single thought t' express,
Without a triple union.
IV
He who has not within his reachThese requisites for distant speech,
May be excused for balking;
But he who has them close at hand
Deserves a friendly reprimand,
Unless he set them talking!
LOWESTOFT.
I
Once only, and long past the hour,In pensive thought awhile I stood
On thy steep cliff, whose beacon-tower
Boldly o'erlooks the briny flood.
II
It was a calm and lovely eve;The western sky still faintly wore
The hue which sunset's glories leave,
When their bright source is seen no more.
III
But o'er the hush'd and slumb'ring deepThe mists of evening flung their screen;
Though still glanc'd forth, upon thy steep,
Its white alcoves, and foliage green.
IV
Thy lofty beacon's dazzling lightShot forth its guiding beams afar,
To bless the home-bound seaman's sight,
Who hail'd it as his polar star.
V
Yet though no lovelier, calmer hourCould meet the poet's thoughtful eye,
He had but half confess'd its power,
Unless some kindred soul were nigh.
VI
But he who stood beside me there,To view the tower, the cliff, the main,
Not only could the present share;
He felt the past revive again.
VII
Yes; thou, my lost, lamented friend!Living belov'd, and dead rever'd,
To such a scene and hour couldst lend
The mental charm which both endear'd.
VIII
Thou hadst from youth to manhood beenA wand'rer o'er the boundless sea;
Its features, stormy or serene,
Recall'd departed hours to thee.
IX
And though revolving years had sped,Since last was brav'd its billowy foam,
Yet thou the beetling cliff wouldst tread,
Like one who there was most at home.
X
Now Memory paints thy thoughtful pause,Each look, each word I yet retain,
All, all express'd what ample cause
Thou hadst to know this spot again.
XI
It was thy earliest anchoring-place,In thy first voyage o'er the deep;
Thy active mind could here retrace
Feelings and thoughts long lull'd to sleep.
XII
For then thy boyish dreams were notTo their new element subdued;
And home-sick thoughts, friends unforgot,
At times would pensively intrude.
XIII
When anchor'd off this lovely shore,Past every danger, every fear;
Land never look'd so sweet before,
Home never felt so truly dear.
XIV
Peace to thy memory! Scenes less fair,If visited with one like thee,
Fond recollections oft would share,
And present to my fancy be.
XV
But Lowestoft's beacon-crested steep,Its hanging gardens, smiling yet,
When silv'ry mist-wreaths veil the deep,
Are far too lovely to forget.
XVI
Hadst thou not shar'd the bliss they gave,They must have been admired by one
Who looks on ocean's foamy wave,
Earth's shrubby slopes, as I have done.
XVII
Now they are more; for Memory's spellHas so connected them with thee,
That, while upon their charms I dwell,
Thou seem'st to live again for me!
TO A FRIEND, ON HIS DEPARTURE FOR ROME.
I
Yes, go! and on those ruins gaze,Whose silent, eloquent appeal
To meditation's eye displays
What spirits ton'd like thine can feel:
Go! stand by Tiber's yellow stream,
Mid crumbling columns, domes, and towers:
Behold past glory's ling'ring gleam,
And find a still exhaustless theme
For thought's sublimest powers.
II
Ascend the lofty Palatine!Gaze from its piny summits round:
And oh! what feelings will be thine
When treading that immortal ground:
Each sculptur'd vase, each speaking bust,
Shrine, temple, palace, tomb, and fane,
Will plead to thee their earlier trust;
To genius, greatness, goodness just,
Nor will they plead in vain.
III
For thou hast held communion longWith minds that stamp'd the Augustan age:
With Maro's but once-rivall'd song;
And, matchless still, the Sabine page:
And thou o'er many a name hast por'd
That faithful time has ne'er forgot;
As men admir'd, as gods ador'd;
And in thy inmost heart deplor'd
The “Eternal City's” lot.
IV
Oh! I could envy thee the gushOf feeling, and of thought sublime,
When thou, beneath morn's orient blush,
Or stillest hour of eve, shalt climb
O'er ivied ruins once august,
And now in splendid fragments hurl'd:
Their haunts, who, sepulchred in dust,
Unknown except by urn or bust,
Once sway'd a subject world.
V
“And this”—(Oh friend! I hear thee say,As gazing round with proud delight,
Where reliques glorious in decay
Shall burst on thy enraptur'd sight)—
“And this was Rome! and where I tread
“The great, the wise have trod of yore:
“Whose names through every clime are spread;
“Whose minds the world itself have fed
“From their exhaustless store.
VI
“Whose deeds are told by Hist'ry's pen,“Whose works in sculpture, colour, song,
“Still rise magnificent, as when
“Here liv'd and mov'd the exalted throng
“Of painters, sculptors, bards, whose fame
“With time successfully has striven:
“Till he, who would their worth proclaim,
“Shall find the beam that gilds his name
“Is from their glory given.”
VII
I feel,—I own thy language just;And yet a Briton, standing there,
If mindful of the sacred trust
Committed now to Albion's care,
E'en while he granted—gave to Rome
All Rome's just glory could demand;
With feelings worthy of his home
Encircled by free Ocean's foam,
Must love his native land!
VIII
When Art arrays her magic strifeIn hues from young Aurora thrown:
In wakening forth to all but life
Each breathless form of Parian stone:
And e'en in song, whose source and aim
Demanded but an earthly lyre,
Unfed by heaven's ethereal flame;
I grant to Rome, all Rome can claim,
Or genius can admire.
IX
Yet I, in British freedom, say,That Albion even now has won
A fame less subject to decay,
Than grac'd proud Rome's meridian sun:
And, in that freedom, she contains
Of soul, sublimer, loftier powers;
Than e'er enrich'd the Latian plains,
When monarchs clash'd their captive chains
Beneath her conquering towers.
X
And, were I what thou art, I should,E'en on the Palatine's proud height,
Or stretch'd by Tiber's golden flood,
Or where Soracte gleams in sight,
Still turn from Rome's majestic ground,
To Benhall's sweet sequester'd dome,
Her sylvan glades with beauty crown'd;
And own, that there my heart had found
Its fondly cherish'd home.
THE WALL-FLOWER.
I
The rose is beautiful to view,Begemm'd with dew-drops bright,
Which only make its glowing hue
More lovely to the sight.
II
The lily, whose meek beauties seemAs if they must be sought;
Suggests, like some delightful dream,
A train of tender thought.
III
The violet, which, itself unseen,Sheds sweetest perfume round,
Has many a grace for bard to glean,
When he its haunt has found.
IV
All these are beautiful; but oneCan match my favourite flower;
Nor is there, to my fancy, one
That has such soothing power.
V
Not for its transient beauty's sake,This fades, as others may;
But thoughts it has the power to wake
Can never pass away.
VI
To me it speaks of lovelinessThat passes not with youth;
Of beauty which decay can bless,
Of constancy and truth.
VII
Not in prosperity's bright morn,Its streaks of golden light
Are lent her splendours to adorn,
And make them still more bright:
VIII
But in adversity's dark hour,When glory is gone by;
It then exerts its gentle power
The scene to beautify.
IX
Yes; lovely flower! and thou shalt beMy minstrel theme for this;
Thy birth-place has a charm for me,
Beyond the bowers of bliss.
X
To me thy scite disconsolate,On turret, wall, or tower,
Makes thee appear misfortune's mate,
And desolation's dower.
XI
Thou ask'st no kindly cultur'd soilThy natal bed to be;
Thou need'st not man's officious toil
To plant, or water thee.
XII
Sown by the winds, thou meekly rear'st,On ruin's crumbling crest,
Thy fragile form; and there appear'st,
In smiling beauty drest.
XIII
There, in thy bleak and earthless bed,Thou brav'st the tempest's strife;
And giv'st, what else were cold and dead,
A lingering glow of life.
XIV
There is a scene where, years ago,I've mark'd thee blooming fair;
But then I had not learnt to know
What now thou wouldst declare.
XV
For then I could not feel the forceOf loveliness like thine;
Nor couldst thou be in youth the source
Of thoughts which now are mine.
XVI
But, even then, to youth's warm gazeThy blossoming was sweet,
What time the bright sun's early rays
Illum'd thy lofty seat.
XVII
And while the breeze and sun-beam driedThe night-dew's crystal tear,
Thy beauty thoughts of bliss supplied,
And hope—that knew not fear.
XVIII
It seem'd to fancy's vivid dream,That thus love's youthful smile
Through sorrow's morning mists should gleam,
And every care beguile.
XIX
But now 'tis sweeter to behold,Upon a lowering eve,
Thy wind-swept blossom, meekly bold,
The sun's last look receive.
XX
I love thy beauty then to mark,Thy lingering light to see,
When all is growing drear and dark,
Except the west, and thee.
XXI
For then, with brightness caught from heaven,An emblem true thou art
Of love's enduring lustre, given
To cheer a lonely heart:
XXII
Of love, whose deepest, tend'rest worth,Till tried, was all unknown;
Which owes to sympathy its birth,
And “seeketh not its own!”
XXIII
But, by its self-abandonment,When cares and griefs appal,
Appears as if from heaven 'twere sent
To compensate for all.
XXIV
Yet deeper, holier, more divineThat emblem to the eye,
Could we but trace in it the sign
Of pardon from on high.
XXV
Could we but think that, even thus,Like day's last smile to thee,
The Sun of Righteousness, to us,
In life's decline might be!
XXVI
A pledge that hope had not withdrawn,That heavenly love, and light,
With everlasting day should dawn
On death's approaching night!
ON THE DEATH OF A FRIEND.
I
Mary! I have no tears to give;And what if such could flow from me,
Fast might they flow for some who live,
And not for those who die like thee.
II
Yet long-past days, together spent,Endear'd by pleasures, priz'd, how much!
Demand this humble monument
To thee, who partly mad'st them such.
III
We met; thyself in youth's fair bloom,And I in blighted manhood: thou,
With scarce a thought allied to gloom,—
Myself with much to cloud my brow.
IV
And this I owe thee for the gleamsOf joy, then scatter'd o'er my way;
Which like the rainbow's lustrous beams,
Look'd bright in Sorrow's stormiest day.
V
Years have rolled by:—and now I hear,With all the past reviv'd anew,
That thou, whose friendship thus could cheer,
Hast pass'd Death's shadowy valley through.
VI
I shed no tears for thee:—for tears,If I could give thee such, were vain;
But years may pass,—ay! many years,—
Ere I shall meet thy like again.
VII
And thoughts, which find imperfect ventIn words, while I the past recal,
Raise thee this simple monument,
Our Friendship's last memorial!
A CHRISTMAS CAROL.
I
Jesu Hominum Salvator!Thou who cam'st on earth below,
Taking on thee mortal nature,
Life immortal to bestow:—
II
Thou, who diedst for man's transgression,Thou, who reignest now above;
Still art heard in intercession,
Still art known by acts of love!
III
Fain would I, with rev'rent feeling,Owe my hopes to Thee alone;
To thy Sacrifice appealing,
Cast each crown before thy Throne.
IV
Trusting human strength no longer,Henceforth be that weakness mine,
Which attempts not to be stronger
In itself—but power divine!
V
Which seeks not—from depths of science,—Heights of knowledge—aid to draw;
But in humble, meek reliance
On thy Love, would keep thy Law.
VI
Not from superstitious reasonsWould I greet this day with song;
In my view all times and seasons
Unto Thee alike belong.
VII
Who to God this day observeth,Keeps it unto God alone!
He who from its ritual swerveth,
Still may make its good his own.
VIII
Outward rites, of man's appointing,Can no inward feeling give;
'Tis Thy Spirit's blest anointing
Bids the soul awake, and live!
IX
This alone, by Thee imparted,Can possess resistless power;
Can preserve the simple-hearted,
In temptation's darkest hour.
X
Not in subtle speculation,Not in codes, or creeds of man,
Not in learned disputation
On thy Gospel's hidden plan:—
XI
Not in reason's proud researches,Fixing thesis, date, or term;
Not in quoting synods, churches,
Dwells Religion's vital germ.
XII
This is found in spirits tender'd;Hopes that raise our souls above;
Passions chasten'd; wills surrender'd
To thy law of perfect love!
XIII
Time, like some impetuous riverTo the ocean hast'ning on,
Bears us onward to its Giver;
Soon will be for ever gone!
XIV
Let it travel swiftly—slowly,Tow'rds a vast Eternity;
Every day of it were holy,
If it turn'd our hearts to Thee.
XV
This, unto my own appealing,Prompts one tribute to Thy Name;
Warm with many a mingled feeling,
Hope, and fear, and joy, and shame.
XVI
Since to thee, in love, or terror,Knees must bend, and tongues confess;
Cleanse my heart from sin and error,
With thy Holy Spirit bless.
XVII
So that, when Death's transient slumberSeal my eyes,—my soul may be
One among the countless number
Ransom'd and redeem'd by Thee!
TO THE CLOUDS.
I
Ye glorious pageants! hung in airTo greet our raptur'd view;
What in creation can compare,
For loveliness, with you?
II
This earth is beautiful, indeed,And in itself appeals
To eyes that have been taught to read
The beauties it reveals.
III
Its giant mountains, which ascendTo your exalted sphere,
And seem at times with you to blend
In majesty austere:
IV
Its lovely valleys, forests vast;Its rivers, lakes, and seas;
With every glance upon them cast
The sight, the sense must please.
V
And yet 'twere difficult to sayHow far our selfish views
Lend, to Earth's beautiful array,
Its most enchanting hues.
VI
It is not what we see, alone,Delights us most in this;
But what we call, or dream our own,
Yields self its highest bliss.
VII
Exceptions there may be, of course,Which he is blest who finds;
But some such feeling is the source
Of joy to vulgar minds.
VIII
A purer, more abstracted joyIt gives to gaze on you;
And feel what gladden'd once the boy,
Is sweet to manhood's view.
IX
What can there be on sea, or earth,Though charms in each abound,
Which you can fail to shadown forth,
With added beauties crown'd?
X
When through the eastern gates of heavenThe sun's first glories shine;
Or when his softest beams are given
To gild the day's decline;
XI
All glorious as that orb appears,His radiance still would lose
Each gentle charm, that most endears,
Without your soft'ning hues.
XII
When these with his refulgent raysHarmoniously unite,
Who on your splendid pomp can gaze,
Nor feel a hush'd delight?
XIII
'Tis then, if to the raptur'd eyeHer aid the fancy brings,
In you our vision can descry
Unutterable things!
XIV
Not merely mountains, cliffs, and caves,Domes, battlements, and towers,
Torrents of light, that fling their waves
O'er coral rocks, and bowers;
XV
Not only what to man is knownIn nature, or in art;
But objects which on earth can own
No seeming counterpart.
XVI
As once the Seer in Patmos sawHeaven's opening door reveal'd,
And scenes inspiring love and awe
To his rapt sight unseal'd:
XVII
So, in a faint and low degree,Through your unfoldings bright,
Phantoms of glory yet to be
Dawn on the wond'ring sight.
XVIII
Not even thought, and oh! much lessThe loftiest flights of verse,
Can paint the power ye then possess
Unworldly views to nurse.
XIX
It seems as if no dark eclipseBy earth were interpos'd;
But visions of the Apocalypse
Before us were disclos'd.
XX
Nor are they false, deceitful dreams,Which wisdom should suppress;
When dimm'd their most delightful gleams,
Their memory still can bless.
XXI
The warm emotion they inspir'dIn fond remembrance lives;
As evening's sky, by you attir'd,
Its lingering lustre gives.
XXII
And it remains to be the partOf wisdom — virtue too,
To seize on all which in the heart
Such feelings can renew;
XXIII
On all that for a season liftsFrom “Earth's contracted span”
Our eyes, and thoughts; — and offers gifts
Of noblest powers to man.
XXIV
The thousand cares that cumber lifeWrite wrinkles on the brow;
Yet these, with all their noise and strife,
Are things to which we bow.
XXV
We call them useful; — so they are,If man their use would learn;
And then from you, more glorious far,
As idle shadows turn.
XXVI
But if ye lead our thoughts to HimWhose spirit space pervades,
Then are ye, whether bright or dim,
More than aerial shades.
XXVII
I would not underrate the boonThe Gospel has proclaim'd;
Nor give to clouds, winds, sun, or moon,
His right who all has fram'd.
XXVIII
But viewing these as meant to feedDevotion's heaven-ward flame,
His power and love, for whom they plead,
I dare not but proclaim.
XXIX
Better, far better, not to be,Than — being — to resign
The faith that all we feel and see
Betokens Power Divine.
XXX
And rather than forego the thought,The feeling, ye supply,
As silently ye sail athwart
The blue, o'er-arching sky —
XXXI
Be mine the faith the Indian finds,Whom nature's night enshrouds,
Who yet can hear a God in winds,
And see Him in the clouds!
DUNWICH.
That what we are, and have been, may be known.”
I
In Britain's earlier annals thou wert setAmong the cities of our sea-girt isle:
Of what thou wert — some tokens linger yet
In yonder ruins; and this roofless pile,
Whose walls are worshipless, whose tower — a mark,
Left but to guide the seaman's wand'ring bark!
II
Yet where those ruins gray are scatter'd round,The din of commerce fill'd the echoing air;
From these now crumbling walls arose the sound
Of hallow'd music, and the voice of prayer:
And this was unto some, whose names have ceas'd,
The wall'd and gated city of the east!
III
Thus time, and circumstance, and change, betrayThe transient tenure of the worldly wise!
Thus “Trade's proud empire hastes to swift decay,”
And leaves no splendid wreck for Fame to prize:
While Nature her magnificence retains,
And from the contrast added glory gains.
IV
Still, in its billowy boundlessness out-spread,Yon mighty deep smiles to the orb of day,
Whose brightness o'er this shatter'd pile is shed
In quiet beauty. — Nature's early sway
Is audible in winds that whisper round, —
The soaring sky-lark's song, the breaker's hollow sound.
Note. — To those who may think my epithet of “The wall'd and gated city of the East,” — somewhat hyperbolical as applied to Dunwich, I must submit an extract from Gardner's History of Dunwich, as containing at least traditional authority; though I fear little more.
“The oldest inhabitants of this neighbourhood report, that Dun- “wich, (in ancient time,) was a city surrounded with a stone wall, “and brazen gates, had fifty-two churches, chapels, religious houses, “and hospitals, a king's palace, a bishop's seat, a mayor's mansion, “and a mint.” — He further states, in a following paragraph of his preface, his endeavours “to preserve the fate of that renowned “city, now almost swallowed up by the sea, from sinking into “oblivion, by collecting such occurrences dependent thereon, as “may perpetuate the memorial thereof to posterity.” — But, after all, Tradition has done more for the past glories of Dunwich than History, “Time's slavish Scribe,” has ever condescended to do.
TO THE MEMORY OF THE AUTHOR'S FATHER.
I
Like the remembrance of a dreamRecall'd imperfectly to thought;
Thy form, thy features, sometimes seem
To musing meditation brought.
II
And could the painter's mimic artTheir semblance perfectly retrace,
Thy memory would not, in my heart,
Obtain a more enduring place.
III
All that such art might body forthCould but thy outward form display;
It still would leave untold the worth
Which has survived that form's decay.
IV
It still would leave each gem unguess'd,The casket transiently enshrin'd;
Each virtue which adorn'd thy breast,
Each talent that enrich'd thy mind.
V
Continue then, as thou hast been,A spirit, to my spirit known;
By grosser sense unfelt, unseen;
Belov'd, rever'd in thought alone.
VI
As such, thy image is more dearThan blazon'd in the costliest frame;
As such, I still may think thee near,
And bless thy memory, and thy name!
A PORTRAIT.
I
I cannot call thy living form,And bid it stand before me;
But Fancy, as my heart grows warm,
Its semblance can restore me:
For e'en that unsubstantial thing
Must ever be enough to bring
All better feelings o'er me;
And give thee, for the time, to seem
More than the phantom of a dream.
II
But, O! too warmly glows my heart,While thus in thought beholding thee,
For me to act the artist's part,
Embodying each sweet phantasy:
Beauty there is, that painting mars;
Morn's mists, noon's glory, night's bright stars,
And moonlight on the mighty sea;
And yet all these but things express
Of unenduring loveliness.
III
But Thou, when unto me 'tis givenThy semblance to behold,
Now seem'st more like a form from heaven,
Than one of mortal mould;
Which he who would thy Portrait draw,
Turns from, o'ercome by love and awe,
And leaves its charms untold.
No! all I can do, love! must be
To sketch what memory yields of thee.
IV
And ill may such a sketch convey,To those who knew thee well,
What once thou wert; still less portray
Those charms, whose gentle spell
Survives thyself, still unforgot;
Or give to those who knew thee not,
Aught which of thee should tell.
Thy dress, thy form, thy face — alone
If given — might leave thee still unknown.
V
Thy form! avails it now to trace?Though once with charms endow'd:
Thy dress ne'er boasted Fashion's grace,
To satisfy the proud:
Yet thou becam'st it well: and it
On thee so gracefully did sit,
My taste its charms avow'd;
And in that simple garb — to me
Thou wert — all thou couldst wish to be.
VI
Thy face, thy features, — boots it nowTo speak of what is fled, —
Of eyes, or hair, or lips, or brow?
When once the flower is dead,
Its shape, its hue, no bliss can give;
Its odours only seem to live,
And lingering sweetness shed.
If memory still that face enthral,
'Tis by the soul which spoke through all.
VII
Did it not speak? Oh! yes, it did —Not through the lips alone;
That eye, beneath its downcast lid,
Was eloquent in tone;
For purest passion's gentle force,
And thoughts which sprang from virtue's source,
In all its glances shone:
Orbs of more brilliant light I've seen,
But none more tenderly serene.
VIII
Nor was the language of thy soulLess mutely eloquent
In smiles that banish'd grief's control,
Or hues that came and went
In changeful beauty o'er that cheek,
Telling far more than words could speak
Of feelings innocent:
Of truth, of tenderness, of love —
Which Virtue could not but approve.
IX
But why thus dwell on traits, which illThy likeness can portray:
Or linger over charms which still
No semblance can convey?
A loftier aim, blest shade! is mine,
Than painter's art, though call'd divine,
Would venture to essay:
Nor would I, thus, some feelings wake,
But for thy own, and Virtue's sake.
X
For these I would attempt to showA truth ill understood,
Or one the world seems not to know;
That much of truly good,
Much that entwines itself around
The inmost heart, and lives profound
In memory's deepest mood, —
May be attain'd; — and yet inspire
Small scope for pencil or for lyre.
XI
Those virtues, gifts, and graces, — whichIn thee so meekly met,
Boast more, existence to enrich,
Than glittering gaudes; and yet —
Delights we rather feel than see,
Most difficult it well may be
Before the eye to set.
How can we even know their worth,
Till absence gives such knowledge birth?
XII
To sympathies, which soothe and blessOur life, from day to day,
Which throw, with silent tenderness,
Fresh flowers across our way,
The heart must ever fondly cling;
But can the poet's sweetest string
Their loveliness display?
No — nor could Titian's self supply
Their living presence, once gone by.
XIII
The air, in which we breathe and live,Eludes our touch and sight;
The fairest flowers their fragrance give
To stillness, and to night;
The softest sounds that Music flings,
In passing, from her heaven-plum'd wings,
Are trackless in their flight!
And thus life's sweetest bliss is known
To silent, grateful thought alone.
XIV
But is it not, from hence, more pure,Ethereal, and divine?
Yea! and its essence will endure
When stars have ceas'd to shine.
Time may the glowing canvass stain,
Oblivion quench the poet's strain;
But virtues — which entwine
Their memory with undying love,
Endure unchangeably above.
XV
“A meek and quiet spirit” gives,When earth's brief path is trod,
'To those it bless'd — what still outlives
That spirit's senseless clod;
Feelings and thoughts, in part divine,
Which live along the length'ning line
Of being — up to God!
And terminate their blissful course
In union with their parent source!
XVI
Believing such high destinyTo be thy blest estate;
Immortal spirit! can I sigh
Thy lot to contemplate?
No — and though little there might seem
In thee for bard's, or painter's theme,
Of high, of rich, of great,
Yet beyond rank, wealth, beauty, — all!
I love thy virtue's gentler thrall.
TO THE MEMORY OF WILLIAM HEY.
I
Preacher of Righteousness! for suchWert thou in preaching's noblest sense,
Whose life and conversation touch
Hearts cold to pulpit eloquence; —
Preacher of Righteousness, farewell!
With Thee may I hereafter dwell.
II
What though no weekly audience hungUpon the accents of thy voice,
Nor thus collected from thy tongue
What bade them tremblingly rejoice;
Yet did thy lamp so brightly shine,
A silent ministry was thine.
III
A Preacher — by the sick man's bed,In the mute, eloquent display
Of those meek charms that ever shed
Their lustre round the Christian's way;
And these may often deeply move,
Where words would ineffectual prove.
IV
A Preacher — in the narrow sphere(Delightful to the human heart)
Which Nature's tenderest bonds endear,
By the deep feelings they impart;
And in afflictions that must prove
At once the Man's, the Christian's love.
V
For who can thy “Memorial” read,And not unfeignedly repeat
This truth — that through the Christian creed,
“Hard things are easy, bitter — sweet?”
Proudest philosophy could never
Have thus taught Nature's ties to sever.
VI
Christian Philosopher! not thineThe praise by such meek Vict'ry won;
God gave thee power — by grace divine,
And Faith confirm'd it through his Son!
Nor does submission lose its force,
Thus trac'd unto its holiest source.
VII
Virtues our fallen nature bears,Where these appear to linger still,
May, or may not find fitting heirs,
As we are strong or weak of will;
If conscious weakness be our lot,
We read, admire, but profit not.
VIII
Not so when every gift and graceAre with humility referr'd
To Him who died to save our race; —
Even to that eternal word
Which to our weakness power can give,
And bid the dead awake, and live.
IX
Here is the secret, hid of oldE'en from the prudent and the wise!
'Mid faults and frailties manifold,
The Christian upon Christ relies:
And, conscious of his Captain's right,
Is more than conqu'ror through his might.
X
Through humble trust in him is givenThe vict'ry over sin and death;
Hopes that ascend from earth to heaven,
And prayer, and praise, and holy faith, —
Faith which, in every age, hath been
The evidence of things unseen.
XI
This is the faith that works by love;Effectual to the purifying
Of hearts — whose hallow'd feelings prove
A Saviour's love their own supplying, —
The gift of God, through grace divine,
And such, departed saint! was thine.
XII
Other foundation none can layThan that which is already laid;
“The Light, the Life, the Truth, the Way;”
Salvation by the cross display'd!
In this was plac'd thy dying trust,
And this shall consecrate thy dust.
For a full account of this estimable Man and pious Christian, see his “Life” by Pearson: also “The Christian Observer,” and “Christian Guardian.”
WHAT IS LIFE?
The fearful brightness of a shooting star;
The dazzling loveliness of fleeting dreams,
Which frowning phantoms in succession mar: —
Such, such is life!
But soon upon the sated palate palls;
A sun-bright view, which shadows quickly dim;
A strain — whose music on no echo falls: —
Such, such is life!
Where mutability no more is known;
But souls redeem'd, partaking heavenly bliss,
With humble gratitude and praise may own
This, this is life!
ON THE RETURN OF SUMMER BIRDS.
And greet their shades with your sweetest strain;
Inhabit once more your cherish'd groves,
And renew your summer songs and loves.
Yours is the water, the air, and earth;
Woke under the foliage by zephyr's sigh,
With songs for the ear, and tints for the eye.
The vices of luxury's slothful reign,
And the rigour of laws that men revere,
But which you in your liberty need not fear.
To keep a coquetting lover in awe;
And so simple your toilette, your ruffled plumes
A touch of the beak with beauty illumes.
Ye are travellers blithe, and not exiles there;
The grove where you plighted your former vows
Sees you build again in its leafy boughs;
Hears your soft vows of love renew'd,
And the same sweet echoes lingering nigh
Once more to your joyful songs reply.
INFANCY.
I
The Snow-drop, herald of the spring,In storm or sunshine born,
Some passing images may bring
Of being's varied morn.
II
When blasts are chill, and clouds are dark,Its helpless, fragile bloom
Appears as set for misery's mark,
To sink in hopeless gloom.
III
If mild the gale, and bright the beam,Its beauties charm the eye,
And, while we gaze, we almost dream
That summer hours are nigh.
IV
But trustless are the outward signsWhich waken hope or fear;
The flower whose birth in sunlight shines,
Chill blasts the soonest sere.
V
The bud that cold winds nipt at first,A happier lot may know;
In warmer airs to life may burst,
In brighter sunshine glow.
VI
Thus shall the nursling of despairFond sighs and tears requite;
And shine in after life more fair
Than some whose morn was bright.
BOYHOOD.
I
The Rose which greets the smile of June,Unfolding in its joy,
When birds and bees their carols tune,
May typify The Boy.
II
Light clouds, that pass in shadow o'er,Render its hues more bright;
Soft showers may fall, yet these restore
Fresh fragrance to delight.
III
And thus the shade on boyhood's cheekBy smiles is chas'd away;
The tear which transient grief would speak
But leaves the eye more gay.
IV
The clouds whose darkness threatens life,Winds of autumnal tone,
Of Winter's storms the fearful strife —
To it are things unknown.
V
Unknown to Boyhood, too, the stormsWhich after years may roll
O'er all the beauty that now forms
The summer of its soul.
VI
But mind, immortal, through the gloomMay glorious warfare wage;
And know, when faded Boyhood's bloom,
Fresh greenness in old age.
MANHOOD.
I
The ripen'd corn which clothes in goldThe autumnal landscape round,
Is fair; as comely to behold
Is ripen'd Manhood found.
II
Hope to fruition now must yield,The joy of harvest nigh,
In all its plenteousness reveal'd
Before the gazer's eye.
III
If cultureless that soil had laid,What now could be its own,
Be what they might its light and shade,
But barrenness alone?
IV
Nor can mere Manhood bring to viewAught more to be enjoyed,
If the mind's spring and summer too
Have pass'd by unemployed.
V
Yet seed well sown, and ripe to reap,May profit fail to win;
Prudence no jubilee will keep,
Unknown the gathering in.
VI
When safe into the garner brought,The triumph is secure;
And then, alone, to grateful thought
The joy of harvest pure!
OLD AGE.
I
The scath'd and leafless tree may seemOld Age's mournful sign;
Yet on its bark may sunshine gleam,
And moonlight softly shine.
II
Thus on the cheek of age should restThe light of years gone by,
Calm as the glories of the west
When night is drawing nigh.
III
As round that scath'd trunk fondly clingsThe ivy green and strong,
Repaying, by the grace it brings,
The succour granted long; —
IV
So round benevolent Old AgeMay objects yet survive,
Whose greenness can the eye engage,
And keep the heart alive.
V
Grant that no ivy-wreaths it know,But fell'd at last to earth,
Its relics from the hearth may glow, —
Who shall deny its worth?
VI
Not cheerless is the symbol found,If, while it can supply
Delight to living hearts around,
Its smoke ascends on high!
ON A PORTRAIT OF BEATRICE CENCI:
IN THE COLLECTION AT BREDFIELD HOUSE, THE RESIDENCE OF JOHN FITZGERALD, ESQ.
I
It haunts me still! that lovely face,With beauty's own undying power,
Whose pure, imaginative grace
Exists beyond its mortal hour.
II
That brow so thoughtful, yet so fair,Might tell of sorrow's chilling shade,
But patient gentleness is there
Each mournful feeling to upbraid.
III
Those features, moulded to delightIn hours of mirth the gazer's eye,
Are more than beautifully bright
With sorrow's calm sublimity.
IV
'Tis not a face to charm awhile,By common art or outward spell,
Whose transient power of look or smile
All who behold at once can tell.
V
Nor is it one which, left behind,Can mingle with forgotten things;
Calm, energetic, full of mind,
Round it the heart's fond memory clings —
VI
Clings mournfully; while thought would shunThe woes in which it was a sharer;
Joy may boast many a brighter one,
But sorrow never own'd a fairer.
A BIRTH-DAY.
I
“A Birth-day!” — what a joyful soundThose words possess'd to boyhood's ear,
When Fancy shed her sunshine round;
And Hope, the flatterer, still was near,
With balm for every trifling wound,
A smile for every tear!
II
Then life was sweet: the world, unknown,A fairy landscape bright and gay;
Each voice, too, seem'd like Friendship's tone,
Or Love's more fascinating lay;
And Time — a playmate of my own,
To sport with by the way.
III
What is a Birth-day now? — A soundTo shake e'en manhood's sterner heart;
Fancy no sunshine sheds around,
And Hope has lost her healing art,
While from the world's enchanted ground
Its brighter hues depart.
IV
Pain's barbed shafts mock Friendship's shield,Love's smile can ill dark tempests brave,
Time's scythe no longer is conceal'd,
And Life has little left to crave;
Hope, Fancy, Friendship, Love must yield
Their votary to the grave.
V
I speak, 'tis true, of passing things,Which appertain to Time and Earth —
Happy is he whose spirit clings
To thoughts of more enduring worth,
To whom the day of death but brings
More joy than that of birth!
TO A BUTTERFLY.
I
Born with the balmy breath of Spring,With fragrant roses dying,
With Zephyr's light and sportive wing
In playful motion vying.
II
Bright as the pure and cloudless blueOf heaven above, — or blossom
That opes its chalice, as to woo
Thy beauty to its bosom.
III
Intoxicated with perfume,With light and azure glowing;
From wings surcharg'd with youthful bloom
Thy feathery glory throwing.
IV
Then borne away, like thought or breath,To viewless, endless distance,
How lovely in thy life and death
Appears thy brief existence!
V
A gentle wish, a soft desire,To fancy, it resembles,
Which, ardent, restless, would aspire
To bliss — at which it trembles: —
VI
But still, unsatisfied below,Just glances o'er each treasure,
Then soars whence brighter splendours flow,
To seek for purer pleasure.
SMILES AND TEARS.
I
Speechless interpreters of thought,And feeling's hidden dower;
With eloquence resistless fraught,
How touching is your power!
II
In Joy's ecstatic mood, what toneTo gladness can beguile,
With fascination of its own,
Like rapture's silent smile?
III
In anguish — what can more revealThan all that meets the ear?
What but the eloquent appeal
Of Sorrow's silent tear!
IV
In Love, — to those who truly knowWhat smiles and tears can say,
More of the hidden heart they show
Than language can convey.
V
And in that purer element,Ethereal and divine,
Which thought and feeling represent
As Worship's purest shrine;
VI
Far far beyond the influenceThat rhetoric most reveres,
The spirit's holier eloquence
Of silent smiles and tears.
VII
The patient suff'rer's smile, when bornOf Faith, to God is dear;
Nor will His mercy ever scorn
Contrition's voiceless tear!
THE CONCLUSION.
I
'Tis past the midnight hour, and yetI linger o'er this page awhile,
As if I half indulg'd regret,
For what might rather prompt a smile;
II
A mournful smile, at hopes that shedTheir lustre, when my task began;
Which, like the hours between, are fled,
As now my closing leaf I scan.
III
It was a lovely Summer's mornThat first inspir'd my opening page;
Of thoughts and feelings brightly born
Hope was the nat'ral heritage.
IV
Stern Winter's winds are sweeping byAs now I linger o'er my last;
And Hope, like yonder starless sky,
By clouds is darkly overcast.
V
But thou, in hope and gloom the same,Dear silent shade! art with me yet:
Filial affection owns thy claim,
And fondly chides each vain regret.
VI
For had these pages never lentAnother source of joy to me,
I owe them many hours, thus spent
In quient solitude with thee.
VII
Nor could this volume hope an endMy heart more gratefully would own,
Than feeling thus thy image blend
With her's, who could thy loss atone.
VIII
With her's, who so perform'd the partWhich Heaven but gave thee — to resign,
That childhood's unsuspecting heart
Knew not an earlier claim was thine.
Minor Poems, including Napoleon | ||