University of Virginia Library


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SONG OF ITALIAN MAIDENS.

1

Sisters, kneel beside this bier,
Breathe the prayer, and shed the tear—
Young Marcellus sleepeth here.

2

Young Marcellus sleeping lies,
With his slumber-sealéd eyes
Waiting God's great sun to rise—

3

Waiting to re-ope once more
On a sweeter summer shore
By the eternal water's roar.

4

Scatter round about his bed
Violets, ere their scent has fled,—
Winter roses white and red.

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5

Lay upon his gentle breast
All the flowers that he loved best—
Pansies be the mournfullest.

6

Though this bed has grown a bier,
Scatter snowdrops, scatter here
All the promise of the year:—

7

Being born to bloom and die
They perchance may typify
Him who here doth sleeping lie:

8

Since we love those flowers the best
That are plucked the earliest—
As it were for God's own breast:

9

Love them better far than those
The maturer months disclose—
Flaunting tulip, gaudy rose:

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10

Love them for the proof they give
That the world's great heart doth live,—
They the while so fugitive.

11

Such was he who lieth here,
With his leaves all drooping sere
In the spring-time of his year.

12

Here he came a wanderer,
From the Northern Isles that are
Watchéd by the western star.

13

Here he came, to feast his eyes
On an earthly heaven, with skies
Borrowed still from Paradise:

14

Came with rapture to behold
Purple isles and seas of gold,
And the dread Volcano old:

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15

Came with wonder to survey
All the magic of the Bay,
And the towns restored to-day—

16

Or to pluck the flowers that bloom
By the Mantuan Poet's tomb
O'er the grotto's arch of gloom;—

17

Or along Sorrento's shore,
Tasso's birth-place, to think o'er
All his tears for Leonore;—

18

Or to see the sun decline
To his Ischian bath of wine
'Mid the hush'd sea hyaline;—

19

Or, perchance, still more to hear
Music—to his soul so dear,
Singing in her native sphere:

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20

Music that appears to be
But the air of Italy,
Voicéd by her sky and sea.

21

All these projects, howsoe'er
Hopeful, healthful, wise or fair,
Swallowed in this blank despair.

22

He, the gentle, wise, and good,
Manhood's loftiest aims pursued
With a heart of maidenhood.

23

Of a proud ancestral name,
Still it was his boast to claim
The sweet bard's reflected fame:

24

The sweet bard, whose magic lays
Could upon his shield emblaze
Its most precious heraldries

“If there is one heir-loom I prize more than another,” said Lord Belfast, “it is the dedication of the ‘Irish Melodies’ to an ancestress of mine, and the beautiful letter on music which Moore addressed to the same Lady Donegal.”—Lectures on the Poets and Poetry of the Nineteenth Century. By the Earl of Belfast. London: Longmans. 1852.

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25

Showing nobly thus how yet
Genius can its diamond set
In the proudest coronet.

26

Oh! his heart was pure as snow,
Firm when winter winds might blow,
Melting in affection's glow:

27

Firm and fond with filial love
To one gentle heart, above
All the world; though manhood strove

28

With its feverish energy
To supplant it, still did he
Love that fair maternity:

29

Love her with the same sweet zest
Here, where he lay down to rest
As of old upon her breast:

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30

Leaving her in days to come
A sweet memory to illume
Her half-orphan'd twilight gloom.

31

Not in pleasure's fairy bowers,
Dallying with the deadly flowers,
Passed with him the flying hours;—

32

No, he raised his voice to call
Mightiest minds around the wall
Of the workman's wonder-hall;—

33

Raised his voice, and plied his pen,
To enlarge the mental ken
Of “his humbler fellow-men”

The latter words are quoted from the Earl of Belfast's Dedication of his Lectures to the Earl of Carlisle.

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34

Or a soothing charm would find
In his generous praise refined
For some shy, secluded mind.

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35

His the homage of the heart
Dearer to a child of art
Far than fame's more prizéd part.

36

But the bright career is o'er,
Ah! that heart can beat no more—
Wail him, Erin, on thy shore.

37

Wail him, thou, his native land,
On thy lone lamenting strand,
Bow the head, and wring the hand.

38

Wail him, thou, that to thy cost,
Many a hopeful son hast lost,
Soonest those who loved thee most.

39

Wail the taste, the toil severe,
The rich harvest of each year,—
All extinguished on this bier.

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40

Ah! not all,—dear shade forgive
Such despair! they yet shall live
In the example that they give;—

41

Live amid the glow they wake
In new hearts, for her dear sake,
Her, whose own sad heart might break,

42

If, like his, some generous soul
Forced by love beyond control,
Did not with her griefs condole,—

43

Proud to be her child, although
Still she totters to and fro
'Neath her lightened load of woe—

44

Proud to wear upon his breast,
Proud to blazon on his crest
The poor Shamrock of the West.

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45

If the night has passed away,
As we're told, and rosy day
Paints the East with prophet-ray—

46

Let the beam that puts to flight
The long dark, bring forth to light
Those who watched her through the night:

47

Those whose heart she could engage
In some studious hermitage,
As upon a busier stage.

48

And among the best and last
Let its lingering light be cast
Round thy dearest name—Belfast

The rare virtues and accomplishments of this lamented young nobleman; his active exertions in promoting and encouraging a taste for literature and art, particularly in the town from which he derived his title; and his early death in a foreign land, awakened so many feelings of sorrow and respect for his memory, and of sympathy with those who in a nearer and dearer relation had lost him, that it was found impossible to avoid giving them expression in some conspicuous and lasting form. A public statue was determined on, and the work was intrusted to Mr. Macdowall, than whom, as well from his distinguished position as an artist, as from his connexion with Belfast, no more appropriate selection could have been made. The statue, which fully sustained Mr. Macdowall's high reputation, was publicly inaugurated at Belfast on November 1, 1855, by His Excellency the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, the Earl of Carlisle. Some weeks previous to this ceremony, the Author had the honour of receiving from the Marchioness of Donegal a request that he (as an Irish writer for whose poetical efforts her Ladyship was kind enough to say her dear son had an especial liking) would write some lines appropriate to the


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occasion. The Author, who had long wished for some opportunity of paying his tribute of regret and gratitude to the memory of one whose premature death he had reason to consider not only a public loss, but (to him) a private calamity, at once acquiesced, and these lines were written with a rapidity which at least proved the genuine nature of the feelings which originated them. The Author having resided at Naples a short time previous to the Earl of Belfast's arrival and death there, will account for the Italian colouring which pervades the earlier portion of the Poem.

The Sonnets printed at the commencement of the Ode were written subsequent to the public delivery of the Ode itself in Belfast.

A few months before the lamented death of the Earl of Belfast, the author had the gratification of receiving from him the following letter, which is now published for the first time. Whatever difference of opinion there may be as to the literary judgment evinced by his Lordship in this particular instance, there can be none of the generosity and good-heartedness which dictated so kind and encouraging a communication:—

“29, St. James's-street, London, “September 17, 1852.

Sir,—In order to obtain permission to publish some words of yours in connexion with some music which I have adapted to them, I believe it were sufficient to apply to the publisher of your volume of Poems; but I cannot let pass an opportunity so apt of expressing to you the deep sense of admiration with which it has inspired me. It is not only yourself that I would congratulate upon the possession of so truly poetical a genius—it is rather our country that deserves gratulations upon her good fortune, in having given birth to one who seems likely and able to reawaken that strain of poesy (so purely her own) which has slept since the silence of Moore.


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“One who can combine, as you have done, the stirring energy which characterizes your Ballads with that sweet plaintiveness that lends such a charm to such poems as ‘Summer Longings,’ ‘A Lament,’ ‘Devotion,’ &c., &c., cannot but play a part, if he will, in his country's destiny.

“The first of these is the one which has inspired me with a few bars of simple music. I am well aware that it possesses ‘a music of its own—a music far beyond all minstrels' playing.’ Yet should I feel gratified at seeing my name coupled, in however humble a capacity, on the title with that of one of my most gifted countrymen.

“I am, Sir, yours “Obediently and admiringly, “Belfast. “D. F. Mac Carthy, Esq.”
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1855.