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Tasso and the Sisters

Tasso's Spirit: The Nuptials of Juno: The Skeletons: The Spirits of the Ocean. Poems, By Thomas Wade

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THE SPIRITS OF THE OCEAN:
 I. 
 II. 



THE SPIRITS OF THE OCEAN:

A POEM.

CANTO I.

The song—the song!—it was warbled by lips
Sweet as whatever the honey-bee sips—
And where?
By the Sea—by the Sea—for no region can be
So fit for a Spirit divine, as the Sea—
Play-ground of the winds, the limitless place
Where they love the white foam of the billows to chase—
'Twas there.
But the song—the song!—by a Spirit 'twas sung,
And these the wild notes o'er the waters that rung:
“Far distant strains of music sounded
Along the weltering Sea;
Old Ocean from his slumber bounded,
Swept forth the winds in glee:
The tempest-spirits shouted loud
And call'd their dull clouds from the deep;—
The clouds appear'd and threw their shroud
Across the moon, with dark'ning sweep.

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The stars look'd mad, and shrunk behind
The black veil of the cloudy sky;
The thunder mingled with the wind,
And the wild lightning laugh'd on high:
And a vast meteor cleft the air,
Swiftly hurrying on its way,
Displaying by its sullen glare
The darkness it could not allay:
And music beautiful was flowing
Around the meteor, as it sped,
Until it paus'd and hover'd, glowing,
Bright o'er a rock's majestic head.
“Sing to the winds! Its light was shining
Over an infant Child asleep;
Nor could the winds and waves, combining,
Break on its placid slumbers deep.
Calm was its rest as the tears which lie
In eyes by young love lighted;
Still as the joy sweet sounds supply
To hearts by sorrow blighted;
Mute as the leaves of April gay
Lie, when the winds in caves repose;
As air, when o'er the sunny Day
The waves of Ocean gently close:
It slept upon its rugged pillow,
Among the sea-beat rocks,
And dampness, rising from the billow,
Bedew'd its auburn locks.
“Sing to the winds! That Infant slept,
More calm than other calm things are;
Nor heard the winds that round it swept,
Nor the fierce thunder's voice afar:

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But louder still than winds e'er blew
Was heard a voice of sadness;
O'er the wide Ocean Spirits flew,
And lash'd the waves to madness:—
Both long and loud the voice of woe,
And deep the silence that ensued;—
The winds awhile forgot to blow,
Awhile the billows were subdued:
But soon they re-assum'd their wrath,
And that sad voice broke forth again,
And thro' the Ocean's watery path
Pass'd a white steed with flowing mane.
And on his back the Courser bore
A Master of immortal race;—
A Spirit of the Sea, who wore
Eternal sorrow on his face.
“Sing to the winds! The snorting steed
Dash'd thro' the waves with fiery speed;—
And where he came they roll'd aside,
As if he ruled their raging tide:
He neigh'd in answer to their roar;
He shook his mane—they foam'd the more.
And proudly now the steed drew on
To where the burning meteor shone;
The rock was gain'd, submissive grown,
The Steed his graceful neck bent down,
His mane upon the billows spread
And let them idly lave his head.
The Master spoke a magic word—
By ministers unseen 'twas heard,
And airy forms of Sprites, that dwell
On rocks and plains invisible,

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Throng'd o'er the Infant, without number,
To watch him waking from his slumber:
He woke—and stretch'd his little hands
Unto those gay, fantastic bands,
Who gently rais'd him in their arms,
Delighted with his infant charms,
And, with songs of sweetest mirth,
Slowly bore him from the earth;
The spreading meteor o'er the whole
In semblance of a halo stole,
As if the Moon, in darkness hid,
In kind concern had deign'd to bid
The wondrous ring which oft around
Her pathway in the skies is found
To circle that melodious throng
And light them in their course along.
“Sing to the winds! The meteor's ray
And the gay Sprites have pass'd away;
The Steed dash'd onward as before,
And still his gloomy Master bore,
Beneath whose eye and on whose breast
The Infant was again at rest,
Unheeding in its tranquil sleep
Of the loud tumult of the Deep.
“As the weapon of the quiver,
When flying from the bow;
As a light bark down a river,
Whose waters briskly flow;
As a bird that seeks the dwelling
Where its little ones repose;
As a torrent, quickly swelling,
Foaming down a mountain goes:—

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So swiftly dash'd the milk-white Steed
Thro' the wide waters in his speed,
Until he reached the distant wave
From whence he first had risen,
Then a loud snort the Courser gave
And sought his former prison—
Down—down he sank—the waters wild
Clos'd o'er the Spirit, Steed and Child.
“And oft the Dwellers of Ocean sung
To that sweet Boy,—
And he would listen and lend his tongue
To words of joy.
In sparkling caves,
Beneath the waves,
They laid him among the gems of the Sea—
And saw him smile
And look the while
More lovely than ever a gem could be.
“Sing to the winds! That Infant now
Hath manhood written on his brow;
And darker tints o'erspread his hair;
His eyes are dark—his forehead fair;—
And he hath gather'd from his Sire
A Spirit's might, a Spirit's fire,
And knowledge of all things that live
Beyond what mortal lips can give:
He reads the language which the skies
Display before unearthly eyes,
And all the mysteries that dwell
On Earth, or in the Ocean's cell.

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Sing to the winds! the Spirit's Child
Is, as his Father, skill'd and wild.”
Such was the song.—But whose the tongue
From which the varied music sprung?
The voice was a Spirit's—but not of the sky;
Nor of grotto, nor vale where merry ouphes lie:
She dwelt not on mountain, she dwelt not in wood,
Nor in murmuring rill, nor in river's bright flood:—
Oh! where to that Spirit of beauty was given
A dwelling, if neither on Earth, nor in Heaven?
She dwelt in the glittering caves of the Deep,
And oft on the foam of the billows would sleep,—
And the billows she slept on appear'd, as they roll'd,
Like the clouds of the air, when all border'd with gold—
She dwelt in the Ocean—a Spirit as bright
As ever yet smil'd in the regions of light.
Scarce had the Spirit clos'd her song,
When from the waters rose a sound,
And words mysterious flow'd along
The billows as they wander'd round:—
And, at the words, a rush of wings,
Loud as the voice of countless springs
On pebbles playing,
Past o'er the Sea, and heavenly sighs,
With tears, cast down from unseen eyes,
Thro' air were straying.
Then a faint splash spread far and wide
O'er all the bosom of the tide;—
Like that we hear by rural pool.
Whene'er across its waters cool

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Glad birds their way are winging;
Now all disporting in a ring,
Now dipping in the pool their wing,
And now again upspringing.
Ye marvel, perchance, why so swiftly flew
Such numberless wings at the words that were said?
Oh! well the sad Spirits of Ocean knew
'Twas lowly to worship a young Maiden dead:—
And all that had stray'd
From their watery dwelling—
On mountain-tops laid,
Or the black clouds compelling;
On the winds mounted high,
In forest shade sleeping;
Or on tall trees that sigh
Their wakeful couch keeping,—
Their revels destroy'd and their sweet slumber broken,—
All swiftly return'd as those wild words were spoken.
And deeply, deeply down the Sea
They hurried onward mournfully:—
They past o'er cities which the wave
Had folded in its boundless grave,
And look'd on many a lonely hall
That once rang loud with festival,
And chambers, now in ruins sunk,
Where Beauty smil'd and Love grew drunk:
They saw the sea-horse in his lair,
Nor broke upon his slumbers there;
They past the Monster of the Water,
Whilst resting from his work of slaughter;

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Leviathans they mark'd reposing;
They saw the eyes of dolphins closing,
And view'd each lesser tribe that dwells
In Ocean, sleeping in its cells;—
From its fierce lords a moment free—
Those Tyrants of the billow'd Sea.
A palace stands bright
On the wide waters' bed,
Enveloped in light
From ten thousand gems shed:
Its roof is of pearl,
With rare diamonds bestrown,
And coral-wreaths curl
Round its pillars of stone,
More precious than yet
Ever shone 'neath the eyes
Of Beauty, and set
With the ruby's bright dies:
Each cornice and frieze
Is with silver bedight;
Its architraves please
With their porphyry bright:
Of gold is its base,
And its portals display
More charms than the face
Of the sunniest day;—
For on them are trac'd
Forms, of wild love that tell,
In bright purple, rais'd
From the murex' small shell;

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In red tints that come
From the Insects of Ind,
Whose dwelling and tomb
Is the thick web they wind;
In yellow and blue,
Intermingled with green,
And ev'ry bright hue
'Neath the vast billows seen.
 

“The Gum-Lucca (used in dyeing red) is produced by a very minute insect, which fixes itself on the juicy ends of the branches of particular trees, and is glued to the spot where it settles by a clear thick liquid which exudes from its body, the gradual accumulation of which forms it a complete cell, which becomes its tomb and the birth-place of its young.” Vide Robertson's India.

Here slumbers in a dreamful sleep
A Goddess of some fountain deep;
Whilst o'er her gleams a mortal eye,
Enchanted with her symmetry!
Above, a Giant-form appears,
His furrow'd cheek bedew'd with tears;—
And in his eye a mighty grief
Sits, as disdainful of relief.
A young girl, as the lily pale
That whitens in the midnight gale
The glorious moon beneath,
Hangs on his breast and strives to calm
His spirit by that nameless charm
Which, breath'd from woman's eye and voice,
Might make the dying heart rejoice
And worship even in death!

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Far to the right are sylphs, adorning
Their hair with golden flowers,—
Fresh as the blossoms of the Morning,
When dew-drops greet the hours:
And children are disporting round
A lake, where white swans live,
And seem as listening to the sound
Its sparkling waters give.
These, and the charms of mountain, lea,
Of valley, wave and lawn,
Deck those bright portals of the sea,
In radiant colors drawn:—
A Spirit's cunning each display'd—
A Spirit's hand their beauty made.
Hark! a melancholy song
Thro' the water flows along,
Warbled by Sprites that stand before
The Ocean-palace' glittering door:—
The notes are wild and sad the strain,
And this the music of the main:
“Maiden! Maiden!—thou wast fair
As is the light
That revels bright
Within the stars, when all alone
They commune on Night's ebon throne,
Nor sun, nor moon is there.
“Maiden! Maiden!—when the Moon
Rolls full and high
Along the sky,
A blue flame round her orb doth cling;
But thy young eyes outshone that ring,
And faded, ah! as soon.

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“Maiden! Maiden!—flutes by night,
When heard afar
Beneath each star,
Sound soft and sweet and beautiful;—
But thy young voice could sooner lull,
And was as gayly light.
“Maiden! Maiden!—thy young face
Once wore the dress
Of loveliness;
But youth, nor beauty decks thee now,
For cold is thine unrivall'd brow
And faded all thy grace.
“Maiden! Maiden!—Spirits kneel
In grief to thee,
Beneath the Sea;
And as the waters o'er them swell,
Their radiant tears in silence tell
The thousand woes they feel.”
Such were the mournful words that flow'd
From lips divinely rare,
As round the dome those Spirits stood,
And watch'd its portals fair;
Which, as the plaintive song was sung,
Apart were slowly, gently swung;
And, as they oped, their hinges threw
Strange music on the waters blue,
Which join'd its altering notes to those
That from the throng of Spirits rose:—
One sound would speak of hope betray'd,
The next of beauty's bloom decay'd;

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And then a note would rise that told
Of passion wreck'd and love grown cold,
And as it floated on the tide
Each mournful Spirit deeply sigh'd:
Anon, the music in its strain
Told of despair's undying pain,
Of youth and glory doom'd to die,
And heave the wild and bitter sigh
Of Hope's expiring agony:
Then chang'd the notes that told of madness
To those more gentle and less wild,
Warbling of sorrow's speechless sadness,
Of feelings desolate, yet mild;—
But tho' the music varied ever
In each melodious flow,
It told of joy's bland tumults never—
Its sounds were all of woe:—
Tho' loud they rise, tho' gently fall,
A note of sadness runs thro' all.
Widely apart the portals spread,
Whose hinges now no longer shed
Their music on the murmuring Sea,
As wild as music e'er may be;—
But all was stillness, and a light,
Dim as the hues that herald night,
(Those tints crepuscular, obscure
Which to mute thought the gazer lure)
Within, without its shade o'ercast,
And o'er the Ocean's bosom past,—
And all was stirless as the flowers
Of Flora's most sequestered bowers.
Wide ope the portals—Who, with brow
Betokening an undying woe,

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Sits there in silence and in gloom,
Aye musing on his changeless doom?
'Tis he—the Rider of the Steed,
The ruler of his fiery speed:
He sits upon a lofty seat,
With countless gems beneath his feet;
Within his eye and o'er his face
As dark a sorrow still hath place
As when he past along the Deep
To wake the Infant from its sleep,
And bore the smiling babe away
Far, far beneath the Ocean-spray.
—And who is he that near him stands,
Attendant on his mute commands,
With eyes that hold as wild a glow
As lightning on the sky can throw,—
With glossy hair, and lips, whose form
Tell that their owner's soul is warm?—
'Tis he—the Child, who late was borne
Along the mighty Ocean's track,
From summit of tall rock forlorn,
Upon the milk-white Courser's back;—
Now waxed to that tumultuous age,
When Passion opes her burning page,
Bids reckless Youth its words admire
And catch a portion of their fire.
As oft upon a Winter's-night
The heavens are black—the stars are bright,—
Tho' dark his eye and dark the hues
That o'er his face their shade transfuse,
Within, within there lurks a spirit
Which oft doth mirthful mood inherit,

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Stealing across each wilder throb
Of passion, that hath power to rob
The bosom of its joyous dress,
And turn it to a wilderness.
But who is the Maiden that sits in the hall
Of that Palace of Ocean, the palest of all?
Without motion, or life, and appearing alone
Some statue cut out from a half-livid stone?
Without or a smile, or a beauty to cheer?
Whence came she? await, and ye quickly shall hear,
On an emerald throne, drest in glittering state
And by splendor surrounded, that dead Maiden sate:
Her pale brow was adorn'd with a crown of pure gold,
Where the ruby and topaz were seen to unfold
Their beautiful glories, whose radiance might vie
With the colors of earth—the rich tints of the sky,
When the Lord of the Daylight is hiding his car
In the breast of the waters wild, flowing afar:
A necklace of amber, as bright as was ever
By the Heliads shed over stream of a river,
Glow'd on her shrunk bosom and rendered its chill,
Fix'd paleness sepulchral more death-seeming still,
As flowers that are dying more desolate seem
When fresh verdure round them in beauty doth gleam.
A robe of light azure encircled each limb,
Which made her dull eyes look more ghastly and dim;
And rings of rare price from her withering finger
Seem'd falling, as if all unwilling to linger
Where tints of young blood to their brightness could add
No beauty, and where e'en their splendor look'd sad:
But still o'er her eyes and her face and her neck
Of loveliness rare might be traced the pale wreck,

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And the hair that escap'd from her glittering crown,
And far as the gem-cover'd pavement flow'd down,
Still kept its rich colors, all glossy and bright,
O'ersprinkled with ringlets, divine to the sight:—
It seem'd as if Death from his whole prey forbore
To make the half-ruin his horrors shew more;
Or else, ere the work of destruction was done,
The Tyrant bewail'd at the ruin begun;—
Then suddenly ceas'd the fair form to devour,
And left it a mark of his pity and power!
The word was spoken—to the ground
Each Spirit that stood weeping round
Bent sorrowful and slow:
Again arose that music wild,
And lowly down the Master's Child
Inclin'd his lofty brow;
Whilst the sad Parent, speechless, gaz'd
On eyes that could no more be rais'd;—
And as he looked, a long-drawn sigh
Betray'd his bosom's agony,—
To think the faded form he view'd
Was once with loveliness endued,
Whose coral lip and azure eye
Could make the rudest gazer sigh;—
To think that she, who, when the moon
Made night more beautiful than noon,
So lov'd to mark its radiance fair
And watch her rival of the air,
Whilst ever flow'd the notes along
Of Fancy's wildly-warbled song,
To think that lov'd and loveliest maid,
So oft upon his bosom laid,

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Who seem'd commission'd from the skies
To bear to Earth a Paradise,—
Like rainbows should have past away,—
As beautiful, but frail as they!
Oh, Woman! mortal as thou art,
Supreme thy triumph o'er the heart!
Thine eye and cheek and magic lip
(Where bees might well their honey sip)
Make man forget his soul was given
To worship a far different Heaven:—
Nor Man alone—for we are told,
In Chronicles of days of old
And many a Bard's romantic story,
That Gods have left their seats of glory
And scoff'd at Heaven's immortal rest,
To languish on a Maiden's breast:—
And wisely scoff'd—for earth, nor sky
Hath charms that may with woman's vie,
When beauty brightens o'er her form
And youth makes all her feelings warm!
Return, my Muse!—The Spirits knelt,
But worshipp'd not with praise, or pray'r;
Sad sighs and tears told all they felt,
And silence—near akin to care:—
And all look'd sorrowful—save one—
'Twas he-the Master's only Son:
Tho' long and low he stoop'd beneath
The crown which deck'd a brow of death,
There was a laughter in his eye,
Wild as the stars thro' heaven that fly,

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Showing strange thoughts, and plainly telling
With love, with love his heart was swelling;—
And, whilst he humbly bent the knee
To that pale Maiden of the Sea,
A smile upon his kindling cheek,
(For smiles can eloquently speak)
Told that, altho' his form inclin'd
In worship there, his chainless mind
Had taken to her wings divine,
And bow'd before a lovelier shrine.
Then rose a Spirit, at a bound,
From off the pearl-besprinkled ground,
(Pearls that made the earth appear
Beauteous as a mirror clear!)
And, with her tresses, swept away
The tears that on her eyelids lay;
With voice harmonious silence broke,
And these the gentle words she spoke:
“Spirits of Ocean's boundless Realm!
Whose glories the blue waves o'erwhelm;—
Sisters of the murmuring Deep!
Where ye, do your revels keep,
Let my words anew destroy
Thoughts of pleasure, dreams of joy;
Nor haste to gambol o'er the waves,
But mourn within your Ocean-caves!—
And do not smile, oh! Offspring young,
From sire immortal proudly sprung;
But let my tale thy sorrows move,
And learn that it is grief to love:—

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Tho' bright the Sun—his fierce beam kills,
And love is death, howe'er it thrills!
“The thistle's down now decks the plain,
And now upon the winds is riding;
Now to the earth 'tis dash'd again,
And now again thro' air is gliding:—
And thus, by turns, I fall and rise,—
Now touch the earth, and now the skies;
This moment—and the air's my dwelling,
With all the winds around me swelling;
Another—and I'm downward driven
Swifter than ever light from heaven:—
And over land and over sea
I oft do hurry joyfull,
To gaze on all that beauteous is
And smile on Lovers as they kiss;
And I have watch'd o'er forms as bright
As stars that sleep on lap of Night,
With eyes to charm, with lips to bless,
And radiant with loveliness;
But never saw I one so fair
As she who sits a ruin there;—
Tho' thousands were divine and tall,
Young Zora look'd the Queen of all!
“And the Spirit supreme—the proud Lord of the Ocean
Bent down to that Maiden in lowly devotion,—
As the green laurel bows to the bright Sun for ever,
And tires of its undying worshipping never.
Full oft when the young Morn came smiling in light,
And earth and the air were all beauteous and bright;
When glad birds exulting rose high on the wing
To welcome the coming delicious of Spring,

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Whose meekly-eyed flowers were around seen to rise
And breathe all their sweets to the unclouded skies;
When the Sun hurried forth and array'd in his beams
Each hill and each vale, with their murmuring streams;
Kiss'd Ocean's calm billows, as gayly they roll'd,
And turn'd, as enamour'd, their white foam to gold;
When the amorous winds were careering in air,
And robbing the flowers of their fragrancy rare,
And glad Nature, smiling, o'er Heav'n and o'er Earth
Threw her garment of beauty, her sounds of sweet mirth;—
I have seen the proud Spirit that young Maiden greet,
And defraud her red lips of long kisses most sweet.
“And oft they wander'd, side by side,
On Earth and 'neath the waters wide;
And the great Spirit's Courser bore
His lov'd one, thro' the billow's roar,
Unto the Ocean-palace, gleaming
With mimic stars for ever beaming;
And where she now looks cold and pale,—
A ruin for perpetual wail—
I've seen her smile in garments proud,
And paid her homage warm and loud:—
Then to the earth the Steed again
Would bear her fearless o'er the main;—
(For the wild waves ne'er dar'd to harm
The form that could their Ruler charm)
And as she press'd his snow-like back,
And gently grasp'd his bridle slack,
Beauteous she look'd as Dian's car,
When thron'd on stainless clouds afar.
“Weep, Spirits! weep.—Ah, me! that death
Should rob the fairest form of breath!

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That all must sicken, all must die
That lingers in mortality!
The happy birds, with all their songs,
Must fall and sing no more;
The glittering waters sportive throngs
Must moulder on the shore;
The rural things of grove and field
Their beauty to decay must yield,
And the gay dress of hill and vale
Must wither in the wintry gale:—
For all must sicken, all must die
That lingers in mortality!
And even she, upon whose breast
A glorious Spirit lov'd to rest,
Expir'd in all her matchless bloom,
And cloth'd a Spirit's soul in gloom.
Her charms decay'd not one by one,
Till youth and beauty all were done;
No wrinkle ever cleft her cheek,
Nor tints of grey were seen to streak
The brightness of her glossy hair:
In youth, in bloom the Maiden died,
And the last breath her sweet lips sigh'd
Was breath'd from form as ever fair.
“Oh! weep, Spirits, weep—'Twas the burial night
Of that beauty of earth, and no stars lent their light
To the dome of the sky; but a mantle was there
Right fit to o'ershadow a scene of despair:
It seem'd that the Heav'ns had been robb'd of their mirth
By the woe that o'erclouded a portion of earth,

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And that all the bright stars from their thrones had been taken,—
The blue field of their wand'rings destroyed and forsaken,—
That they might not profane, by their revelry glad,
A midnight so solemn, a moment so sad,
When the pale wreck of beauty was brought to the grave,—
Of beauty belov'd by the Lord of the Wave.
'Twas the burial night:—and the silence around
Was broken alone by a sorrowful sound:
That sound was the wailing of those who pursued
The path that led on to the burial grove;
That wailing arose from the mourners who view'd
The corse of that Maiden of beauty and love.
“And a reverend form, with hoary beard,
The first of the sorrowful throng appear'd;
And behind him there follow'd a matron old,
The pangs of whose bosom may never be told—
(Nor mortal, nor spirit can ever reveal
The woes that a Mother made childless doth feel.)
And then came on four Ethiops tall,
With gloomy eye and forehead stern;
One slowly bore the burial pall,
Another held the burial urn:
And two, on swarthy shoulders, bore
Dead Zora to her funeral pile;
Slowly they follow'd those before,
Nor spoke one mournful word the while.
The bier of the Maiden with white was spread,—
A cushion of white lay under her head;—

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And fair flowers around her were scatter'd and dying,
As if sad and unwilling to bloom
Whilst they on the death-bier of Beauty were lying
And perfuming the way to her tomb.
Behind the bier four maidens came;—
Each maiden bore a torch's flame,
Which all around its red beams threw
And gave the mournful throng to view.
And lastly came a beauteous crowd
Of children, that were weeping loud;—
Their laps were fill'd with herb and flower,
Which round their little fingers cast;
And ceaseless fell the fragrant shower,
As slowly on the funeral past.
“'Twas the burial night. The mourners stood
Around a pile of leafless wood:
The Ethiops twain
Had gently lain
The Maiden on its summit high;
And he the pall of death that bore
With careful hand had spread it o'er
Her pallid cheek and rayless eye:
A grave, as deep
As ever sleep
Eternal of still death requires,
Display'd its cavern dark and wide
Beneath the pile, and by its side
The urn of gold
Was plac'd, to hold
The ashes of the funeral fires.
“The deep grave is ope—the bright urn is there;
Around the tall pile the red torches glare:—

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A moment hath past—and the pile is on fire,
And swiftly the wild flames mount higher and higher;
They triumph, they rage, as they soar to their prey,
And the sparks they give forth make the darkness look gay.—
I hover'd above, and I hark'd to their sound,
And I sigh'd as they revell'd the dead Maiden round;—
Burning on, burning fiercely, disdaining control,—
For I thought on despair, when it withers the soul!
“Hark!—a voice sublime and strange
Assails each unexpecting ear;
Its words are wild—but soon they change
To those that it is grief to hear:
The flamen signs him with a sign,
Which he devoutly deems divine;
The children's rosy cheeks turn white;
The maidens tremble with affright;
The Ethiops four their dark eyes raise,
And wond'ring on each other gaze,
Whilst e'en the matron stays her grief
To ponder on those accents brief:—
All marvel whence those sounds could flow
That broke the dreary silence so.
“By the light that shone
In his fiery eye;
By the mournful tone
Of his frequent sigh;
By the gloom of his brow,
As I saw him in air;
By the fetterless flow
Of his dark-waving hair;

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By a word and a name
From his pale lips that came;—
I knew, I knew that the Spirit sublime
Had swiftly come, in his own good time,
From Ocean's realms and from Ocean's spray
To bear his lifeless young bride away.—
“Away—away.—The pile burnt on,
But she for whom 'twas rais'd was gone;
The Spirit had resum'd his own,
And ta'en her to his Ocean-throne.
Away-away:—but, as he went,
A signal thro' the air was sent:
I left the mourners far behind,
And rode upon the angry wind—
Which, in its music, seem'd to tell
It lov'd a starless midnight well;—
And all the spirits that reside
And sport upon its pinions wide
Held converse with me on my path,
And whisper'd of the tempest's wrath
Which then was arming in the west,
To rob the air and sea of rest;
To fill the heavens with wild emotion,
And rouse the madness of the Ocean.
I left the Spirits to their mirth,
And lightly stept upon the earth;—
I hurried on, and swiftly trod
O'er flowery path and verdant sod,
And came at length to where repos'd
The Child of Mortal and Immortal;
With eager hand I soon unclos'd
The stately mansion's graceful portal,

79

And guardian pinions gently kept
Above the Infant as it slept.
“And, oh! 'twas excellent to view
The slumbers of that blooming boy:
A smile that o'er his features grew
Betoken'd a pure dream of joy;
His little hand he rais'd on high,
As if some painted flow'r were nigh
That charm'd his infant sight,
The which he fondly sought to gain,
To tear its rosy leaves in twain
And spoil its beauty bright.
And those who gaz'd upon his face
Might fain have deem'd some sprite of air
Had left her own, her native place
And turn'd her into childhood fair,
To prove how passing sweet the gleams
Of Fancy in an Infant's dreams.
“The hour was come:—with gentle hand,
I blithely rais'd the Infant bland;
Thro' the wide air delighted sped,
And laid it on a tall rock's head—
Then hied away. The Ocean's roar
Hath mingled with my song before.”
The song was sung—And who was she
That warbled so melodiously?
My favorite Spirit—she who sung
Of strains across the waves that rung;
Of Courser proud, and how the Child
Was borne across the waters wild;—

80

Then sought the Deep. The Ocean's roar
Had mingled with her song before.
The song was sung: the Sprite again
To worship with the rest return'd:—
Rose the great Master's offspring then,
And all his face with fancy burn'd:
His cheeks were flush'd, his eyes were fill'd
With light that love alone can give;
His beating heart with feelings thrill'd
That only rise where love doth live:
He smil'd on all, and with a voice
That made each beauteous breast rejoice—
That every Sprite of woe beguil'd,
Thus Reumon spoke—the Spirit's Child:
“'Twas motion all. The restless Deep
Roll'd onward, as it ne'er could sleep;—
Each billow, with a rushing sound,
Hied towards the blue horizon round,
As if it deem'd 'twas some sweet home
Wherein it might forget to roam,
And there in blissful quiet lie
Upon the bosom of the sky.
The winds had left their tranquil slumbers,
And hurried forth in all their numbers,
Making the peaceful air unstill
And gliding o'er the earth at will;—
They stirr'd the grass of every plain,
Now sunk awhile—then rose again;
Above, around their influence cast
And mov'd the green leaves as they past,
And humble grove and forest proud
Right lowly in their presence bow'd.

81

Bright streams rejoic'd, and many a fountain
Was sparkling down from every mountain;
And beauteous lake and stately river
Were rippling onward, as for ever.
The Sun was striding on his way,
Surrounded by a mantle gay
Of gaudy clouds, that rose and died
Alternate by his radiant side:
The Moon at distance mov'd along,
Paler than ever, and the throng
Of hidden stars were dancing thro'
The bright, etherial fields of blue,—
All anxious for the sun-set hour,
When they regain their native pow'r,
And strive to make the reign of Night
As the proud Day's divine and bright:
And living things upon the earth
Were gambolling in their wildest mirth;
And birds were sporting in the air
And warbling all their music there:
Across the rivers, o'er the Sea
Light skiffs were gliding merrily,
And ships, with every sail unfurl'd,
Pursued their way from world to world.
'Twas motion all:—the earth and Heaven
Seemed each to restless movemet given.
“And I along the shore was roaming,
To watch the boundless Ocean foaming;
To view the bright beams of the Sun
Exulting o'er the waters run,
And look on all the beauteous strife,
Of Nature, newly sprung to life

82

Beneath the rosy Morning's eye,
Wide opened in the eastern sky.
I wander'd by a river's brink,
Of beauty and of love to think;
But little deem'd I soon should prove
The power of beauty and of love,
And little thought I soon should view
Th' embodied charms my fancy drew:—
But view I did; for o'er the stream,
Careering in the solar beam,
A light skiff flew, whose silken sail
Right fondly held the passing gale,
As in a prison far more sweet
Than e'er retain'd its pinions fleet:
The oars were golden and the wave
Seem'd proud that things so fair should lave
Their beauty in its sparkling tide,
And glitter o'er its surface wide.
“But whose the form, so rare and young,
That o'er the painted vessel hung?
Whose the red lip, and eye, that shone
Bright as the stream it look'd upon?
Oh! could each fine and thrilling word
That e'er from Spirit's tongue was heard;
Could all the noble thoughts that spring
In minds of Poets as they sing;—
All—all in one mellifluous sound
Commingled be, by skill profound,
It could not tell the matchless grace
That sparkled on that maiden's face,
As o'er the stream the vessel past,
Driven onward by the playful blast.

83

“Fair Spirits! by your smiles I tell
That ye do guess the sequel well.—
Not far the bark had cut its way
Ere I ador'd that maiden gay,
And gather'd from her lips and brow
A passion that enchanteth now:
At once a mutual flame was caught,
The feelings into phrensy wrought,
And love and rapture fill'd the hours
In verdant groves and rosy bowers.
“Fair Spirits! by your smiles I see
That ye have guess'd my thoughts of glee;—
And, truly, whilst ye sadly paid
Deep homage to that lifeless maid,
And wept, right sorrowful, to trace
The paleness of her faded face,
Where beauty once appear'd divine,
Far merrier reveries were mine:—
For I was musing on the hour
When last with every beauteous flower
I deck'd my Laura's ringlets bright
—With violets blue and roses white;—
And prest her lip, and watch'd her eye,
And hearken'd to her gentle sigh;—
And rapture, love, a world of bliss
Were centred in one glowing kiss!
Rare thoughts, gay Spirits!—tho' the wreck
Of loveliness was nigh to check
My roving fancy;—tho' the Chief
Of the wild Waves was mute for grief,
And matchless eyes were wet the while,—
Despite of all, I could but smile:

84

Sweet flowers will show that Spring is near,
And smiles betray the thoughts that cheer.”
He spoke: and away, on the bright wings of hope,
Young Reumon hath passed from the dome of the Deep:
The worship is done; the gay portals are ope,
And forth from the palace the fair Spirits sweep;—
With smiles and with tears, thcy all hasten along,
And converse in the sweet notes of beautiful song;
They hie to their revels on earth, or in air,
And give to the light winds their minstrelsy rare.
But where is the Child of the Spirit supreme?
Where now doth his eye in its brilliancy beam?
Oh! wherever 'tis glancing in brightness around;
Wherever the tone of his deep voice may sound;
Wherever his light feet in ecstasy rove;—
'Tis sure by the side of his own lady Love.
But the Lord of the Deep? As the sorrowful willow,
Whose branches bend over some rivulet's bank
And love on its bright stream their verdure to pillow
Till their furthermost leaves become wither'd and dank,
Tho' the current should fail, tho' its freshness should die,
And its smooth bed forsaken all desolate lie,
Still reclines as before and as faithful as ever,
As tho' the lost stream had deserted it never:
The great Spirit thus o'er the dead Maiden hung
As fondly as when her rare beauties were young:—
Tho' the glow of her lip, tho' the bloom of her cheek
And her eyes, whose blue light could a wild language speak,

85

Were all faded and gone, still the sad Spirit lov'd,
Nor e'er from the side of the dead Maiden mov'd.
And still the fair Sprites of the far-foaming Sea
Would frequent abandon their revels of glee,
And 'mid sounds of strange music, right mournful, tho' sweet,
Would weep as they knelt at the dead Maiden's feet.
Enough of sighs, enough of tears:—
Bring me my favorite lyre that cheers!
Now vanish gloom and vanish sadness;—
Ye plaintive sounds! away, away:—
Give me the harp that speaks of gladness!
I die for a more cheerful lay.
But, as the light strings gayly move,
Still let their music breathe of love;—
Of love, sweet love and woman's eye
And beauty's bloom melodiously.—
Ye musings, hence! that mirth destroy;
I strike the chords that wake to joy!

87

CANTO II.

Oh, Heaven! how beauteous is the glow
Which Morning on thy front doth throw;
When sky and earth and air and sea
Breathe incense and divinity!
But far more beautiful the tint
Which Midnight on thy brow doth print;
When moon and stars, divinely fair,
Glitter in all their grandeur there,
And Earth beneath thy face lies spread,
Tranquil as thou art overhead!
The moon roll'd on, in cloudless glory,
Beneath a wilderness of blue,
And all along the mountains hoary
Flung a pale garb of silvery hue:
One little twinkling star, alone,
At distance in her pathway shone,

88

And smiling worlds, sublime as high,
Were scatter'd thro' the azure sky:
And as the bright Queen swept above,
(The image of continual love)
She seem'd a splendid mirror, sent
To charm the stars thro' which it went,
By holding out its bosom fair
For them to see their beauty there.
Nature had all her music hush'd,
Save the wide Ocean's ceaseless roar;
Whose foaming billows eager rush'd
To kiss the pebbles on its shore,
And dash'd against each lofty rock,
As tho' its adamant to mock.
So calm, so beautiful, so bright,
So full of sweetness was the night,
One could have almost wish'd that morn
Would ne'er again those skies adorn.
Oh! countless were the things divine
Which view'd the moon-beams round them shine;
But loveliest was a girl that laid
Within the brightness which they made
In sleep, as stirless and profound
As the o'erpow'ring silence round.
Her dark locks she had careless flung
O'er her fair arms unsullied white,
And ringlets on her forehead hung,
Nor hid its matchless beauty quite:
Tho' clos'd her eyes, the very lid
And the long lashes that conceal'd
Told how divine the orbs they hid,
The orbs themselves tho' not reveal'd;—

89

And those who gaz'd upon them clos'd,
Whilst the sweet Maid in bliss repos'd,
Might swear the lovely lights below
Were black as midnight's darkest brow,
But fill'd with living fire, that turn'd
All hearts to passion where it burn'd.
And next her lip—but wherefore strive
To sing the magic of her face?
The Painter's fancy ne'er could give
Such beauty to his forms of grace,
And least of all may tuneful verse
The story of her charms rehearse.
And slept the Maid alone?
Blush not, Beauty! thou wast born
For not an hour of life forlorn—
The heart's thine only throne!
And there thou reignst o'er smiles and tears—
Queen of a world of joys and fears,
That all around thee cling and hover
Till youth and love and all are over:—
No plaintive tone—away—away:—
A blessing on each Minstrel gay!
The Maiden's head was pillow'd on
The bosom of the Spirit's Son:
They were alone—and Reumon kept
His eyes on Laura, as she slept,
And prais'd the gentle pow'r that blest
His lov'd one with such peaceful rest.
And then he look'd around, above,
And commun'd with the stars on high:—
All things on earth did speak of love,
And all the air and all the sky:—

90

He rais'd his voice, and every word
By Spirits of the Deep was heard,—
And forth they came, and one and all,
Obedient to his powerful call;
And some did tune harmonious lyres,
As o'er the sleeping girl they hung,
And, as they lightly pressed the wires,
'Twas thus their answering sisters sung:
“There is light in the sky,
There is balm in the air,
And the still earth may vie
With the beauty that's there;—
And the Spirits of Ocean are roving afar,
From the depths of the Sea to the furthermost star.
Some have gone, on gay pinions,
To climes of the East,
In Arabia's dominions
On perfume to feast;
And some, sportive, are laid
On ice-cover'd rocks,
Where the Mermaidens braid
Their emerald locks:
Some are floating on Ocean;
Some laugh in the light
Of the Moon, whose proud motion
Ennobles the night:
Some move in the vale
To the music they play,
And then, on the gale,
Hurry blithely away;
Whilst we gayly watch over young Beauty's slumbers,
And warble with joy in our sweetest of numbers.

91

“Slumber, Maiden! Love is waking
To behold his Beauty rest;—
Blessing, kissing oft and breaking
Roses on thy cheek imprest.
“Slumber sweetly, Maiden young!
Spirits fair have o'er thee sung
Gayly, gayly,—and away
Hasten with the waves to play:—
Slumber, slumber all the night—
Maiden dear! thy dreams are bright.”
Thus sang the Spirits:—then advanc'd,
With gentle pace, a sister band,
Which round the sleeping Maiden danc'd,
With foot to foot and hand in hand:
Their garments in the moonlight gleam'd,
And brighter than that moonlight seem'd,
All radiant ever, and no shade
By their etherial forms was made;—
And difficult it were to trace
The outline of their form and face;—
And scarce could one that gaz'd declare
Which the fine Spirits, which the air.
They parted then, and each upheld
A thread that seem'd of moon-beams wrought;—
From the fair Moon's own breast impell'd
And by those beauteous Spirits caught;—
And then in mazy rounds they went,
Whilst music sweet divinely sounded;—
Now stood erect, to earth then bent,
Then up again in concord bounded,—

92

And still around their footsteps light
Was drawn the thread of moon-beams bright.—
Awhile they danc'd, awhile they sang,
And music soft harmonious rang
In sweet reply, and air and sea
Seem'd hallow'd by their minstrelsy.
“Away, gay Sprites! wild Reumon said:
At once the warbling Spirits fled;—
Their voice, their lyres were heard no more,
And all was silent as before.
The Maiden woke and vow'd that ne'er
Did vision so divine appear;
And gaily said that, as she slept,
A host of Spirits o'er her swept,
And sang beneath the virgin Moon
Unto their lyres melodious tune;
That others danc'd in beauteous guise,
Then vanish'd from her stedfast eyes:—
And Reumon smil'd—and fondly broke
With joyful lip her gentle speech;
Of love and pleasure wildly spoke,
And the rare tales that Poet's teach:—
And Laura listen'd to the voice
Of him she worshipp'd, and the eye
Of Bard did never so rejoice,—
In watching each bright sphere on high
And all the glories that take birth
From Ocean, or the wondrous Earth,—
As did that Maiden's, whilst she gaz'd
On Reumon, as her charms he prais'd,
Vowing that words of love were ne'er
Breath'd into lovelier maiden's ear.—

93

I said she worshipp'd—and her heart
To his was bound by fetters strong;
And words of his could e'er impart
More charms to her, than syren's song,
In days of old, to those whose oar
Approach'd Sicania's dang'rous shore.
'Tis sung the Hamadryades
Depended on their kindred trees;
With them to life did slowly spring,
Divine beyond imagining;
Bloom'd as they flourish'd, and decay'd
When their lov'd boughs in dust were laid:—
And even thus the Maiden young
On Reumon's love for being hung;
And youth and bloom would soon have died
Could aught have made that love subside.
Away!—it was an hour sublime,
When Joy shook hands with passing Time;
And light and love fill'd all the scene
O'er which the bright Moon roll'd the Queen.
The Lovers drank of Passion's cup,
And every feeling wild was up
High in the breast—and soul and sense
Were lost in bliss divine—intense!
Their pulse mov'd quick, their hearts beat high
In all Love's sweet variety;—
Hours swift away as moments flew,
And, one by one, the stars withdrew;—
Yet still on softer couch than down
Lay Reumon—
But ye quaintly frown!
Your stoic thoughts ye need not tell;
For I do know their tenor well.

94

Aye, frown, ye Grave!—let Wisdom's crowd
Rail against Love's bright self aloud,
And term him, o'er and o'er again,
A wild chimera of the brain;
Still will he reign, to charm the soul,
And all must yield to his control;—
And those who love are wiser far
Than all pale Mammon's votaries are—
For what were Earth, or Heaven above
Without the thoughts—the fire of love?
By Phœbus' lyre Megara's wall
Was render'd passing musical,—
And Love can bid a heart of stone
Assume a wild, impassion'd tone;
Each thought of gloom at once destroy,
And make the soul all feeling—joy!
Lo! again the Morning bright
Shines in her celestial height,
Smiling from eastern mountain's crest
On night, retiring to the west:—
Early sun-beams gleam around;
Sparkling dew-drops kiss the ground;—
And every branch of every tree
Gives token of returning glee.
The air grows warm, and now advance
The insects in their mazy dance;
The flowers assume a lovelier hue
And all their odors bland renew;
In deeper tints the skies are clad,
Enlight'ning all the waters glad,
And Earth and Heaven their charms display
In honor of the rising Day.

95

Still Reumon, by young Laura's side,
Ador'd his dear, unrivall'd bride;
Nor heeded time, nor light, nor space
In gazing on her peerless face;
But fondly linger'd near to mark
The changes of its beauty—Hark!
A trumpet's loud and deaf'ning clang,
Tumultuous, in the distance rang.
'Twas War's first note, announcing grief to come,
When tears should answer to the muffle-drum,
And Love's pale cheek be pillow'd on the sod
Where once her Warrior and her Hero trod,
Till the stroke fell and it became a grave
For hearts to bleed o'er and for tears to lave.
The trumpet blew—and, soon, from land to land
Past dauntless millions, arm'd with spear and brand;
And helm and cuirass gleam'd o'er many a field
From heads and bosoms that ne'er deign'd to yield:—
And haughty steeds, that shar'd their riders' lust
For blood and conquest, spurn'd the subject dust,
And neigh'd exultingly, whilst gun and sword
Did their base bidding at a Tyrant's word.
All Earth was terror:—streams of sable gore
Died the deep sands of each contested shore—
Whole cities blaz'd, and Ruin, far and wide,
Display'd the folly of Man's hell-sprung pride.
The beauty of the world was soon destroy'd,
And Nature's thrones became a blighted void;—
Where verdure laugh'd, and fields of dark'ning gold,
Beneath the pinions of the breezes, roll'd;
Where flow'rs look'd forth upon the tearful morn,
Drest in their colors bright and newly born;

96

Where streamlets sweetly murmur'd in the sun
And proudly seem'd 'mid scenes so fair to run;
—All, all grew desolate; nor could the ground
Supply with food the beasts that wander'd round;
But all in hunger made their piteous moan,
And the Earth satisfied the worm alone.
Wild grief shed burning tears:—where late the sire
Had seen his young hope, with an eye of fire,
Demand the strife sublime, was now a tomb,
O'er which the father mourn'd his offspring's doom.
Old matrons were made childless; beauteous eyes
Of girls upbraided the unpitying skies,
Or wept in resignation, till the cheek
Grew cold with thoughts that have no pow'r to speak.
Strife rose and spread, till every hill and plain
Groan'd with the loathsome weight of warriors slain,
And Death swept onward in his shadowy car
To feast triumphant at the heels of War!
If such the Madness, such the Guilt,
That gloried in the blood they spilt;
If quiet thus the land forsook,
And tumult held unbounded sway,—
Oh! well might Love and Beauty look
For happier climates far away,
Where peace and joy again might greet
The silence of their blest retreat,
And the glad hours in pleasure go,
Unruffled by one thought of woe.
Vile weeds will hide the clearest stream,
And dust obscure the greenest earth;
And mist will dim the brightest beam
That ever from the Moon had birth:—

97

And scenes of terror aye dispel
The dreams that round young Beauty dwell,
And woe and death can ever blight
The magic of Love's strange delight.
A land of bliss, a home of quiet,
Far from the world's unhallow'd riot;
Where earth is green and skies are clear,
And Nature's music greets the ear,
Thrown out from waters and from grove,
Is the sole spot that's fit for love.
—And such a sweet and peaceful clime,
(Replete with scenes and sounds sublime,)
Was that to which wild Reumon bore
The Maiden beautiful and young—
By mortal eyes ne'er hail'd before,
And never yet by Minstrel sung—
A land of love, a land of glee,
Right fit for Passion's ecstasy!
On the sea-shore the Maiden stood
And look'd upon the boundless flood,
Which, far as her bright eyes could trace,
Roll'd foaming, with majestic grace,
Deep—deep, around,
As if no bound
Were near to stop its glorious pace.
'Twas now the hour that Reumon vow'd
Should see his Love forsake the strand
Where war and tumult rang aloud,
To seek a fair and quiet land.
That hour had past:—her cheek grew pale
And strength and hope began to fail,—

98

For Reumon came not, and afar
The ceaseless din she heard of war,
Which nearer and yet nearer drew,
Until the warriors met her view—
Cloth'd all in strongly-tempered steel,
With plume to helm and spur to heel.
They mark'd her well, and paus'd awhile,
Delighted with a form so fair,
And then began to fawn and smile
And told her of her beauty rare:
She trembled—and ne'er yet did bird
Whose music in the air is heard,
When close pursued by hungry hawk,
So long for refuge safe and nigh,
Wherein his ravenous ire to balk
And right secure in covert lie,—
As Laura for her Reumon brave
To bear her o'er the bounding wave,
Far from the warriors fiercely stern
That round her murmur'd all in glee,
As pleas'd the terror to discern
Of Maid so passing fair as she,—
And every moment nearer came
To question of her home and name,
Looking, as they around her rang'd
And each with each fierce looks exchang'd,
Like fiends, whose very touch can blight,
Surrounding some fair form of light.
They came,—and one, with iron clasp,
Enclos'd her in his hated grasp:
She rais'd her voice:—“Oh, Reumon mine!
“If one kind thought of me be thine;—

99

“If love, if vows have ought to bind—
“Let thy rare Spirits mount the wind!”—
Listen, listen—music gay
Floats upon its airy way;
Golden pinions gleam afar,
Sparkling as with gem and star;
Swiftly, swiftly, sound and song
Come the charmed air along,
And Spirits six
Their voices mix,
Flying, flying as they sing
And a light bark with them bring,
With golden sails
And painted sides,
To kiss the gales
And greet the tides:
Falling, they upon the billow
Lay the bark, as 'twere a pillow
Fit for thing so beautiful;
Rosy garlands then they throw
On the nimble vessels prow,
And sweet flow'rs that fairies cull.
The Spirits warbled—whilst they sung
As from the earth young Reumon sprung,
High in the air a weapon whirl'd,
And to the dust the warriors hurl'd:—
Then gently clasp'd his Laura dear,
And bade her not to weep, or fear.
They left the ground:—the Sprites decay'd
Amid the music that they made,
And, onward by the breezes sent,
Away, away the light bark went.

100

The wondering Chieftains uprose from the plain,
And murmur'd of vengeance—the murmur was vain;
Nor the Maid, nor the Child of the Spirit shall stand
Again on those Warriors' desolate land:—
With a frown on his brow, each retir'd to his home,
To muse on new combat and glory to come.
Meanwhile o'er the tranquil sea
Past the light bark merrily:—
It cut the water with a speed,
Whose swiftness might all thought exceed;
Nor even left a fleeting track
Upon the billows' stately back,
Which mov'd unruffled still and fast,
As nought above their height had past.—
The light bark flew, nor ought controll'd
The tenor of its arrowy course,—
Swift as a leaf, when onward roll'd
By all the winds' tumultuous force;—
Its painted prow right gayly shone;—
Its sails upon the air were thrown;—
And such a thing minute and gay
It look'd upon its nimble way,
That those who from afar beheld
Its beauty o'er the billows glide,—
By heavenly hands unseen impell'd,
That mov'd around its glitt'ring side,—
Might deem 'twas e'en the Nautilus
Careering o'er the Ocean thus,
All haste to greet the Halcyon's nest,
Constructed on the water's breast,
Once more from travel to repose
And strive to sooth its lov'd-one's woes. —

101

“How merrily,” young Reumon said,
As on the painted vessel sped,
“Doth my brave bark its pathway trace
“Along the ruffled Ocean's face!—
“A thing more beautiful and swift
“Than ever the dark billows saw
“Across their swelling bosoms drift,
“Obedient to the steersman's law.
“My dark-eyed Love! 'twas made by Sprites
“That move thro' Ocean, as the lights
“Of Heaven on high—'twas made to sweep
“With my dear Beauty o'er the Deep,
“And bear her from an unblest soil,
“Where all was tumult and turmoil,
“Unto a bright and matchless Isle,
“That far across the waves doth smile,
“Array'd in loveliness divine—
“Fair Love! that Island home is mine:—
“I bade the Spirits who do dwell
“Within the Mermaid's coral cell
“Bedeck it all in loveliest guise,
“To charm my Laura's radiant eyes;—
“And they have made it almost vie
“With the rare glory of the sky,
“And fill'd it all with forms as fair
“As those that revel in the air,
“Or skim the sea, or haunt the shade,
“Of leafy grove and forest glade:
“But beauteous as those forms may be,
“Not one may e'er compare with thee,
“And the blest Isle will own a Queen
“Unrivall'd as its matchless scene!”

102

“How blissfully,” the Maiden said,
As swiftly on the light bark sped,
“Will pass the feather-footed hours
“In that fair Island's lovely bowers!
“How passing sweet 'twill be to list
“To all the sounds which there exist,
“In whisp'ring streams, that wind about
“O'er flow'ry vale and gentle hill;
“In strains, from every grove sent out
“By birds that love the woodland still,
“And, most of all, in song and tune
“Of Spirits, floating 'neath the moon!
“How sweet to wander, side by side,
“Along the banks of each bright tide;
“On verdant fields, that give to view
“Many a flow'rs imperial hue;
“To rest by moolight, in the grove,
“In slumbers, fill'd with dreams of love!
“Now hie thee on, my nimble bark!
“I long that Island fair to mark;—
“Too fast to such a beauteous scene
“Thou canst not bear its happy Queen.”
 

This is one of the many beautiful fables of the East, and the Halcyon and Nautilus are a pair of lovers that may almost vie with the Nightingale and the Rose.

And fast—and fast, with motion deft,
The bounding waves the vessel cleft;
And whilst it kept its rapid path,
They wail'd around it, as in wrath
That thing so slight, from coast to coast,
Should dare to brave their mingled host.
It flew, as it had wings and life
To bear it thro' the billows strife,—
And dash'd away along their foam,
As anxious to its bourn to come.

103

It flies—it flies: the Lovers reach
The happy Island's tranquil beach
And quit the vessel, which again
Glides swiftly o'er the weltering main:—
It bounds away, all life and light,
With speed of unimagin'd might;
The Lovers watch its rapid course
Along the murmuring waters hoarse,
Until it gains its native spray,
And, in the distance, fades away.
Then hied they from the glorious strand
And quickly pac'd its glitt'ring sand,
O'er which were scatter'd shell and gem,
Each fit to grace a diadem;
(A diadem work'd out to press
A brow of regal loveliness;)
Or, sparkling ever, hang to deck
The rarest maiden's blushing neck.—
They hasten'd on, and soon were met
By forms of heavenly mould;—
Forms that the eye may ne'er forget
If once it doth behold:
Their limbs were light; their eyes were blue;
Their cheeks were all of rosy hue,—
And veins of azure, small and bright,
Career'd along their bosoms white—
Rich as the sky, when partly seen
Thro' clouds of pure and snow-like sheen.
And those who gaz'd upon their tresses,
Responding to the winds' caresses,
Might deem they had received the kiss
Of Crathis and of Sybaris,

104

And, wash'd in either fountain fair,
Had gain'd their matchless colors there.
 

Fountains mentioned by Ovid (Met. xv. l. 315-16.) as possessing the wondrous property of adorning vulgar hair with the refined colors of amber and gold—thus:

“Crathis, et huic Sybaris nostris conterminus arvis,
“Electro similes faciunt, auroque capillos.”
And sweetest songs they merrily sung
To greet their Monarch aud Mistress young;
And round them joyfully danc'd along,
In concord with their heavenly song:—
“Oh! welcome, fair Maiden of distant earth,
“To beautiful scenes of passion and mirth:
“Oh! welcome, dear Maiden—approach and mark
“The land thou hast reach'd in thy glittering bark.”
And lightly on the Maiden mov'd
Beside the step of him she lov'd:
Thro' scenes of beauty they pursued
Their flowery way, and soon ascended
A mount, that in the Island stood
And almost with the bright clouds blended;
They paus'd upon its middle steep
And turn'd to gaze on all around,—
And scarce the Maid her sense could keep
For rapture at the sight she found:
For, far beneath, three vallies green
In all their verdant pride were seen,
Upon whose breasts sweet flow'rs arose,
As bright as e'er the Morning view'd
Beneath her glorious eye unclose
And smile upon the sun-beams rude,
That love to quit their native sky
On beds so beautiful to lie:

105

And odorous shrubs their incense shed
Upon the earth, and thro' the air
Such sweet perfumes unceasing spread,
One might have grown inebriate there
From scenting fragrancy so rare.—
Thro' each green valley's bright abode
Streamlets, for ever murmuring, flow'd,
Transparent as the light that lies
In wicked Beauty's dangerous eyes;
And o'er them hung each graceful tree
That loves beside the wave to be,
In morning dew all wet and dipp'd,
Which slowly from their branches dripp'd;—
And ere the drops the earth could print
They drank the passing sun-beam's tint,—
So that the gazing eye, deceiv'd,
Might, for a moment, have believ'd
The glittering boughs did doubtless throw
Bright amber on the ground below:
And, midst the herbage and the bloom
Of flowers, that mingled their perfume,
Wide branches forth did proudly shoot
Far distant from their native root,
All loaded with delicious fruit,
Of every die and every shape
That rich Pomona's children wear:—
Some scarcely from the leaves escape,
But slumber in their beauty there;
Whilst others boldly darken forth
And dare t' assert their matchless worth,
And look upon the flowers, that smile
Beneath them, on the green below,
As if they thought to prove the while
How deeplier beautiful their glow:

106

In other lands, in other climes
Fruits ripen at their several times;
But here together all display'd
Their hues, in gay confusion laid,
And yellow, purple, green and red
All—all at once shone overhead.
Beyond the vales fair hills appear'd
And gently up their foreheads rear'd:—
Some yellow all with flowery dress;
Others of darker loveliness;—
And some were crown'd by meeting trees,
From whose thick boughs the wild birds sung
Songs, whose melodious flow might please
The ear that heard their tuneful tongue
Much as the sound that waters give,
In falling ever, those who live
Where, on the scarcely-breathing Day,
The sun pours down his burning ray,
And parches all things with his beam,
Save the bright bosom of the stream.
Then round the mount young Laura past:—
At every step new glories greeted
Her sparkling eyes, and loud and fast
Her lips sweet words of joy repeated.—
And last she view'd a sloping plain
Sweep from the mountain to the main,
Whereon were sporting deer and fawn,
And timid sheep and young gazelle,
With every beast that loves to dwell
On flowery mead and grassy lawn.
Beyond the green and fertile wold
In majesty the Ocean roll'd,

107

By rocks that almost seem'd to pry
Into the wide, cerulean sky,
As fiery passion dares to trace
The beauty of a virgin's face:—
The waves roll'd on and mix'd their sound
With that which floated far around,
Harmoniously, from vale and hill—
Given out by glad bird's tuneful bill;—
And wave and bird their voice combine
With all the minstrelsy divine
Of heavenly song and heavenly lyre,
Resounding with their rarest fire,
To praise the Spirit's glorious child
And her he lov'd—the Maiden wild.
Such the blest Isle. And now the night
Comes in her starry garment bright,
And Reumon and his lov'd-one hie
Within their Island-home to lie,
And fall from passion's tumults deep
Into a long and quiet sleep.
'Twas in the centre of a grove,
Fit for the silent hours of love—
Its floor was laid with marble, stain'd
With colors in fantastic mode,
And carpets on the ground remain'd
That might have grac'd a God's abode—
All soft as down, and each gave way
At every passing footstep gay:
With radiant hues the ceilings glow'd,
And many a matchless figure show'd;—
Each trac'd by some impassion'd hand,
That could creation's power command,

108

And unto painted beauty give
The magic of the forms that live,—
And draw the Ocean, Earth and Sky
Divine as in reality.
By every glittering casement's side,
Rich tapestry hung flowing down,
And, doubling all the chambers pride,
Along the walls such Mirrors shone
As Beauty loves (nor doth she sin)
To see herself reflected in.
The Maiden strayed thro' room and hall,
And look'd delighted upon all:—
Then, full of pleasure, she reclin'd
On Reumon's breast her glowing cheek;
Recall'd each beauteous scene to mind
And strove her boundless joy to speak:
Whilst he replied to every word
That her enchanting lips preferr'd
In tones divine—and, as she spoke,
With kisses oft her accents broke:
He lov'd the varied charms to view
That rapture o'er her features threw,
And every moment nearer still
He clasp'd her to his heart, until,
By slumber's gentle power opprest,
She sunk within his arms to rest!
Then sounds arose:—the Sprites that kept
Their revels, as the Maiden slept,
And danc'd and sang, thro' all the grove,
The dance and song that Spirits love,

109

Tun'd all their lyres to gentle numbers
To sooth the happy Maiden's slumbers,
And as they notes harmonious play'd,
These the gay words their sweet lips said:
“Maiden of Earth! when the Nightingales tell
Tales of their sorrow in valley and dell,
We do love to mingle our music light
With the songs they pour on the ear of night;
But never before did we sing our tune
To Maiden reposing beneath the moon.
“Maiden of Earth! when the sportive winds sigh,
Sweetly beneath the pale stars of the sky,
We love to waken our songs divine,
And all their notes with the breeze combine;
But never before have we warbled a tune
To slumbering Maiden beneath the bright moon.
“And when streams in the ray of the moonlight are bounding,
And their music sublime is right merrily sounding,
We love to play on our minstrel-string
And in reply to the waters sing;
But never till now have fram'd a tune
For Maiden asleep beneath the moon.
“Fair Queen of our Island! 'tis fit for thee
In regions of pleasure like this to be:—
The young myrtle never could prosper yet
Wherever the climate is cold and wet,
And maidens should live in a land like this
To flourish in beauty, to revel in bliss.

110

“We have play'd to the sorrowful Nightingale's song;
We have warbled reply
To the winds of the sky,
And have sung to the stream as it bounded along;—
But never before have we fram'd a tune
For Maiden reposing beneath the moon.”
The music dies—the song is sung—
Their lyres away the Sprites have flung;—
They hasten from the grove's retreat,
And tread the earth with airy feet;
Hie to their beds of gentle rest,
Recumbent on the Island's breast,
And soon each joyful Sprite reposes
In beauty on a couch of roses.
And, my wild Muse! 'tis time for thee
To cease thy careless minstrelsy,
And hie to rest with Sprite and maid,
In slumber on their Island laid.—
Away to sleep,—or else thy song
May haply seem too wild and long;
For Critic stern doth little heed
Things that the bounds of truth exceed,
And names of Sprites the beauteous theme
At best a vain and idle dream,
Bred in the frenzied Poet's thought
And madly into music wrought—
The music of the tuneful verse
Which his impassion'd lips rehearse.—
Then furl thy wing—nor evermore
Of Spirits be thy artless lore;
Or, if such themes be still thy choice,
Sing with a less erratic voice!

111

Come, my wild Muse! from sky and land,
Wherein thou rov'st with magic wand,
That gives all things a blissful guise
Which meet thine ever wandering eyes—
Bless but a moment more my numbers,
And then resume thy fleeting slumbers,
Soon to awake, renew'd again,
And ponder on a loftier strain!
Oh! fast as sound the moments fly
When loving lips and eyes are nigh,—
And hours and years mov'd swiftly on
Within the Island's sunny clime,
Where joy and love for ever shone
Upon the tearless course of time:—
And the young Maid, as Spirits fair,
Still reign'd the peerless Beauty there;—
And he—the Ocean-Spirit's Child—
For ever on his lov'd-one smil'd,
And gave unto her wondering view
Things that till then no mortal knew;—
The mysteries of Sea and Heaven,
The language of their Dwellers bright—
All to her growing sense were given;
And songs by day and dreams by night,—
By Spirits sung, by Sprites inspir'd,—
For ever her young fancy fir'd.
Theirs was a love that could not die—
All free from Sorrow's tear, or sigh;
A feeling passionate, whose power
Alloy might never prove,—
But made their happy Island-bower
A Paradise of Love!

112

And, all alone, thro' grove and shade
Of foliage by each woodland glade,
They wander'd oft, when vanish'd Day
Left Night to her sublime array
Of stars, that love her brow to press—
Each one a world of loveliness!
And, frequent, when the moonlight pale
Smil'd radiance on the fragrant vale,
They lay in bliss divine and deep—
Lull'd by the songs of Sprites to sleep.
If such their love—oh! wonder not
That all beside they soon forgot;
Felt not a wish to change, or roam,
And never left their Island-home.
And would ye fain question where now is the dwelling
Of those of whose deeds my wild lay hath been telling?
Of the dead Maid that reign'd in the palace of Ocean?
Of the Spirit that lov'd—the proud Lord of the Deep?
Of the beautiful Sprites that have paid her devotion,
And oft have been seen in my strange song to weep?
If Reumon yet live—if his Laura yet smile,
All loveliness still, in their favorite Isle?
And where on the breast of the limitless Sea
That Island of beauty and verdure may be?—
—Oh! seek not wild Fancy's sweet dreams to dispel,
Nor strive the gay thoughts of the Poet to quell:—
From fable to truth, oh! how dull the transition—
—'Tis foolish to search for the things of a vision!