The lay of an Irish harp or metrical fragments. By Miss Owenson |
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The lay of an Irish harp | ||
SHAKSPEARE.
LA FONTAINE.
FRAGMENT I. THE IRISH HARP.
I
Why sleeps the Harp of Erin's pride?Why with'ring droops its Shamrock wreath?
Why has that song of sweetness died
Which Erin's Harp alone can breathe?
II
Oh! 'twas the simplest, wildest thing!The sighs of Eve that faintest flow
O'er airy lyres, did never fling
So sweet, so sad, a song of woe.
III
And yet its sadness seem'd to borrowFrom love, or joy, a mystic spell;
'Twas doubtful still if bliss or sorrow
From its melting lapses fell.
IV
For if amidst its tone's soft languishA note of love or joy e'er stream'd,
'Twas the plaint of love-sick anguish,
And still the “joy of grief” it seem'd.
V
'Tis said oppression taught the layTo him—(of all the “sons of song”
That bask'd in Erin's brighter day)
The last of the inspir'd throng;
VI
That not in sumptuous hall, or bow'r,To victor chiefs, on tented plain,
To festive souls, in festal hour,
Did he (sad bard!) pour forth the strain.
VII
Oh no! for he, opprest, pursued,Wild, wand'ring, doubtful of his course,
With tears his silent Harp bedew'd,
That drew from Erin's woes their source.
VIII
It was beneath th' impervious gloomOf some dark forest's deepest dell,
Or on the drear heath where he fell.
IX
It was beneath the loneliest caveThat roofs the brow of misery,
Or stems the ocean's wildest wave,
Or mocks the sea-blast's keenest sigh.
X
It was through night's most spectral hours,When reigns the spirit of dismay,
And terror views demoniac pow'rs
Flit ghastly round in dread array.
XI
Such was the time, and such the place,The bard respir'd his song of woe,
Surviv'd their freedom's vital blow.
XII
Oh, what a lay the minstrel breath'd!How many bleeding hearts around,
In suff'ring sympathy enwreath'd,
Hung desponding o'er the sound!
XIII
For still his Harp's wild plaintive tonesGave back their sorrows keener still,
Breath'd sadder sighs, heav'd deeper moans,
And wilder wak'd despair's wild thrill.
XIV
For still he sung the ills that flowFrom dire oppression's ruthless fang,
And sharpen'd every patriot pang.
XV
Yet, ere he ceas'd, a prophet's fireSublim'd his lay, and louder rung
The deep-ton'd music of his lyre,
And Erin go brach he boldly sung.
FRAGMENT II. LA ROSE FLETRIE.
Mais helas! il n'y a point d'eternel amour.”
J. J. Rousseau.
I
Oh! return me the rose which I gather'd for theeWhen thy love like the rose was in bloom,
For neglected it withers, though given by me,
And shares with thy love the same doom.
II
Yet so lately renew'd was thy passion's frail vowOn that rose, which so lately was given,
Are still gem'd with the fresh dews of heaven.
III
For the twin-buds thy fondness so tastefully woveWere ne'er kiss'd by the sun's faintest ray,
While the rose, which receiv'd the warm vow of thy love,
Lies expos'd to the varying day.
IV
So faded, so tintless, it lives but to languish,All its blushes, its freshness, decay'd,
And droops (hapless flow'r!) as tho' love's tender anguish
On its blushes and freshness had prey'd.
V
Then return me the rose which I gather'd for thee,When thy love like the rose was in bloom,
Since neglected it withers, though given by me,
And shares with thy love the same doom.
VI
Thou return'st me the rose; yet with sighs 'tis return'd,And the drops which its pale bosom wears,
Were they shed from thine eye? is my rose then so mourn'd,
Or but dew'd with the eve's falling tears?
VII
Yet speak not! that look is enough! Keep the flow'r,Since in death 'tis still precious to thee;
When the rose was presented by me.
VIII
And wilt thou, when breathing the scent of its sighs,E'er say, with a love-ling'ring thrill,
“Thus passion deep-felt in the bosom ne'er dies,
And if faded, is odorous still?”
IX
Oh thou wilt! and the rose which thus wither'd with thee,From thy cares may recover its bloom,
And that love which thine eye again pledges to me
Will still share with the rose the same doom.
A kindred melody, the scene recurs,
And with it all its pleasures and its pains.”
Cowper.
And the effect produced by the recurrence of a sweet strain, or a delicious odour, heard and inhaled under the influence of circumstances dear to the heart or interesting to the fancy, may be deemed twin sensations: for my own part (and perhaps I am drawing con-clusions from an individual rather than a general feeling) I have never listened to the air of Erin go brach, or breathed the perfume of the rose geranium, without a thrill of emotion which was sweet, though mournful, to the soul, and which drew its birth from a feeling memory, had inseparably connected with the melody of the one and the perfume of the other. It is indeed but just and natural that the safest and purest of all the senses should claim the closest kindred with the memory and the soul. “L'oreille est le chemin du cœur,” said Voltaire. And the rose had never witnessed its frequent apothesis, had its bloom been its only or its sweetest boast.
My memory at this moment supplies me with innumerable poems addressed to the Rose. Among the most bcautiful are, I think, one by Anacreon, so elegantly translated by Moore; one by Sappho, one by Ausonius, one by Francisco de Biojo (Parnasso Espagnol), one by Camoens, one by Bernard le Jeune, one by Cowper, two by Metastasio, one from the Persian, and one by a German poet (whose name has escaped recollection) beginning,
FRAGMENT III. TO MRS. LEFANUE.
Pouront-il trouver tou egale.”
Voltaire.
I
Oh why are not all those close ties which enfoldEach human connexion like those which unite us!
Alone to sweet amity's bondage invite us?
II
Thou wert just in that age when the soul's brightest rayIllumines each mellowing charm of the face,
And the graces of youth still delightedly play
O'er each mind-beaming beauty which Time can-not chase.
III
I was young, inexperienc'd, unknowing, unknown,Wild, ardent, romantic, a stranger to thee;
But I'd heard worth, wit, genius, were all, all thine own;
And forgetting that thou wert a stranger to me.
IV
My heart overflowing, and new to each formOf the world, I sought thee, nor fear'd to offend
By unconscious presumption: oh sure 'twas some charm
That thus led me to seek in a stranger, a friend!
V
Yes, yes, 'twas a charm of such magical forceAs Reason herself never wish'd to repel,
For it drew its sweet magic from Sympathy's source,
And Reason herself bows to Sympathy's spell.
VI
Yet fearful of failing, and wishful of pleasing,How timidly anxious thy notice I woo'd!
With courage, with fondness, my faint heart endu'd.
VII
No never (till mem'ry by death shall be blighted)Can our first touching interview fade from my mind,
When thou, all delighting, and I all delighted,
I, more than confiding; thou much more than kind.
VIII
Forgetful scarce germ'd was our friendship's young flower,My heart o'er my lips unrestrain'd seem'd to rove,
Left me much to admire, yet still more to love.
IX
Till warm'd by a kindness endearing, as dear,A wild, artless, song was respir'd for thee;
'Twas a national lay! and oh! when shall the tear
Which was shed o'er that song, be forgotten by me.
X
And now since that sweet day some years have flown by,And some golden hours of those years have been mine;
Round my heart, like that tie which first bound it to thine.
Grand-daughter to the friend of Swift—daughter to the celebrated Thomas Sheridan—to the Author of Sidney Biddulph—and sister to the Right Hon. Richard Brinsley Sheridan—claiming a connexion equally intimate with many other characters scarcely less eminent; yet by a unity in her own of the most unblemished virtue and the most brilliart talents, reflecting back upon her distinguisbed kindred a lustre pure and permanent as that she has received from it.
FRAGMENT IV. VIVE LA PLATONIQUE!
T. Corneille.
I
If once again thou'dst have me love,Revive my fancy's faded beam;
Give back each vision that illum'd
My early youth's ecstatic dream.
II
'Tis true, not many winters' snowsHave fall'n upon my life's fresh flow'r:
But feelings that should last an age,
With me, were wasted in an hour.
III
Too sanguine to be calmly blest,The “life of life” I sought, and in it
But found their span, a raptur'd minute.
IV
Too ardent to be constant long,If Love's wild rose I haply gather'd,
I scarcely breathed its fragrant bloom,
When Love's wild rose grew pale, and wither'd.
V
Too delicate to seek a blissDisrob'd of Fancy's magic veil,
Love's faintest throb, I ceas'd to feel.
VI
Then let me be thy tender friend,Thy mistress since I cannot be:
Thou'lt soon forget thou'rt not belov'd,
And I! I'm not adored by thee.
VII
'Twill be the chastest, sweetest, tyeThat round two hearts was ever twin'd;
Than friendship 'twill be warmer still,
Than passion 'twill be more refin'd.
VIII
Each soul shall meet its kindred soul,Each heart shall share the same sensation;
Between pure sentiment and sense
Each feeling play with sweet vibration.
IX
And though in the Platonic scalesSome little Love should Nature fling,
The balance Reason would restore,
And give th' intrusive urchin wing.
Ninon de l'Enclos speaks of “le don d'aimer” as one not indiscriminately bestowed; and certainly the disposition of the object on whom it is lavished must in some degree not only ascertain its value, but regulate its duration. It can never indeed be laid totally aside (like the unused talent of the indolent steward), but it may be husbanded for life, or expended in an instant; one may live too fast in a feeling as well as in a physical sense, and languish of a premature atrophy of the heart as well as of the body. Thus Montesquieu is surprized to find he could love at thirty-five; while St. Aulaire wrote his last amatory verses at ninety!— “Anacreon moins vieux,” says Voltaire, “fit des bien moins jolies chosés.”
FRAGMENT V. THE DRAWING-ROOM.
TO LADY C---FT---N, OF L---D HOUSE.
Que la Luxe decore a grand frais
Bien ne parle a mon cœur
Quand tout parle a mes yeux,
Il semble dans ces vastes lieux
Que le sentiment s'evapore.”
De Moustier.
I
When midst an idle, senseless, crowd,The flutt'ring insects of the day,
So coldly pleas'd, so sadly gay;
II
Thou know'st at least my young heart's pulseStill gaily throbs to joy's wild measure,
And that each sense is still alive
To every dream of youthful pleasure.
III
Too prone perhaps to pleasure's dreams,Too “thrillingly alive all o'er,”
And oh! too prone at every woe
To “agonize at every pore.”
IV
But that sad medium, dull and chill,Of gayless revels, heartless joys,
To me; 'tis nought but din and noise.
V
Thou know'st me playful, sportive, wild,Simple, ardent, tender, glowing;
A glance can chill my bosom's spring,
A glance can set it warmly flowing.
VI
Thou'st seen me midst the charming groupThat forms thine own domestic heaven,
By youthful spirits (wildly gay)
To many a childish frolic driven.
VII
But oh! the heart some think lies still,Resembles most my lute, whose string
Breathes not (Eolian-like) untouch'd,
Nor vibrates to each insect's wing.
VIII
But when the sympathetic touchCalls forth the magic of its wires,
How soft, how tender is the strain
Each trembling, thrilling, chord respires!
IX
And seem'd I ever dull to thee,Or strove I to resist the art,
With which thou oft wert wont to thrill
Each latent feeling of my heart?
X
Oh no! for though the many slight,Thou know'st at least my trivial worth,
For thou (who best canst touch my heart)
Canst call its best vibrations forth.
“It is certain,” says the elegant St. Evremond, “that nature has placed in our hearts something gay and laughing—some secret principle of affection which conceals its tenderness from the multitude, and only communicates itself when it feels it will be understood.”
FRAGMENT VI. THE DREAM.
As not to chase my doubtful sleep,
And did a smile so lightly play
O'er those lips, in slumbers clos'd,
When every thrilling sense repos'd?
Yes! 'twas a cheery dream that stole
Its vision o'er my sleepless soul.
(As oft in childhood's careless glee
We fondly stray'd, to danger blind,
Our arms, our hearts, as closely twin'd),
It seem'd the sacred haunt of Love,
Where, pointing to the orient day,
An odour-breathing structure lay;
On rosy shafts was rear'd the bower,
And many a sweet though transient flower,
And many a bud and wreathy band,
Twin'd by Nature's tasteful hand,
In rich luxuriance closely wed,
Form'd a sweetly simple shed,
To canopy the thoughtless brow
Of youth, in life's first ardent glow;
And as methought we loitering stray'd,
Delighted in th' Elysian shade,
We saw approach th' enchantress Youth,
Led by Simplicity and Truth,
Laughing eye, and flowing hair;
Blest and blessing beyond measure,
Grasping every transient pleasure;
Pleas'd with life as with a toy,
Pursuing still the urchin joy;
At cold Caution's precept smiling,
Time of every care beguiling,
Till with all her jocund train
She reach'd her own delicious fane,
And around the hallow'd bower
The Virtues throng'd to own her power,
And Innocence, and Peace serene,
And Confidence with candid mien,
And infant loves, and harmless wiles,
And frolic sports, and rosy smiles,
Offer'd there their tribute treasures;
And Health, by ruddy Temp'rance led,
Around her dearest blessings shed;
Whilst Youth, on Hope's fair breast reclin'd,
Her arm round Expectation twin'd,
Blushing view'd the Graces bland
Lead chasten'd Passion by the hand;
And Genius swept his lyre to prove
The soul of life was Youth and Love.
Delightful Youth! thy powers divine
Protract to life's maturer day,
And all thy “ling'ring blooms delay.”
And when I pass thy golden hour,
And watch thy last declining flow'r
Change to a sickly hectic flush,
And each warm life-illumin'd ray
In my dimming eye decay;
When all thy transient spells are flown
(Which now, alas! are all my own),
When all thy sorceries expire,
Yet still, oh! still with fond desire
Back may each with'ring spirit flee
To live in memory with thee,
To catch thy fire's reflected beams,
And feel thy joys again in dreams.
Rousseau, in that affecting and delicate manner which is all his own, exquisitely describes the delicious feelings that accompany those moments vibrating between waking consciousness and the senseless torpidity of sleep—moments, of which Locke treated as a logician and a philosopher, and which Martial delineated as a voluptuary and a poet.
“Thus lifeless yet with life how sweet to lie!Thus without dying oh how sweet to die!”
(Translated by Peter Pindar, Esq.)
Of the tye which binds me to this dearest object of my heart's best affections, I may say with Tasso,
Ma il pensier; piu conforme.”
FRAGMENT VII.
[There was a day when simply but to be]
Je regrettais les sensible plaisirs
Dont la douceur enchanta ma jeunesse
Sont il perdu? desais-je sans retour.”
Marquis de la Fare.
There was a day when simply but to be,
To live, to breathe, was purest ecstasy;
Then Life was new, and with a smiling air
Robb'd of his thorny wreath intrusive Care;
And o'er the drear path I was doom'd to tread
Beneath the little wand'rer's footsteps shed
Full many a beam of gay prismatic hue,
And many a bud from Fancy's bosom threw;
Time's tell-tale record, I idly flung away;
And Love (but then a child) from hour to hour
Would fondly rove, and from each fragrant flow'r
Suck'd honey'd essence, to imbue his dart,
And though he thrill'd, ne'er pain'd the flutt'ring heart;
In life alone each transport was possest:
But now, in life alone no charms I view—
And oh! Time, Hours, and Love, how chang'd are you!
The Cupid of Anacreon is represented as tempering his arrows with gall; for
Che in vecchie membre
Il piggior d'armore.”
Guarini.
And Horace, (Carmen viii. lib. 2. v. 15.) “pleasantly terrible” makes his deity imbue his arms in blood: but the tutelar Love that presides over the first enchantment of a young and tender heart may surely be supposed to bathe his shafts in honey; whose healing attribute is by some believed the best remedy for the sting of its own bee.FRAGMENT VIII. THE VIOLET.
Non posso, prendi liete
Guesti negre viole
Dall umor rugiadose.”
B. Tasso.
I
Oh! say, didst thou know 'twas mine own idol flowerThat my heart has just welcom'd from thee?
Didst thou rear it expressly for me?
II
Sure thou didst! and how richly it glows through the tearsThat dropt o'er its beauties from heaven!
Like those which the rosed-cheek of fond woman wears
When her bosom to rapture is given.
III
And meek, modest, and lovely, it still seems to shun,E'en as though it still blush'd in the vale,
Ev'ry too glaring beam of the too ardent sun,
Ev'ry rudely breath'd sigh of the gale.
IV
Oh! dear is the friend whom the blossom resembles,Who as sweet, as retiring is found;
Who unseen, sheds her fragrance around.
V
And thou art that friend! and thy emblem believeHas now found in my bosom a shrine;
And ne'er did the holiest relic receive
An homage more fervent than mine.
FRAGMENT IX. TO MRS. C*N*LLE.
I
Whilst over each lay thou didst flatt'ringly hang,In triumph I cried, “'Tis all mine,”
Unconscious 'twas thou didst inspire as I sang,
And in fact that the lay was all thine.
II
Then take it—but oh! still be present the while,When another that lay shall respire;
For at least I have felt 'tis the spell of thy smile
That alone can the songstress inspire.
FRAGMENT X. THE BOUDOIR.
To * * * * * * * * * *
Honteux de paroitre nud
Pour cacher sa rougeur, cherche l'obscurité.
La, sa confidence legitime rapproche deux amis.
De Mouslier.
I
What need'st thou ask, or I reply?Mere words are for the stupid many;
I've ever thought a speaking look
The sweetest eloquence of any!
II
Yes, thou may'st come, and at the hourWe consecrate to pensive pleasures,
When feeling, fancy, music, taste,
Profusely shed their dearest treasures.
III
Yet come not ere the sun's last beamSleeps on the west wave's purpled breast,
Nor wait thee till the full-orb'd moon
Resplendent lifts her silver crest.
IV
But steal the softer hour between,When Twilight drops her mystic veil,
And brings the anxious mind's repose,
And leaves the sensient heart to feel.
V
Yet turn not towards the flaunting bow'rThat echoes to the joyless laugh
Of gossip dames, nor seek the hall
Where Riot's sons her goblet quaff.
VI
But with a stilly noiseless stepGlide to the well known fairy room,
Where fond affection visits oft,
And never finds the heart from home.
VII
Fear not to meet intruders there,Thou'lt only find my harp and me,
Breathing perhaps some pensive song,
And waiting anxiously for thee.
VIII
And I will wear the vestal robeThou lov'st, I know, to see me wear;
And with that sweet wreath form'd by thee
(Though faded now) I'll bind my hair.
IX
And round my harp fresh buds I'll twine,O'er which departing day has wept;
As wildly soft its chords I'll touch
As though a sigh its chords had swept.
X
And I will hum the song thou lov'st,Or thou each bosom-chord shalt thrill
With thine own soul-dissolving strain,
Or silent, we'll be happier still.
XI
Well now, thou know'st the time, the place,And—but I merely meant to tell thee
That thou might'st come! yet still I write
As though some witchcraft charm befel me.
FRAGMENT XI. THE SPANISH GUITAR.
I
Neglected long, and wrapt in idle slumber,Forlorn, obscure, this hapless thing I found;
Thy chords relax'd, and ev'ry tuneful number
Latent and still with thy sweet soul of sound.
II
Not always thus didst thou abandon'd languish;The matin hymn, the midnight serenade,
Claim'd from thy tones, and found no trivial aid.
III
Of vanquish'd Moor, of Saracen subdued,Of Roncevalle's immortal feats thou'st rung,
And oft beneath the grated casement woo'd
Her, whose bright charms thy tender master sung.
IV
And who was he, by adverse fortune drivenFar from his native land (sad youth!) to stray,
By all abandon'd but by thee and Heaven,
Of all bereft but thy care-soothing lay?
V
Who ceaseless breath'd to thee his song of woe,And haply o'er thy chords inanguish'd hung,
As still thy chords in sympathy would flow,
And sadder breath'd each woe he sadly sung.
VI
Whose e'er thou wert, at least I owe thee much,Kind little soother of each weary hour;
Obedient ever to the faintest touch
That call'd to sympathy thy passive pow'r.
VII
For when the star of eve unveil'd her light,To bathe its glories in some lucid stream,
Or twilight hung upon the day's swift flight,
I've woo'd thy tones to aid my vision'd dream.
VIII
Or when the roving moon-beam seem'd to gatherFrom every shutting rose its pendent dew,
And heartless joys with flaunting sun-beam wither,
Softly I hum'd my pensive song to you.
IX
And found thee erst responsive to my soul,Thy fainting tones each faint breath'd note return'd,
With every sigh thy sighing accents stole,
With pathos trembled, or in sadness mourn'd.
X
As true vibrative to the frolic lay,To ev'ry careless touch of laughing pleasure,
As wildly playful, and as simply gay,
As madly jocund was thy sportive measure.
XI
Oh then to Nature's touch be sacred still!To her I consecrate thy soothing pow'r;
Let passion, fancy, feeling, wake the thrill
That gives to bliss each visionary hour.
FRAGMENT XII. SPLEEN.
Mille piacer ne voglion un tormento.”
Petrarch.
I
Come, Apathy, and o'er me breathe thy spell,Whilst I devote to thee those bosom'd treasures
Which feeling gave, and thou shalt sound the knell
Of my departed joys and dying pleasures.
II
For they were but illusions—senseless power!And cheated while they charm'd the dazzled mind;
Nor bloom nor odour can thy vot'rist find.
III
Then come! and thou shalt be my god supreme,And I will worship at thy gloomy shrine;
Nor from the light of memory shall beam
One ray, to shew that bliss or joy were mine.
FRAGMENT XIII. FANCY.
I
Oh thou! who late with glowing fingers wreath'dAround my youthful brow thy blooming flow'rs,
Sweet Fancy! thou who late so warmly breath'd
Thy frolic spirit o'er my careless hours:
II
Was it by thought or study thou wert banish'd?Did care or sorrow chill thy vital glow?
That from so young a mind thy dreams are vanish'd,
That droops thy wild wreath round so young a brow.
III
Why fade thy fairy visions on my view(And every spell that cheer'd my sinking heart)?
Why change thy iris-tints to sablest hue?
Why latent sleeps thy gay creative art?
IV
Oh come! but come not as thou late wert wont,With faded blush, and matted locks unbound,
Chasing my foot-steps in each dreary haunt,
And scatt'ring rue and deadly night-shade round.
V
But come with kindling blush and sunny tress,The tear of rapture gleaming in thine eye;
Thy lip (where revel'd many a fond caress!)
Thy ruby lip, exhaling transport's sigh.
VI
Thy glance reviving every faded flow'r,The young loves sporting in thy frolic train,
And many a fairy joy and smiling hour,
Chasing in rosy groups Despair and Pain.
VII
Oh! thus return, thou source of all my pleasures,And though bereft of all but Hope and thee,
Yet they who count as theirs exhaustless treasures,
And empires sway, perhaps might envy me.
FRAGMENT XIV. TO MRS. BROWNE,
OF MOUNT PROSPECT, NEAR DUBLIN.
Marmontel.
I
I love the warmth! the genial warmth,That from thine heart's core seems to flow;
That lights thine eye's benignant glance,
And lends thy smile its brightest glow.
II
I love the warmth, the tender warmth,That animates thy artless air,
That still extends thy cordial hand,
And bids each word a welcome wear.
III
For I (too oft) am doom'd to meetThe eye whose glance my ardour chills,
Where still I seek that eye of soul
Whose glance o'er every fine nerve thrills.
IV
And still, alas! I'm doom'd to touchSome hand more cold than wintry dew,
Where still I seek that hand's fond press
Whose pulse to mine throbs sweetly true.
V
And oh! how oft I'm doom'd to hearA voice that from the heart new stole,
Where still I languish for those tones
That woo and win the list'ning soul.
VI
And still I'm sadly doom'd to playThe mental gladiator's part,
When, weary of the strife of wits,
I seek an intercourse of heart.
VII
But thou, dear friend! didst sweetly wakeEach nerve where bosom-pleasures slumber'd,
Which grieving mem'ry ceaseless number'd.
VIII
With thee too happy to be wise,Yet wiser in my folly's dream
Than, when to trim cold study's lamp,
I quite neglected nature's beam.
IX
With thee! no longer sadly sage,Or gravely wise, but wisely simple,
The close-knit brow appears the tomb
Of Wisdom, and her throne the dimple.
FRAGMENT XV. THE MUSICAL FLY.
Eterniser la bagatelle.”
De Moustier.
I
To-day around my Harp I twin'dA rose, whose bosom veil'd a fly,
Some insect Epicure in bliss,
Who sip'd her dews, and breath'd her sigh;
II
Till surfeit drove him from the feast,And, pleasure-cloy'd, the tiny rover
Fled his idol rose's breast,
O'er the harp's still chords to hover.
III
Nor seem'd unconscious of the charmThat lurk'd in every silent string,
For oft the little vagrant swept
O'er every chord his lucid wing.
IV
While they (too like the sensient soulThat vibrates to the least impression)
E'en to th' ephemeral's breathy touch
Return'd a faint, but sweet, expression.
V
“Charm'd with the sound himself had made,”Still flutter'd o'er the chords the minion,
And oh! it was a fairy strain
That died beneath his fairy pinion.
VI
Distinctly soft, and faintly true,It scarce was fancied, scarce was caught:
Just such a sighing sound it breath'd
As I by thee one eve was taught.
VII
Whilst thou upon my murmur'd songDidst hang in Fancy's wildest dream,
And I, not “touch'd, but rapt,” made thee
My inspiration and my theme.
FRAGMENT XVI. TO SIGNOR ALPHONSO PILLIGRINNI, LL.D.
Professor of Italian and Spanish, Trinity College, Dublin.
I
The castle lies low, whose towers frown'd so high,And the landscape is awful and bold;
And the woods many ages have told.
II
And the world's greatest ocean still dashes its wave'Gainst the coast that is savagely wild:
Midst the castle's grey ruins there still yawns a cave
Where the sun's cheering light never smil'd.
III
And steep is the precipice, horrid to view,That rears o'er the ocean its crest:
And its base 'neath the waves seems to rest.
IV
And the blast that awakes on Columbia's far shoreUnimpeded here breathes its last sigh,
And the rocks round whose brow th' Atlantic winds roar
The spent storms of Columbia defy.
V
Nor is there a spot midst this scene of romanceObscur'd by oblivion's dark veil,
But some charm from tradition can steal.
VI
For many a pilgrim has pillow'd his headIn that cell that now moulders away,
And many a brave chief and warrior has bled
Near these walls that now fall to decay.
VII
In that spot, by the thistle and long grass o'ergrown,That breathes round a desolate gloom,
Lies the pilgrim and warrior's tomb.
VIII
But the little enthusiast who boasts thee her friend,And who strays midst this world of romance,
Where nature such scenes e'en to fancy can lend
As ne'er floated on fancy's rapt glance;
IX
Who roams midst this landscape, so awful and wild,Who hangs on th' Atlantic's deep roar,
And wanders the desolate shore;
X
Who sighs o'er the tomb where the warrior's laid low,Where the rough thistle waves its lone head,
Where the blasts o'er the old abbey's grey ruins flow,
And a requiem breathe over the dead;
XI
Yes, th' enthusiast e'en here, midst these scenes drear and wild,The gentlest of spirits has found,
And many a bosom “ethereally mild,”
By the sweet ties of sympathy bound.
XII
And that polish of manner which only can flowFrom the soul that is warm and refin'd,
And those heart-born endearments which shed their soft glow
O'er the stronger endowments of mind.
XIII
Then, oh! tell me, dear friend, what has place, what has scene,To do with the heart or the soul?
The same 'neath the line or the pole.
FRAGMENT XVII. CONCETTE.
Go, balmy zephyr, softly breatheTo her for whom these buds I wreath;
Yes, breathe the echo of my sigh
To her whose soul-seducing eye
Has look'd, I fear, my soul away:
But, zephyr, dare not to betray
That 'tis to her I lay my doom;
Tell her I die—but not for whom!
FRAGMENT XVIII. HOME.
Goldsmith.
I
Silent and sad, deserted and alone,In mem'ry drooping o'er my faded pleasures,
Each home delight, each soul-felt comfort flown,
A little bankrupt in the heart's rich treasures.
II
Sweet social ties, to every feeling dear!Still round that heart's most vital fibre twining,
If I relinquish ye, 'tis with a tear,
Sadly resign'd, and tenderly repining.
III
Home of my heart! of every wish the goal,Where'er thy little wand'rer's doom'd to stray;
“Though Alps between us rise, and oceans roll,”
Thou'lt be the Pharos of my devious way.
IV
For tho' the world's fleet joys awhile deceive me,Though dazzled by my more than meed of fame,
Should thy dear threshold, Home, again receive me,
Thou'lt find my warm, my untouch'd heart the same.
V
For if, O world! to other eyes you wearA syren aspect! yet your vaunted treasures
Ne'er valued to my heart a single tear,
Dropt to my simple Home's departed pleasures.
This trifle was scribbled on a tablet when the recollection of endeared home opposed itself to the comfortless solitude of an inn; for surely the term solitude is arbitrary in its application; and the heart, independent of situation, may, in the midst of the busiest haunts, shrink back upon itself solitary and unanswered.
FRAGMENT XIX. L'AMANT MUTIN.
Et je reprend ma liberte—sans regreter mon esclavage.”
Bernard le Jeune.
I
Nay, if you threaten, all is over;Ne'er dart that rebel look at me!
I languish too, to turn a rover,
So take your shackles—both are free.
II
No galling steel that chain composes,Which once I fondly wove for thee;
And dew'd with tears love stole from me.
III
But now if o'er its bloomy flushingIndiff'rence sheds her chilling air,
And o'er each bud (still faintly blushing)
Congeals each tear that lingers there,
IV
Why break at once the useless fetter,Since round thy heart no more 'tis bound;
But while its roses thus you scatter,
Think not its thorns my breast shall wound.
V
And yet hadst thou still been that lover,That all I hoped to find in thee,
I ne'er had been thus idly free.
VI
But o'er my lip, in fondness dying,No sigh of love e'er breath'd its soul,
Until some heart more fondly sighing,
My sigh into existence stole.
VII
And if some tender pangs I cherish'd,From thee I caught the pleasing anguish;
But when with thee those sweet pangs perish'd,
I felt them in my bosom languish.
FRAGMENT XX. TO-MORROW.
Che recordarsi del tempo felice, nella miseria.”
Dante.
I
Visions of fleeting pleasure! spare, oh! spare me!Hence! shades of many a bliss, and many a sorrow;
In vain from this cool medium would ye tear me,
With joys indeed to-day—but, what to-morrow?
II
For every blessing your possession brought meLeft in its absence still a kindred sorrow,
And tho' to-day with many a joy you sought me,
You'd leave me, lost to every joy, to-morrow.
III
Like this rich flow'r, which now in sweet decayDroops on my breast its head in seeming sorrow;
For though its beauties charm each sense to-day,
My breast will only wear its thorns to-morrow.
FRAGMENT XXI. THE SENSITIVE PLANT.
I
Sweet timid trembling thing, no moreShalt thou beneath each rude breath sink;
Thy vestal attribute is o'er,
E'en from the softest sigh to shrink.
II
No more the balmy zephyr's kissShall find thy chaste reluctance such
That, fading from the fragrant bliss,
Thou shun'st the balmy zephyr's touch.
III
Proud of thy sensient pow'rs, the breastOf Emily, with rival pride,
Thou sought'st, but drooping there, confest
That sensient pow'r surpass'd, and died.
FRAGMENT XXII. TWILIGHT.
Prepare thy shadowy car.”
Collins.
I
There is a mild, a solemn hour,And oh! how soothing is its pow'r
To smile away Care's sombre low'r!
This hour I love!
It follows last the feath'ry train
That hovers round Time's rapid wain.
'Tis then I rove.
II
'Tis when the day's last beam of lightSleeps on the rude tow'r's mould'ring height,
With many an age's moss bedight,
The dreary home
Of some sad victim of despair,
Who from the world finds shelter there;
'Tis then I roam.
III
'Tis when the west clouds faintly blush,And his last vesper sings the thrush,
And soft mists veil gay nature's flush,
And not a ray
From the morn's cloud-embosom'd crest
Silvers the green wave's swelling breast;
'Tis then I stray.
IV
'Tis the soft stilly dawn of night,When many an elf and fairy sprite
Pursue the glow-worm's furtive light,
Like me fonder
Of that soft, pale, mysterious beam
Which lures wild fancy's wizard dream,
While I wander.
V
Day cannot claim this charming hour,Nor night subdue it to its power,
Nor sunny smiles, nor gloomy low'r,
Does it betray:
But blandly soothing, sweetly wild,
Soft, silent, stilly, fragrant, mild,
It steals away.
FRAGMENT XXIV.
[“Vivons pour nous . . . . .]
Que l'amitie qui nous unie
Nous tiens lieu du monde.”
Voltaire.
I
Oh! no—I live not for the throngThou seest me mingle oft among,
By fashion driven.
Yet one may snatch in this same world
Of noise and din, where one is hurl'd,
Some glimpse of heaven!
II
When gossip murmurs rise around,And all is empty shew and sound,
Or vulgar folly,
How sweet! to give wild fancy play,
Or bend to thy dissolving sway,
Soft melancholy.
III
When silly beaux around one flutter,And silly belles gay nonsense utter,
How sweet to steal
And with the dear elected few
Converse and feel!
IV
When forced for tasteless crowds to sing,Or listless sweep the trembling string,
Say, when we meet
The eye whose beam alone inspires,
And wakes the warm soul's latent fires,
Is it not sweet?
V
Yes, yes, the dearest bliss of anyIs that which midst the blissless many
So oft we stole:
And idle crowds, we each betray'd
To each—a soul.
FRAGMENT XXV. DAWN.
I
There is a soft and fragrant hour,Sweet, fresh, reviving is its pow'r;
'Tis when a ray
Steals from the veil of parting night,
And by its mild prelusive light
Foretels the day.
II
'Tis when some ling'ring stars scarce shedO'er the mist-clad mountain's head
Their fairy beam;
Then one by one retiring, shroud,
Dim glitt'ring through a fleecy cloud,
Their last faint gleam.
III
'Tis when (just wak'd from transient deathBy some fresh zephyr's balmy breath)
Th' unfolding rose
While every bud with deeper bloom
And beauty glows.
IV
'Tis when fond Nature (genial power!)Weeps o'er each drooping night-clos'd flower,
While softly fly
Those doubtful mists, that leave to view
Each glowing scene of various hue
That charms the eye.
V
'Tis when the sea-girt turret's browReceives the east's first kindling glow,
And the dark wave,
Swelling to meet the orient gleam,
Reflects the warmly strength'ning beam
It seems to lave.
VI
'Tis when the restless child of sorrow,Watching the wish'd-for rising morrow,
His couch foregoes,
And seeks midst scenes so sweet, so mild,
To sooth those pangs so keen, so wild,
Of hopeless woes.
VII
Nor day, nor night, this hour can claim,Nor moon-light ray, nor noon-tide beam,
Does it betray;
But fresh, reviving, dewy, sweet,
It hastes the glowing hours to meet
Of rising day.
FRAGMENT XXVI. SLEEP.
I
Come, Sleep, thou transient, but thou sure relief,Shed o'er my aching eyes thy soothing pow'r,
And mingle with their ceaseless tear of grief
One drop, extracted from thy opiate flow'r.
II
Shroud oh! sweet Sleep! in thy oblivious veil,Each woe that would repel thy balmy reign,
And o'er each wearied sense as softly steal
The welcome bondage of thy unfelt chain.
III
Sooth to forgetfulness my care-worn mind,Dispel awhile each sad prophetic fear,
And mem'ry in thy gentle thraldom bind,
And steal this sigh, and chase this starting tear;
IV
And call the mimic Fancy to thy aid,With all her frolic, illusory train;
With rosy visions cheer thy vot'rist maid,
With welcome treach'ry steal her bosom's pain.
V
Each fond affection in her heart revive,By waking apathy long lull'd to rest;
Once to each thrilling tone of joy alive,
Though dormant now within her joyless breast.
VI
Thus come, delightful and delusive Sleep,Thus o'er my wither'd spirits claim thy pow'r;
In thy sweet balm each anguish'd feeling steep;
For days of suff'ring give one blissful hour.
FRAGMENT XXVII. THE NOSEGAY.
The bloomy buds were cull'd by thee;
I snatch'd the flow'rs, and to my breast
Thy fragrant off'ring fondly prest;
That gloom'd our cold adieus to-day,
Till as I closer, fonder, hung
O'er every bud, a sad doubt sprung
Within my heart, and chill'd their bloom,
And robb'd them of their rich perfume:
For oh! thy gift appear'd methought
With cruel, doubtful, meaning fraught;
For one sweet blossom placed in view
Seem'd each delighted sense to woo,
Yet close beneath the fragrant veil
Deception's flow'r was seen to steal.
Why didst thou send me this bouquet?
Cruel! oh! didst thou mean to say,
“These flowers, delusive girl, receive,
Like thee they charm, like thee deceive;
Thy obvious grace, thy hidden guile—”
And is it so? then keep thy flow'r!
And trust me, 'tis no dewy show'r
Shed from nature's genial eye
That glitters o'er its purple dye,
But a tear, a tear that stole
From a fond but wounded soul,
The essence of a pang severe,
By thee extracted, form'd that tear;
Yet still 'tis thine, the chemic pow'r,
To change that tear, to change the flow'r:
Transmuted to a gem the tear
(Joy's precious gem!) the flow'r shall wear,
The flow'r that robb'd my heart of rest
Shall bloom an “heart's ease” in my breast,
Thou ne'er didst think thy friend a rover,
And that the flow'rs were sent by thee
But as peace offerings to me.
FRAGMENT XXVIII. L'AMANTE FURIOSO.
Voltaire.
I
Is this then the passion, is this the sweet anguish?Fondly to feel, and as fondly inspire;
My poor silly heart in its folly would languish;
And sigh, the true martyr of love to inspire.
II
Oh no! this is fury, 'tis rage, or 'tis madness,It scares the mild feelings that dwell in the heart;
It wearies the senses, or sinks into sadness
The soul that in riot can ne'er take a part.
III
Oft in the sweet dream that play'd o'er my pillow,Or in my warm'd fancy, Love's vision would beam;
But oh! how unlike fleeting passion's wild billow
O'er each yielding sense did it tenderly stream!
IV
Led by the graces, surrounded by pleasuresWhich aim at the heart, or which flow from the soul;
And veil'd in sweet sympathy's magical stole.
V
Though obvious, reserved, mysterious, yet simple,Chastely endearing, and timidly wild;
Repuls'd by a frown, recall'd by a dimple;
Placid, though tender; though ardent, refin'd.
VI
And couldst thou (thou maniac in passion) thus woo me,And lay by these freaks, less persuasive than fright'ning,
And cease with this fury of love to pursue me,
Nor always approach me—in thunder and lightning;
VII
If my poor little heart thou wouldst win, my wild rover,First give me of safety some positive token;
For to tell you the truth, my too vehement lover,
My fear is, my poor little head will be broken.
FRAGMENT XXIX.
[Here, Iris, pr'ythee take my lyre]
Guilem Æsmir.
Here, Iris, pr'ythee take my lyre,
No more its pathos or its fire
Shall wrap me in delusive bliss,
Its chords my flying fingers kiss,
Nor to its sweet responsive string
Her song of soul thy mistress sing,
The myrtle wreath that twined her brow:
Thou know'st by whom that wreath was gather'd,
Thou seest how soon that wreath is wither'd.
Oh! quick the emblem-gift remove;
I cannot sing, and must not love,
Or touch the lyre, or myrtle wear,
Exempt from bliss, and free from care.
Henceforth flow on, my torpid hours;
Indifference! I hail thy powers!
Come, and each keen sensation lull,
And make me languishingly dull,
While thus I offer at thy shrine
What (oh Indifference!) ne'er was thine,
The raptured sigh, the glowing tear,
The fervid hope, the anxious fear,
The freezing doubt, the feeling glow;
Nay, take the ling'ring wish to please,
But give, oh! give thy vot'rist ease.
FRAGMENT XXX. THE MINSTREL BOY.
I
Thy silent wing, oh Time! hath chased awaySome feathery hours of youth's fleet frolic joy,
Since first I hung upon the simple lay,
And shared the raptures of a minstrel boy.
II
Since first I caught the ray's reflected lightWhich genius emanated o'er his soul,
Or distant follow'd the enthusiast's flight,
Or from his fairy dreams a vision stole.
III
His bud of life was then but in its spring,Mine scarce a germ in nature's bloomy wreath;
He taught my infant muse t' expand her wing,
I taught his youthful heart's first sigh to breathe.
IV
In sooth he was not one of common mould,His fervid soul on thought's fleet pinions borne,
Now sought its kindred heaven sublimely bold,
Now stoop'd the woes of kindred man to mourn.
V
For in his dark eye beams of genius shoneThrough the pure crystal of a feeling tear,
And still pale Sorrow claim'd him as her own,
By the sad shade she taught his smile to wear.
VI
Though from his birth the Muses' matchless boy,Though still she taught his wild strain's melting flow,
And proudly own'd him with a mother's joy,
He only call'd himself “the Child of Woe.”
VII
For still the world each finer transport chill'dThat stole o'er feeling's nerve or fancy's dream,
And when each pulse to Hope's warm pressure thrill'd,
Experience chased Hope's illusory beam.
VIII
Too oft indeed, by Passion's whirlwind driven,Far from cold Prudence' level path to stray,
Too oft he deem'd that light “a light from heaven”
That lured him on to Pleasure's flow'ry way.
IX
To bliss abandon'd; now pursued by woe;The world's sad outcast; now the world's proud gaze;
The vine and yew alternate wreath'd his brow,
The soldier's laurel, and the poet's bays.
X
Example's baleful force, temptation's wile,Guided the wand'rings of his pilgrim years;
Fancy's warm child, deceiv'd by Fortune's smile,
That steep'd th' expecting glance in mis'ry's tears.
XI
The sport of destiny, “Creation's heir,”From realm to realm, from clime to clime he rov'd,
Check'd by no guardian tie, no parent care,
For oh! a parent's love his heart ne'er prov'd.
XII
Yet vain did Absence wave the oblivious wandOne spark still glim'ring in his breast to chill,
Illum'd by Sympathy's unerring hand,
That still awaked his lyre's responsive thrill.
XIII
Though o'er eternity's unbounded spaceThe knell of many a fleeting year had toll'd,
And weeping mem'ry many a change could trace
That made affection's vital stream run cold;
XIV
Yet still those laws immutable and trueTo nature's void, attraction's sacred laws,
Each spirit to its kindred spirit drew,
Of sweet effects, the fond and final cause.
XV
But oh! when cherish'd Hope reposed its soulUpon a new-born certainty of joy,
Death from the arms of pending pleasures stole,
And years of promis'd bliss, the Minstrel Boy.
FRAGMENT XXXI. TO LOUISA.
(On whose Easel I found a beautiful Painting of Cupid sleeping.)
Et craignons un jour, ce Dieu ne seveille.”
J. J. Rousseau.
I
How! Love, thus wrapt in soft repose;Ah! whence didst thou thy model borrow,
Or Love, with waking transport glows,
Or restless weeps, a waking sorrow?
II
Perhaps thou'st borrow'd from thyself,For in thine heart, they say, Love sleeps;
While in thine eye some swear the elf
An everlasting vigil keeps.
III
Oh! where, my charming artist, liesThe mystic secret of thy art?
To keep Love waking in the eyes,
And guard him sleeping in the heart!
FRAGMENT XXXII. CANZONA.
I
Oh! should I fly from the world, Love, to thee,Would solitude render me dearer?
Would our flight from the world draw thee closer to me,
Or render thy passion sincerer?
Than when its wild pulse fear'd detection?
Would the bliss unrestrain'd be more poignantly sweet
Than the bliss snatch'd by timid affection?
II
Though silence and solitude breathed all around,And each cold law of prudence was banish'd,
We should sigh for those hours that are vanish'd.
When in secret we suffer'd, in secret were blest,
Lest the many should censure our union;
And an age of restraint, when oppos'd and opprest,
Was repaid by a moment's communion.
III
When virtue's pure tear dew'd our love's kindling beamIt hallow'd the bliss it repented;
When a penitent sigh breath'd o'er passion's wild dream
It absolv'd half the fault it lamented:
In spite of each prudent restriction,
When the soul unrestrain'd met its warm kindred soul,
And we laugh'd at the world's interdiction!
IV
Then fly, oh my love! to the world back with me,Since the bliss it denies it enhances,
Since dearest the transient delight shar'd with thee,
Which is snatch'd from the world's prying glances:
Nor talk thus of death till the warm thrill of love
From each languid breast is retreating;
When love's vital throb has ceas'd beating.
FRAGMENT XXXIV. APATHY.
Pouroit-il recompenser la porte du plaisir?
Non! aimer, joucir, et soufrir
De l'homme! voila l'existence.”
I
Thou! whom unknown, my suff'ring heart implor'dTo fling thy spell athwart the anguish'd hour,
Spirit of Apathy! unfelt ador'd,
Oh! now I feel, now deprecate thy pow'r.
II
This once too sensate, tender, glowing heart,I thought could never own thy chilling sway;
Where fester'd late the wound of Sorrow's dart,
Where lately beam'd, oh Joy! thy transient ray.
III
Suspense in all its torturing forms I've known,And many a tender, many an anxious fear;
And on my lip has died the stifled groan,
And in mine eye has swam the silent tear.
IV
And I have known sweet Friendship's soothing hour,Perhaps have felt Love's first-born pure delight;
And I have worship'd Fancy's magic pow'r,
And (fond enthusiast!) dared her wildest flight.
V
But now! no raptur'd moment, no soft woe,Can sublimate the soul or touch the heart;
No more the solemn “joys of grief” bestow,
Or pensive bliss, or gracious pangs impart.
VI
Stagnate each feeling, frozen every sense,Each fairy thought enrob'd in Languor's stole;
No visionary joy can now dispense,
Or with “an airy nothing” cheer the soul.
FRAGMENT XXXV. THE IRISH JIG.
Pope.
I
Old Scotia's jocund Highland ReelMight make an hermit play the deel!
So full of gig!
Famed for its Cotillions gay France is;
But e'en give me the dance of dances,
An Irish jig.
II
The slow Pas Grave, the brisk Coupée,The Rigadoon, the light Chassée,
Devoid of gig,
I little prize; or Saraband
Of Spain; or German Allemande:
Give me a jig!
III
When once the frolic jig's begun,Then hey! for spirit, life, and fun!
And with some gig,
Trust me, I too can play my part,
And dance with all my little heart
The Irish jig.
IV
Now through the mazy figure flying,With some (less active) partner vying,
And full of gig;
Now warm with exercise and pleasure,
Each pulse beats wildly to the measure
Of the gay jig!
V
New honours to the saint be givenWho taught us first to dance to heaven!
I'm sure of gig,
And that he often danced and play'd
An Irish jig.
VI
I think 'tis somewhere clearly provedThat some great royal prophet loved
A little gig;
And though with warrior fire he glow'd,
The prowess of his heel he shew'd
In many a jig!
VII
Nay, somewhere too I know they tellHow a fair maiden danced so well,
With so much gig,
She won a saint's head from a king
For one short jig!
VIII
But I (so little my ambition)Will fairly own, in meek submission,
(And with some gig)
That for no holy head I burn;
One poor lay heart would serve my turn
For well danced jig.
IX
Since then we know from “truths divine,”That saints and patriarchs did incline
To fun and gig,
And still support with best endeavour
The Irish Jig.
FRAGMENT XXXVI. THE SWAN QUILL.
I
The quill that now traces the thought of my heart,And speeds the soft wand'rer to thine,
From the pinion of love, by thy hand's erring dart,
Was sever'd, and then became mine.
II
“Preserve it,” thou saidst, “for it shatter'd the breastWhich once glow'd with love's purest fire;
And it fell as the mistress and mother caress'd
In love's transport, the offspring and sire.”
III
Then thou toldst me the tale, and I wept o'er the quill,Where already thy tear had been shed;
“And oh!” I exclaim'd, “may its point ever thrill
O'er the nerve where soft pity is bred.
VI
“From that point may the fanciful sorrow still flowWhich, though fancied, ne'er misses the heart;
Be it sacred alone to the delicate woe
Which genius and feeling impart.”
V
But little I dream'd the first trace it imprestWith a sorrow not fancied should flow,
And that, that real sorrow should spring from my heart,
And that thou shouldst awaken that woe.
VI
For they tell me, alone and unfriended thou'rt leftOn the pillow of sickness to languish;
By absence, by fate, of the fond friend bereft
Who could feel for, and solace, thy anguish.
VII
May this quill then convey one fond truth to thy heart,And its languid pulsation elate;
That still in each suff'ring that friend takes a part,
And shares, as she mourns for thy fate.
VIII
Then fancy thou viewest that tear of the soulWhich thy destiny draws to her eye,
And believe that no sigh from thy bosom e'er stole
But she gave thee as heart-felt a sigh.
IX
For sweet is the solace that lurks in the tearWhich flows from the eye that we love;
And what is the suff'ring, oh! what is the care
That sympathy cannot remove?
X
Oh! then speed thy return, and thy sweet cure receive,Which affection and friendship present,
From her who by pity was taught to forgive,
And who feels, where she ought to resent.
FRAGMENT XXXVII. JOY.
Young.
I
“Joy a fix'd state—a tenure, not a start!”Whence came that thought, sublime and pensive sage?
Did Joy e'er play upon thy grief-chill'd heart,
Or flash its warm beam o'er the life's sad page?
II
And felt'st thou not 'twas but a start indeed,A rainbow lustre o'er the clouds of care;
Of many an anxious hope the golden meed,
The bright, tho' transient heaven of despair?
III
Oh Joy, I know thee well! and in that hourWhich gave me to the dearest father's arms,
(Arms long unfill'd by me) have felt thy pow'r
Sweetly dispelling absence' fond alarms.
IV
And I have felt thy evanescent gleamIllume the vision youthful fancy brought;
Have known thee in my slumbers' rosy dream
Give many a bliss I (waking) vainly sought.
V
From thee what sweet truths would cold Reason borrow,Whilst thou (tumultuous in thy reign) would chase
Each gloomy phantom of my bosom's sorrow,
And send thy sunny spirits in their place.
VI
Wild, warm, and tender, was thy witching hour,Delight's wild throb, and rapture's tear was thine,
And every feeling own'd thy melting pow'r;
Oh! such at least thou wert, when thou wert mine.
VII
Transient indeed, as young spring's iris sky,And ever fleetest in thy dearest bliss;
Chas'd by a doubt, a frown, a tear, a sigh;
Lured by a glance, a thought, a smile, a kiss.
VIII
Yet though so fleeting in thy poignant pleasure,Though thy brief span is scarce a raptured hour,
Though still least palpable thy richest treasure,
Though as we cull, still fades thy sweetest flow'r;
IX
Yet come! delicious Joy! ere yet the chillOf age repels thy influence o'er my heart,
While yet each sense responsive meets thy thrill,
Oh come! delicious Joy! all transient as thou art!
FRAGMENT XXXVIII. THE OATH.
I
By the first sigh that o'er thy lip did hover,And sweetly breath'd a secret sweeter still;
By thy reproachful glance, thou mock reprover!
The speechless transport, and the vaunted thrill:
II
By thy assumed despair and fancied sorrow,The sudden languor, and the transient glow;
By all those wiles thou know'st from love to borrow,
The timid doubt, the counterfeited woe:
III
By the soft murmurs of thy flatt'ring tongue,By all thy looks have told, or smiles exprest,
By all thou'st sworn, or wrote, or said, or sung,
By all the arts thou aimest at my breast:
IV
By the feign'd tear of love (delusive trembler!)Thou know'st to conjure to thy dang'rous eye,
And by that dang'rous eye, thou arch dissembler,
I still am free, and Love and thee defy!
V
For not a faultless form or perfect face,Or studied arts, can win a soul like mine;
It must be more than mere external grace,
It must be more than ever can be thine.
VI
Why (though thy tender vow exalt another)May not my rapt imagination rove
Beyond the solemn softness of a brother,
And live in fancy on thy looks of love?
VII
Ah! surely of celestial growth the flowersThat bloom'd so brightly o'er our early scene;
For tho' that sunny scene was dash'd with showers,
How glorious was each glitt'ring space between!
VIII
Young Innocence, array'd in guiltless blushes,Would then preside o'er each delightful prank;
Wild Laughter wreath her mimic crown of rushes,
And pluck her jewels from the lilied bank.
IX
Now sterner cares impel of big ambition,The glare of beauty, and the din of praise;
And nature quite disown'd, that playful vision
Is but the vision of departed days.
X
Mid the mad waves of life's inconstant oceanMy solitary skiff shall vent'rous steer,
And mem'ry, smiling at the dread commotion,
Paint on each cloud affection's harbour near.
XI
Thy gilded bark o'er the glad billows bounding,Ætesian gales shall smoothly bear along,
And sighing crowds its charming freight surrounding,
Salute thy splendid progress with a song.
XII
While thou dost to the choral flatt'ry listen,More gently soothed by melancholy bliss,
Perchance thy meek averted eye may glisten
O'er some neglected strain—sincere as this.
FRAGMENT XXXIX. LOVE'S PICTURE.
Son l'incantissima
Son l'arti magichi, del dio d'amor.
Hither, Love, thy wild wing bend,
Or on thy mother's dove descend;
Or mount some “courser of the air;”
Or float thee on a lover's sigh,
But hither, Love, oh! hither fly:
And come while yet the wish is warm,
To portrait true, thy changeful form;
Yes, come, with all thy magic arts,
“Quips, cranks, and smiles,” bows, arrows, darts;
Approach thee cap-a-pee in arms,
Muster ten thousand strong in charms;
Then (if thou canst) repose thy pinion,
And give me one good sitting, minion.
Shake not at me those golden locks,
Thy pow'r my dauntless spirit mocks;
I'll paint thee, rascal, as I find thee.
Yes, thou shalt have a seraph's face,
A childish air, an infant grace,
A bashful blush, a movement shy,
A timid glance, a downcast eye,
A frolic gait, a playful mien,
A cherub's smile, a brow serene;
Such is thy outward form, I know;
“But that within, which passeth shew,”
And thou wouldst slily keep perdû,
I'll paint in colours strong and true.
So now have at thee, trait'rous boy!
Thou bitter sweet, thou painful joy;
Thou thing compos'd of contradictions,
Of blessings and of maledictions,
Of sports and joys, of frowns and pouts,
Of gay delight, of anxious care,
Of thrilling bliss, of wild despair,
Of confidence, of dark suspicion,
Of tyranny, of meek submission,
Of sympathy, of jealous fire,
Of tenderness, of wrathful ire,
Of certainties, of mad'ning fears,
Of melting smiles, of treach'rous tears,
Of vestal blush, of roguish eye,
Of speaking look, of stifled sigh,
Of present joy, of future woe,
Of chill disdain, of genial glow,
Of simple air, of practis'd guile,
Of candid words, of hidden wile;
Thou ofttimes angel, ofttimes devil;
Thou all on earth we most should fear,
Thou all on earth we hold most dear;
Whom now we trust, whom now we doubt,
Whom none can live with, nor without,
Thou woe, fear, grief, thou bliss, hope, joy,
Thou—oh! thou too delightful boy!
Go, go, I dare not longer gaze,
For well I know thy wily ways,
And that while I with critic stricture
Thus coldly finish off thy picture,
At the simple painter's heart.
FRAGMENT XLI. HEALTH.
Nymph of the mountain! blithsome maid,Whose bloom no midnight revels fade;
That breath'st the grey dawn's scented air,
And with its dew-pearls deck'st thy hair;
Thy brow with Alpine myrtle crown'd,
Thy waist with deathless aloes bound,
Thy lip with wild-bees' nectar dew'd,
Thine eye with rapture's tear imbued,
Warm as the rich carnation flushes,
Thy step of devious frolic measure,
And all around thee breathing pleasure;
Thou dearest gift of bounteous Heaven,
To its most favour'd object given,
Source of the richest joys the heart
Can feel, or senses can impart,
Enchantress Health! what offering, say,
What tribute can thy vot'rist pay,
While now, delicious nymph, you shed
Your richest blessings o'er her head?
This smile is thine, this laughing eye,
This form suffused with thy warm dye,
These rising spirits gay, yet even,
By thee alone, oh Health! were given,
And gaily mock the fiend Despair,
That smile away the frowns of life,
Exalt each bliss, and calm each strife;
With whom, and thee, each circling year
Has swiftly flown, while every tear
Which woe shed o'er my fervid cheek
You fondly chased, and bade me seek
In motives pure, and guileless mind,
For every woe a balm to find.
Led by thy hand my feather'd hours,
Enwreath'd with fancy's blooming flow'rs,
Time's progress check'd with frolic play,
And “gaily trifled life away;”
Reviv'd the chaplet on my brow,
Unchill'd indeed by age's snow,
By disappointment's blast was wither'd,
And hush'd the song of syren ease,
And wak'd each latent wish to please,
And many a harmless joy bestow'd
Which from no source but thine e'er flow'd;
Yet oh! for all thou'st done for me
I've nothing, Health, to offer thee,
For all thy joys and all thy blisses,
But such—an idle song as this is.
FRAGMENT XLII. EFFUSION.
Qu'ne souvenir funesti
Qui me les convertit a toute héurs in tourments.”
I
Return, ye fairy dreams of promis'd joy,My youthful fancy's flatt'ring pencil drew,
Nor suffer time your visions to destroy,
Nor strike the bright tints from my raptur'd view.
II
Again, oh Hope! thy glowing prospects spread,Restore thy scenes so distant and so fair;
Oh! be each thought by thee, sweet syren, led,
And drown in fancied bliss each real care.
III
For what can “flat reality” bestow,E'en when illum'd by fortune's brightest beam,
To compensate those joys that sweetly flow
From youthful Hope, and youthful fancy's dream?
FRAGMENT XLIII. CUPID TIPSY.
I
Fairer than Alpine sunless snowsWert thou, in thy primæval hour,
Eternal odour-breathing rose!
Queen of every lovely flow'r;
II
Till, upon a festive day,When the Loves with Hymen sported,
Revel'd wild in antic play,
And the brimming goblet courted,
III
An urchin wilder than the restTript in many a mazy ringlet,
The luscious grape insatiate prest,
And shook fresh odours from his winglet.
IV
While the bowl of nectar'd dewsTrembles in his nerveless clasp,
Thy modest form (sweet rose!) he views,
And reels, thy fragrant charms to grasp.
V
But reeling, spills the crimson tideWhich o'er thy tintless bosom flows;
And now that bosom's snowy pride
With love's own colouring warmly glows.
FRAGMENT XLIV. THE BRIDE.
What form celestial greets my sight,In such a panoply of light,
Whose robes of air so brightly flow,
Like sun-ting'd show'rs of feather'd snow?
Ah! 'tis the lovely queen of blisses,
Of melting sighs, and tender kisses!
Over the couch where Love reposes,
Softly lull'd on Hymen's breast,
His suff'rings hush'd, his cares at rest.
And whence that group, that elfin bevy,
That crowd the Hymeneal levy?
With antic sport and frolic leer,
What brings the urchin rabble here?
Ah! these are Venus' rosy boys,
Her tiny sports, and roguish joys;
These cunning loves and laughing wiles
Are thy sly brood, arch queen of smiles!
See how their shafts they idly shiver,
And empty every golden quiver,
And fling their pointless darts away;
For every dart has done its duty,
And conquer'd in the cause of beauty.
But whose soft sigh now meets my ear?
Whence is the melting plaint I hear?
Who comes, so like a drooping flow'r,
Whose fair head bends beneath the show'r
That sheds its tear from zephyr's wing,
And weeps amidst the smiles of spring?
It is the Bride! but say why flow
From eyes of bliss the dews of woe?
And art thou then so wondrous simple?
And seest thou not the roguish dimple
And mocks the tear that glitters there?
And know'st thou not these wiles but prove
The policy of timid love?
FRAGMENT XLV. WHIM.
V'e un incognita magia
Non si sa diavol sia!
Ma fa l'uomo, delivar.”
Gay soul of every piquante charm
That can the torpid senses warm,
Mistress of the Non sa che
Toute ensemble, sweet Naivité!
The pointed glance of meaning sly,
Flinging round with comic air
The shaft that wounds cold “wrinkled care;”
Thy brow with many a feather crown'd,
In many a different climate found,
Thy robe of every rainbow hue,
As bright, as gay, as changeful too;
Thy girdle by the graces wove,
And breath'd on by the queen of love;
Or gay or grave, still sure to please
With novel airs and playful ease;
Before th' enchantment of thine eye
Dull beauty's fair disciples fly;
Man worshipping variety,
Finds all its magic charms in thee.
When the spell of youth shall fade,
To touch the alter'd form and face
With thine own bewitching grace;
When time shall pale my life's fresh flow'r,
Oh give me then thy bizarre pow'r!
Let me, oh Whim! thy cestus wear,
And make the stupid many stare,
With gay caprice, and outré thought,
The petit pointe, the pun unsought,
The bon trovaté, tour d'expression,
And all that's in thine own possession;
Thus, thus the pow'r of age disarming,
Thus ever changing, ever charming.
FRAGMENT XLVII. THE BUTTERFLY.
Child of a sun-beam, airy minion,Whither points thy flutt'ring pinion?
Pinion dipt in rainbow hues,
Pinion gem'd with sparkling dews
Shed from many a weeping flower,
Bathed in matin's rosy shower;
Tell me why thy form so bland
Still eludes my eager hand?
Madly wild, and wildly free?
If freedom is thy life's best treasure,
Then get thee hence, gay child of pleasure,
From feudal tow'r and cloistral cell,
For freedom there did never dwell;
And I no more thy form will woo,
But pleas'd thy varied flight pursue;
And now upon a zephyr's sigh
Thou seem'st in languid trance to die,
Now flutt'ring wild, thy golden winglet
Sports in many a wanton ringlet,
Or soar'st to drink the sun's first gleam,
Or bask thee in the infant beam;
Then panting in thy heaven-snatcht glow,
I feel thee flutt'ring o'er my brow,
Each tear the hand of sorrow traces,
Or, as athwart my lip you fly,
Fan away the woe-born sigh,
Tear of sorrow, sigh of woe,
Early taught by fate to flow,
From an heart a stranger still
To nature's dearest, sweetest thrill;
Tear of sorrow, sigh of woe,
Ne'er given thee, happy thing, to know;
Thee, whose life a raptured minute
Bears an age of blisses in it;
Dawns, exists, and fades in pleasure.
Oh! insect of the painted wing,
I've watch'd thee from the morning's spring,
As idly lapt in soft repose
Midst the blushes of the rose,
The playful zephyr's balmy breath
Has wak'd thee from thy transient death,
Or the bee in tuneful numbers
Put to flight thy fragrant slumbers;
And as thy wings of varied hue
(Dipt in rose-embosom'd dew)
You flutt'ring imp and deftly try,
Still I follow, still you fly
Midst the lavish charms of Nature,
Thou her freest, gayest creature;
Now the tulip's changeful dye,
Now the rose's orient glow,
Now the lily's tintless snow,
Woo and win thy brief caress,
Alternate pall, alternate bless,
Till the summer's glow is o'er,
Till her beauties bloom no more,
Then the flow'r whose fragrant sigh
Survives her warmly blushing dye,
Lures thee to an heaven of rest
On her pale but od'rous breast,
And amidst her balmy treasures
Thou diest in th' excess of pleasures.
Oh happy careless thing! could I
But live like thee, but like thee die,
My life of bliss, in blissful death,
I'd envy not th' extended span,
The patriarchal day of man.
For him let time's protracting pow'rs
Still spare existence' drooping flow'rs,
And wreaths of joyless years entwine,
But oh! one raptured hour be mine.
This fragment has already appeared in the Novice of St. Dominick, and the above lines are an allusion to the destiny of the heroine.
FRAGMENT XLVIII. VENUS AND CUPID.
As Love's delightful mother prestThe sportive urchin to her breast,
And he, like other idle boys,
Play'd with her trinkets and her toys,
Or teaz'd his younger brother loves;
“Come, tell me,” cries the queen of charms,
“Why hast thou never turn'd thine arms
Against the sage Minerva's heart?
Does she defy thy potent art?”
“'Tis true,” abash'd her son replies,
“A single glance from wisdom's eyes
Can all my best resolves destroy,
And quite repels thy daring boy,
As often as he strives to plunder
The heart of that same vestal wonder;
And sure the snakes that twine her crest,
The gorgon head that shields her breast,
Might well an infant soul dismay,
And chase a timid child away.
(I swear ne'er dreaming ought of harm)
I strove in frolic play to scorch
Her owl's grey pinion with my torch,
And then (as though I did not fear her)
Flash'd my little flambeau near her;
When turning round, (her eyes on fire)
‘I swear,’ she cried, ‘by Jove my sire,
If thus again you venture near me,
To pieces, urchin, will I tear thee;
Dare but a single step advance,
I'll pierce thee, mischief! with my lance;
Raise but thy bow, and strait from heaven
To Tartarus shalt thou be driven.’
I took the hint, and from that hour
Ne'er threw myself in wisdom's pow'r.”
Awakes my timid Cupid's dread
More than the thunder-bolt of Jove,
Say, do the Muses frighten Love?”
“Oh no, mamma!” replies the elf,
“I love the Muses next thyself;
E'en I revere, with all my folly,
Their sweet voluptuous melancholy,
And oft I steal their groves among
To catch, unseen, their pensive song!”
Th' experienced mother archly smiles,
And cries, “Alas! with all thy wiles,
Thou'rt still a child; for where can Love
Unseen repose, unthought of, rove?
Thy faintest sigh that scents the air
Would still thy vicinage declare;
Well may the Muses' pensive song
Breathe the soul of melody,
Still sweetest breathed when breathed for thee;
For sure the song the soul holds dearest
Is sweetest breathed when Love is nearest.”
The lay of an Irish harp | ||