<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<p><SPAN name="startoftext"></SPAN></p>
<p>Transcribed from the 1844 Henry Washbourne edition by David
Price, ccx074@pglaf.org</p>
<h1>POEMS,</h1>
<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">by</span></p>
<p style="text-align: center">FRANCES ANNE BUTLER,</p>
<p style="text-align: center">(<span class="smcap">late fanny
kemble</span>.)</p>
<p style="text-align: center">LONDON:<br/>
(<span class="smcap">reprinted from the american
edition.</span>)<br/>
HENRY WASHBOURNE, NEW BRIDGE STREET,<br/>
<span class="smcap">blackfriars</span>.<br/>
<span class="smcap">oliver & boyd</span>, <span class="smcap">edinburgh</span>, <span class="smcap">machen &
co.</span> <span class="smcap">dublin</span>.<br/>
<span class="smcap">mdcccxliv</span>.</p>
<p style="text-align: center"><!-- page 4--><SPAN name="page4"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>LONDON:<br/>
Printed by <span class="smcap">Stewart</span> and <span class="smcap">Murray</span>,<br/>
Old Bailey.</p>
<p style="text-align: center"><!-- page 5--><SPAN name="page5"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span><span class="smcap">to</span><br/>
KATHARINE SEDGWICK,<br/>
<span class="smcap">this little volume</span><br/>
<span class="smcap">is</span><br/>
<span class="smcap">most respectfully</span>, <span class="smcap">gratefully</span>,<br/>
<span class="smcap">and affectionately</span><br/>
<span class="smcap">inscribed</span>.</p>
<h2><!-- page 11--><SPAN name="page11"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>LINES WRITTEN AT NIGHT.</h2>
<p style="text-align: center">August 9th, 1825.</p>
<p>Oh, thou surpassing beauty! that dost live<br/>
Shrined in yon silent stream of glorious light!<br/>
Spirit of harmony! that through the vast<br/>
And cloud-embroidered canopy art spreading<br/>
Thy wings, that o’er our shadowy earth hang brooding,<br/>
Like a pale silver haze, betwixt the moon<br/>
And the world’s darker orb: beautiful, hail!<br/>
Hail to thee! from her midnight throne of ether,<br/>
Night looks upon the slumbering universe.<br/>
There is no breeze on silver-crownëd tree,<br/>
There is no breath on dew-bespangled flower,<br/>
There is no wind sighs on the sleepy wave,<br/>
There is no sound hangs in the solemn air.<br/>
<!-- page 12--><SPAN name="page12"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
12</span>All, all are silent, all are dreaming, all,<br/>
Save those eternal eyes, that now shine forth<br/>
Winking the slumberer’s destinies. The moon<br/>
Sails on the horizon’s verge, a moving glory,<br/>
Pure, and unrivalled; for no paler orb<br/>
Approaches, to invade the sea of light<br/>
That lives around her; save yon little star,<br/>
That sparkles on her robe of fleecy clouds,<br/>
Like a bright gem, fallen from her radiant brow.</p>
<h2><!-- page 13--><SPAN name="page13"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>VENICE.</h2>
<p>Night in her dark array<br/>
Steals o’er the ocean,<br/>
And with departed day<br/>
Hushed seems its motion.<br/>
Slowly o’er yon blue coast<br/>
Onward she’s treading,<br/>
’Till its dark line is lost,<br/>
’Neath her veil spreading.<br/>
The bark on the rippling deep<br/>
Hath found a pillow,<br/>
And the pale moonbeams sleep<br/>
On the green billow.<br/>
Bound by her emerald zone<br/>
Venice is lying,<br/>
And round her marble crown<br/>
Night winds are sighing.<br/>
From the high lattice now<br/>
Bright eyes are gleaming,<br/>
That seem on night’s dark brow<br/>
Brighter stars beaming.<br/>
<!-- page 14--><SPAN name="page14"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
14</span>Now o’er the bright lagune<br/>
Light barks are dancing,<br/>
And ’neath the silver moon<br/>
Swift oars are glancing.<br/>
Strains from the mandolin<br/>
Steal o’er the water,<br/>
Echo replies between<br/>
To mirth and laughter.<br/>
O’er the wave seen afar<br/>
Brilliantly shining,<br/>
Gleams like a fallen star<br/>
Venice reclining.</p>
<h2><!-- page 15--><SPAN name="page15"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>TO MISS ---</h2>
<p>Time beckons on the hours: the expiring year<br/>
Already feels old Winter’s icy breath;<br/>
As with cold hands, he scatters on her bier<br/>
The faded glories of her Autumn wreath.<br/>
As fleetly as the Summer’s sunshine past,<br/>
The Winter’s snow must melt; and the young
Spring,<br/>
Strewing the earth with flowers, will come at last,<br/>
And in her train the hour of parting bring.<br/>
But, though I leave the harbour, where my heart<br/>
Sometime had found a peaceful resting-place,<br/>
Where it lay calmly moored; though I depart,<br/>
Yet, let not time my memory quite efface.<br/>
’Tis true, I leave no void, the happy home<br/>
To which you welcomed me, will be as gay,<br/>
As bright, as cheerful, when I’ve turned to roam,<br/>
Once more, upon life’s weary onward way.<br/>
<!-- page 16--><SPAN name="page16"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
16</span>But oh! if ever by the warm hearth’s blaze,<br/>
Where beaming eyes and kindred souls are met,<br/>
Your fancy wanders back to former days,<br/>
Let my remembrance hover round you yet.<br/>
Then, while before you glides time’s shadowy train,<br/>
Of forms long vanished, days and hours long gone,<br/>
Perchance my name will be pronounced again,<br/>
In that dear circle where I once was one.<br/>
Think of me then, nor break kind memory’s spell,<br/>
By reason’s censure coldly o’er me
cast,<br/>
Think only, that I loved ye passing well!<br/>
And let my follies slumber with the past.</p>
<h2><!-- page 17--><SPAN name="page17"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>THE WIND.</h2>
<p>Night comes upon the earth; and fearfully<br/>
Arise the mighty winds, and sweep along<br/>
In the full chorus of their midnight song.<br/>
The waste of heavy clouds, that veil the sky,<br/>
Roll like a murky scroll before them driven,<br/>
And show faint glimpses of a darker heaven.<br/>
No ray is there of moon, or pale-eyed star,<br/>
Darkness is on the universe; save where<br/>
The western sky lies glimmering, faint and far,<br/>
With day’s red embers dimly glowing there.<br/>
Hark! how the wind comes gathering in its course,<br/>
And sweeping onward, with resistless force,<br/>
Howls through the silent space of starless skies,<br/>
And on the breast of the swol’n ocean dies.<br/>
Oh, though art terrible, thou viewless power!<br/>
That rid’st destroying at the midnight hour!<br/>
We hear thy mighty pinion, but the eye<br/>
Knows nothing of thine awful majesty.<br/>
<!-- page 18--><SPAN name="page18"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
18</span>We see all mute creation bow before<br/>
Thy viewless wings, as thou careerest o’er<br/>
This rocking world; that in the boundless sky<br/>
Suspended, vibrates, as thou rushest by.<br/>
There is no terror in the lightning’s glare,<br/>
That breaks its red track through the trackless air;<br/>
There is no terror in the voice that speaks<br/>
From out the clouds when the loud thunder breaks<br/>
Over the earth, like that which dwells in thee,<br/>
Thou unseen tenant of immensity.</p>
<h2><!-- page 19--><SPAN name="page19"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>EASTERN SUNSET.</h2>
<p>’Tis only the nightingale’s warbled strain,<br/>
That floats through the evening sky:<br/>
With his note of love, he replies again,<br/>
To the muezzin’s holy cry;<br/>
As it sweetly sounds on the rosy air,<br/>
“Allah, il allah! come to prayer!”<br/>
Warm o’er the waters the red sun is glowing,<br/>
’Tis the last parting glance of his splendour and might,<br/>
While each rippling wave on the bright shore is throwing<br/>
Its white crest, that breaks into showers of light.<br/>
Each distant mosque and minaret<br/>
Is shining in the setting sun,<br/>
Whose farewell look is brighter yet,<br/>
Than that with which his course begun.<br/>
On the dark blue mountains his smile is bright,<br/>
It glows on the orange grove’s waving height,<br/>
<!-- page 20--><SPAN name="page20"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
20</span>And breaks through its shade in long lines of light.<br/>
No sound on the earth, and no sound in the sky,<br/>
Save murmuring fountains that sparkle nigh,<br/>
And the rustling flight of the evening breeze,<br/>
Who steals from his nest in the cypress trees,<br/>
And a thousand dewy odours fling,<br/>
As he shakes their white buds from his gossamer wing,<br/>
And flutters away through the spicy air,<br/>
At sound of a footstep drawing near.</p>
<h2><!-- page 21--><SPAN name="page21"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>FAREWELL TO ITALY.</h2>
<p>Farewell awhile, beautiful Italy!<br/>
My lonely bark is launched upon the sea<br/>
That clasps thy shore, and the soft evening gale<br/>
Breathes from thy coast, and fills my parting sail.<br/>
Ere morning dawn, a colder breeze will come,<br/>
And bear me onward to my northern home;<br/>
That home, where the pale sun is not so bright,<br/>
So glorious, at his noonday’s fiercest height,<br/>
As when he throws his last glance o’er the sea,<br/>
And fires the heavens, that glow farewell on thee.<br/>
Fair Italy! perchance some future day<br/>
Upon thy coast again will see me stray;<br/>
Meantime, farewell! I sorrow, as I leave<br/>
Thy lovely shore behind me, as men grieve<br/>
When bending o’er a form, around whose charms,<br/>
Unconquered yet, Death winds his icy arms:<br/>
While leaving the last kiss on some dear cheek,<br/>
Where beauty sheds her last autumnal streak,<br/>
<!-- page 22--><SPAN name="page22"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
22</span>Life’s rosy flower just mantling into bloom,<br/>
Before it fades for ever in the tomb.<br/>
So I leave thee, oh! thou art lovely still!<br/>
Despite the clouds of infamy and ill<br/>
That gather thickly round thy fading form:<br/>
Still glow thy glorious skies, as bright and warm,<br/>
Still memory lingers fondly on thy strand,<br/>
And Genius hails thee still her native land.<br/>
Land of my soul’s adoption! o’er the sea,<br/>
Thy sunny shore is fading rapidly:<br/>
Fainter and fainter, from my gaze it dies,<br/>
’Till like a line of distant light it lies,<br/>
A melting boundary ’twixt earth and sky,<br/>
And now ’tis gone;—farewell, fair Italy!</p>
<h2><!-- page 23--><SPAN name="page23"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>THE RED INDIAN.</h2>
<p>Rest, warrior, rest! thine hour is past,—<br/>
Thy longest war-whoop, and thy last,<br/>
Still rings upon the rushing blast,<br/>
That o’er thy grave sweeps drearily.</p>
<p>Rest, warrior, rest! thy haughty brow,<br/>
Beneath the hand of death bends low,<br/>
Thy fiery glance is quenchëd now,<br/>
In the cold grave’s obscurity.</p>
<p>Rest, warrior, rest! thy rising sun<br/>
Is set in blood, thy day is done;<br/>
Like lightning flash thy race is run,<br/>
And thou art sleeping peacefully.</p>
<p>Rest, warrior, rest! thy foot no more<br/>
The boundless forest shall explore,<br/>
Or trackless cross the sandy shore,<br/>
Or chase the red deer rapidly.</p>
<p><!-- page 24--><SPAN name="page24"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
24</span>Rest, warrior, rest! thy light canoe,<br/>
Like thy choice arrow, swift and true,<br/>
Shall part no more the waters blue,<br/>
That sparkle round it brilliantly.</p>
<p>Rest, warrior, rest! thine hour is past,<br/>
Yon sinking sunbeam is thy last,<br/>
And all is silent, save the blast,<br/>
That o’er thy grave sweeps drearily.</p>
<h2>TO ---</h2>
<p>Oh, turn those eyes away from me!<br/>
Though sweet, yet fearful are their rays;<br/>
And though they beam so tenderly,<br/>
I feel, I tremble ’neath their gaze.<br/>
Oh, turn those eyes away! for though<br/>
To meet their glance I may not dare,<br/>
I know their light is on my brow,<br/>
By the warm blood that mantles there.</p>
<h2><!-- page 25--><SPAN name="page25"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>SONG.</h2>
<p>Yet once again, but once, before we sever,<br/>
Fill we one brimming cup,—it is the last!<br/>
And let those lips, now parting, and for ever,<br/>
Breathe o’er this pledge, “the memory of
the past!”</p>
<p>Joy’s fleeting sun is set; and no to-morrow<br/>
Smiles on the gloomy path we tread so fast,<br/>
Yet, in the bitter cup, o’erfilled with sorrow,<br/>
Lives one sweet drop,—the memory of the
past.</p>
<p>But one more look from those dear eyes, now shining<br/>
Through their warm tears, their loveliest and their
last;<br/>
But one more strain of hands, in friendship twining,<br/>
Now farewell all, save memory of the past.</p>
<h2><!-- page 26--><SPAN name="page26"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>LAMENT FOR ISRAEL.</h2>
<p>Where is thy home in thy promised land?<br/>
Desolate and forsaken!<br/>
The stranger’s arm hath seized thy brand,<br/>
Thou art bowed beneath the stranger’s hand,<br/>
And the stranger thy birthright hath taken.</p>
<p>Where is the mark of thy chosen race?<br/>
Infamous and degraded!<br/>
It hath fallen on thee, on thy dwelling-place,<br/>
And that heaven-stamped sign to a foul disgrace<br/>
And the scoff of the world, has faded.</p>
<p>First-born of nations! upon thy brow,<br/>
Resistless and revenging,<br/>
The fiery finger of God hath now<br/>
Written the sentence of thy wo,<br/>
The innocent blood avenging!</p>
<p><!-- page 27--><SPAN name="page27"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
27</span>Lion of Judah! thy glory is past,<br/>
Vanished and fled for ever.<br/>
Homeless and scattered, thy race is cast<br/>
Like chaff in the breath of the sweeping blast,<br/>
To rally or rise again, never!</p>
<h2>A WISH.</h2>
<p>Let me not die for ever, when I’m gone<br/>
To the cold earth! but let my memory<br/>
Live like the gorgeous western light that shone<br/>
Over the clouds where sank day’s majesty.<br/>
Let me not be forgotten! though the grave<br/>
Has clasped its hideous arms around my brow.<br/>
Let me not be forgotten! though the wave<br/>
Of time’s dark current rolls above me now.<br/>
Yet not in tears remembered be my name;<br/>
Weep over those ye loved; for me, for me,<br/>
Give me the wreath of glory, and let fame<br/>
Over my tomb spread immortality!</p>
<h2><!-- page 28--><SPAN name="page28"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>SONG.</h2>
<p>The moment must come, when the hands that unite<br/>
In the firm clasp of friendship, will sever;<br/>
When the eyes that have beamed o’er us brightly
to-night,<br/>
Will have ceased to shine o’er us, for
ever.<br/>
Yet wreathe again the
goblet’s brim<br/>
With
pleasure’s roseate crown!<br/>
What though the future hour be
dim—<br/>
The present is
our own!</p>
<p>The moment is come, and again we are parting,<br/>
To roam through the world, each our separate way;<br/>
In the bright eye of beauty the pearl-drop is starting,<br/>
But hope, sunny hope, through the tear sheds its
ray.<br/>
<!-- page 29--><SPAN name="page29"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>Then wreathe
again the goblet’s brim<br/>
With
pleasure’s roseate crown!<br/>
What though the present hour be
dim—<br/>
The
future’s yet our own!</p>
<p>The moment is past, and the bright throng that round us<br/>
So lately was gathered, has fled like a dream;<br/>
And time has untwisted the fond links that bound us,<br/>
Like frost wreaths that melt in the morning’s
first beam.<br/>
Still wreathe once more the
goblet’s brim!<br/>
With
pleasure’s roseate crown!<br/>
What though all else beside be
dim—<br/>
The past has
been our own!</p>
<h2><!-- page 30--><SPAN name="page30"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>TO MRS. ---</h2>
<p>Oh lady! thou, who in the olden time<br/>
Hadst been the star of many a poet’s dream!<br/>
Thou, who unto a mind of mould sublime,<br/>
Weddest the gentle graces that beseem<br/>
Fair woman’s best! forgive the darling line<br/>
That falters forth thy praise! nor let thine eye<br/>
Glance o’er the vain attempt too scornfully;<br/>
But, as thou read’st, think what a love was mine,<br/>
That made me venture on a theme, that none<br/>
Can know thee, and not feel a hopeless one.<br/>
Thou art most fair, though sorrow’s chastening wing<br/>
Hath past, and left its shadow on thy brow,<br/>
And solemn thoughts are gently mellowing<br/>
The splendour of thy beauty’s summer now.<br/>
Thou art most fair! but thine is loveliness<br/>
That dwells not only on the lip, or eye;<br/>
Thy beauty, is thy pure heart’s holiness;<br/>
Thy grace, thy lofty spirit’s majesty.<br/>
<!-- page 31--><SPAN name="page31"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
31</span>While thus I gaze on thee, and watch thee glide,<br/>
Like some calm spirit o’er life’s troubled stream,<br/>
With thy twin buds of beauty by thy side<br/>
Together blossoming; I almost deem<br/>
That I behold the loveliness and truth,<br/>
That like fair visions hovered round my youth,<br/>
Long sought—and then forgotten as a dream.</p>
<h2>A WISH.</h2>
<p>Let me not die for ever when I’m laid<br/>
In the cold earth! but let my memory<br/>
Live still among ye, like the evening shade,<br/>
That o’er the sinking day steals placidly.<br/>
Let me not be forgotten! though the knell<br/>
Has tolled for me its solemn lullaby;<br/>
Let me not be forgotten! though I dwell<br/>
For ever now in death’s obscurity.<br/>
Yet oh! upon the emblazoned leaf of fame,<br/>
Trace not a record, not a line for me,<br/>
But let the lips I loved oft breathe my name,<br/>
And in your hearts enshrine my memory!</p>
<h2><!-- page 32--><SPAN name="page32"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>A SPIRIT’S VOICE.</h2>
<p>It is the dawn! the rosy day awakes;<br/>
From her bright hair pale showers of dew she shakes,<br/>
And through the heavens her early pathway takes;<br/>
Why art thou sleeping?</p>
<p>It is the noon! the sun looks laughing down<br/>
On hamlet still, on busy shore, and town,<br/>
On forest glade, and deep dark waters lone;<br/>
Why art thou sleeping?</p>
<p>It is the sunset! daylight’s crimson veil<br/>
Floats o’er the mountain tops, while twilight pale<br/>
Calls up her vaporous shrouds from every vale;<br/>
Why art thou sleeping?</p>
<p>It is the night! o’er the moon’s livid brow,<br/>
Like shadowy locks, the clouds their darkness throw,<br/>
All evil spirits wake to wander now;<br/>
Why art thou sleeping?</p>
<h2><!-- page 33--><SPAN name="page33"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>TO THE DEAD.</h2>
<p>On the lone waters’ shore<br/>
Wander I yet;<br/>
Brooding those moments o’er<br/>
I should forget.<br/>
’Till the broad foaming surge<br/>
Warns me to fly,<br/>
While despair’s whispers urge<br/>
To stay and die.<br/>
When the night’s solemn watch<br/>
Falls on the seas,<br/>
’Tis thy voice that I catch<br/>
In the low breeze;<br/>
When the moon sheds her light<br/>
On things below,<br/>
Beams not her ray so bright,<br/>
Like thy young brow?<br/>
Spirit immortal! say,<br/>
When wilt thou come,<br/>
To marshal me the way<br/>
To my long home?</p>
<h2><!-- page 34--><SPAN name="page34"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>SONG.</h2>
<p> I sing
the yellow leaf,<br/>
That rustling strews<br/>
The wintry path,
where grief<br/>
Delights to muse,<br/>
Spring’s early violet, that sweetly opes<br/>
Its fragrant leaves to the young morning’s
kiss,<br/>
Type of our youth’s fond dreams, and cherished hopes,<br/>
Will soon be this:<br/>
A sere and
yellow leaf,<br/>
That rustling strews<br/>
The wintry path,
where grief<br/>
Delights to muse.<br/>
The summer’s rose, in whose rich hues we read<br/>
Pleasure’s gay bloom, and love’s
enchanting bliss,<br/>
And glory’s laurel, waving o’er the dead,<br/>
Will soon be this:<br/>
A sere and
yellow leaf,<br/>
That rustling strews<br/>
The wintry path,
where grief<br/>
Delights to muse.</p>
<h2><!-- page 35--><SPAN name="page35"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>TO THOMAS MOORE, <span class="smcap">Esq.</span></h2>
<p>Here’s a health to thee, Bard of Erin!<br/>
To the goblet’s brim we will fill;<br/>
For all that to life is endearing,<br/>
Thy strains have made dearer still!</p>
<p>Wherever fond woman’s eyes eclipse<br/>
The midnight moon’s soft ray;<br/>
Whenever around dear woman’s lips,<br/>
The smiles of affection play:</p>
<p>We will drink to thee, Bard of Erin!<br/>
To the goblet’s brim we will fill,<br/>
For all that to life is endearing,<br/>
Thy strains have made dearer still!</p>
<p>Wherever the warrior’s sword is bound<br/>
With the laurel of victory,<br/>
Wherever the patriot’s brow is crowned<br/>
With the halo of liberty:</p>
<p><!-- page 36--><SPAN name="page36"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
36</span>We will drink to thee, Bard of Erin!<br/>
To the goblet’s brim we will fill;<br/>
For all that to life is endearing<br/>
Thy strains have made dearer still!</p>
<p>Wherever the voice of mirth hath rung,<br/>
On the listening ear of night,<br/>
Wherever the soul of wit hath flung<br/>
Its flashes of vivid light:</p>
<p>We will drink to thee, Bard of Erin!<br/>
To the goblet’s brim we will fill;<br/>
For all that to life is endearing,<br/>
In thy strains is dearer still.</p>
<h2><!-- page 37--><SPAN name="page37"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>A WISH.</h2>
<p>Oh! that I were a fairy sprite, to wander<br/>
In forest paths, o’erarched with oak and beech;<br/>
Where the sun’s yellow light, in slanting rays,<br/>
Sleeps on the dewy moss: what time the breath<br/>
Of early morn stirs the white hawthorn boughs,<br/>
And fills the air with showers of snowy blossoms.<br/>
Or lie at sunset ’mid the purple heather,<br/>
Listening the silver music that rings out<br/>
From the pale mountain bells, swayed by the wind.<br/>
Or sit in rocky clefts above the sea,<br/>
While one by one the evening stars shine forth<br/>
Among the gathering clouds, that strew the heavens<br/>
Like floating purple wreaths of mournful nightshade!</p>
<h2><!-- page 38--><SPAN name="page38"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>THE MINSTREL’S GRAVE.</h2>
<p>Oh let it be where the waters are meeting,<br/>
In one crystal sheet, like the summer’s sky
bright!<br/>
Oh let it be where the sun, when retreating,<br/>
May throw the last glance of his vanishing light.<br/>
Lay me there! lay me there! and upon my lone pillow<br/>
Let the emerald moss in soft starry wreaths
swell;<br/>
Be my dirge the faint sob of the murmuring billow,<br/>
And the burthen it sings to me, nought but
“farewell!”</p>
<p>Oh let it be where soft slumber enticing,<br/>
The cypress and myrtle have mingled their shade:<br/>
Oh let it be where the moon at her rising,<br/>
May throw the first night-glance that silvers the
glade.<br/>
<!-- page 39--><SPAN name="page39"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
39</span>Lay me there! lay me there! and upon the green willow<br/>
Hang the harp that has cheered the lone minstrel so
well,<br/>
That the soft breath of heaven, as it sighs o’er my
pillow,<br/>
From its strings, now forsaken, may sound one
farewell.</p>
<h2>TO ---</h2>
<p>When we first met, dark wintry skies were glooming,<br/>
And the wild winds sang requiem to the year;<br/>
But thou, in all thy beauty’s pride wert blooming,<br/>
And my young heart knew hope without a fear.</p>
<p>When we last parted, summer suns were smiling,<br/>
And the bright earth her flowery vesture wore;<br/>
But thou hadst lost the power of beguiling,<br/>
For my wrecked, wearied heart, could hope no
more.</p>
<h2><!-- page 40--><SPAN name="page40"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>ON A FORGET-ME-NOT,<br/> Brought from Switzerland.</h2>
<p>Flower of the mountain! by the wanderer’s hand<br/>
Robbed of thy beauty’s short-lived sunny
day;<br/>
Didst thou but blow to gem the stranger’s
way,<br/>
And bloom, to wither in the stranger’s land?<br/>
Hueless and scentless as thou
art,<br/>
How much that
stirs the memory,<br/>
How much, much more, that thrills
the heart,<br/>
Thou faded
thing, yet lives in thee!</p>
<p>Where is thy beauty? in the grassy blade,<br/>
There lives more fragrance, and more freshness
now;<br/>
Yet oh! not all the flowers that bloom and fade,<br/>
Are half so dear to memory’s eye as thou.<br/>
The dew that on the mountain
lies,<br/>
The breeze that o’er the
mountain sighs,<br/>
Thy parent stem
will nurse and nourish;<br/>
But thou—not e’en
those sunny eyes<br/>
As bright, as blue, as thine own
skies,<br/>
Thou faded
thing! can make thee flourish.</p>
<h2><!-- page 41--><SPAN name="page41"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>SONNET.</h2>
<p>’Twas but a dream! and oh! what are they all,<br/>
All the fond visions Hope’s bright finger
traces,<br/>
All the fond visions Time’s dark wing
effaces,<br/>
But very dreams! but morning buds, that fall<br/>
Withered and blighted, long before the night:<br/>
Strewing the paths they should have made more
bright,<br/>
With mournful wreaths, whose light hath past away,<br/>
That can return to life and beauty never,<br/>
And yet, of whom it was but yesterday,<br/>
We deemed they’d bloom as fresh and fair for
ever.<br/>
Oh then, when hopes, that to thy heart are dearest,<br/>
Over the future shed their sunniest beam,<br/>
When round thy path their bright wings hover nearest,<br/>
Trust not too fondly!—for ’tis but a
dream!</p>
<h2><!-- page 42--><SPAN name="page42"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>SONNET.</h2>
<p>Oh weary, weary world! how full thou art<br/>
Of sin, of sorrow, and all evil things!<br/>
In thy fierce turmoil, where shall the sad heart,<br/>
Released from pain, fold its unrested wings?<br/>
Peace hath no dwelling here, but evermore<br/>
Loud discord, strife, and envy, fill the earth<br/>
With fearful riot, whilst unhallowed mirth<br/>
Shrieks frantic laughter forth, leading along,<br/>
Whirling in dizzy trance the eager throng,<br/>
Who bear aloft the overflowing cup,<br/>
With tears, forbidden joys, and blood filled up,<br/>
Quaffing long draughts of death; in lawless might,<br/>
Drunk with soft harmonies, and dazzling light,<br/>
So rush they down to the eternal night.</p>
<h2><!-- page 43--><SPAN name="page43"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>ON A MUSICAL BOX.</h2>
<p>Poor little sprite! in that dark, narrow cell<br/>
Caged by the law of man’s resistless might!<br/>
With thy sweet liquid notes, by some strong spell,<br/>
Compelled to minister to his delight!<br/>
Whence, what art thou? art thou a fairy wight<br/>
Caught sleeping in some lily’s snowy bell,<br/>
Where thou hadst crept, to rock in the moonlight,<br/>
And drink the starry dew-drops, as they fell?<br/>
Say, dost thou think, sometimes when thou art singing,<br/>
Of thy wild haunt upon the mountain’s brow,<br/>
Where thou wert wont to list the heath-bells ringing,<br/>
And sail upon the sunset’s amber glow?<br/>
When thou art weary of thy oft-told theme,<br/>
Say, dost thou think of the clear pebbly stream,<br/>
Upon whose mossy brink thy fellows play,<br/>
<!-- page 44--><SPAN name="page44"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
44</span>Dancing in circles by the moon’s soft beam,<br/>
Hiding in blossoms from the sun’s fierce gleam,<br/>
Whilst thou, in darkness, sing’st thy life
away?<br/>
And canst thou feel when the spring-time returns,<br/>
Filling the earth with fragrance and with glee;<br/>
When in the wide creation nothing mourns,<br/>
Of all that lives, save that which is not free?<br/>
Oh! if thou couldst, and we could hear thy prayer,<br/>
How would thy little voice beseeching cry,<br/>
For one short draught of the sweet morning air,<br/>
For one short glimpse of the clear azure sky!<br/>
Perchance thou sing’st in hope thou shalt be free,<br/>
Sweetly and patiently thy task fulfilling;<br/>
While thy sad thoughts are wandering with the bee,<br/>
To every bud with honey dew distilling.<br/>
That hope is vain: for even couldst thou wing<br/>
Thy homeward flight back to the greenwood gay,<br/>
Thou’dst be a shunned and a forsaken thing,<br/>
’Mongst the companions of thy happier day.<br/>
For fairy sprites, like many other creatures,<br/>
Bear fleeting memories, that come and go;<br/>
Nor can they oft recall familiar features,<br/>
By absence touched, or clouded o’er with
woe.<br/>
<!-- page 45--><SPAN name="page45"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
45</span>Then rest content with sorrow: for there be<br/>
Many that must that lesson learn with thee;<br/>
And still thy wild notes warble cheerfully,<br/>
Till, when thy tiny voice begins to fail,<br/>
For thy lost bliss sing but one parting wail,<br/>
Poor little sprite! and then sleep peacefully!</p>
<h2>TO THE PICTURE OF A LADY.</h2>
<p>Lady, sweet lady, I behold thee yet,<br/>
With thy pale brow, brown eyes, and solemn air,<br/>
And billowy tresses of thy golden hair,<br/>
Which once to see, is never to forget!<br/>
But for short space I gazed, with soul intent<br/>
Upon thee; and the limner’s art divine,<br/>
Meantime, poured all thy spirit into mine.<br/>
But once I gazed, then on my way I went:<br/>
And thou art still before me. Like a dream<br/>
Of what our soul has loved, and lost for ever,<br/>
Thy vision dwells with me, and though I never<br/>
May be so blest as to behold thee more,<br/>
That one short look has stamped thee in my heart,<br/>
Of my intensest life a living part,<br/>
Which time, and death, shall never triumph o’er.</p>
<h2><!-- page 46--><SPAN name="page46"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>FRAGMENT.</h2>
<p>Walking by moonlight on the golden margin<br/>
That binds the silver sea, I fell to thinking<br/>
Of all the wild imaginings that man<br/>
Hath peopled heaven, and earth, and ocean with;<br/>
Making fair nature’s solitary haunts<br/>
Alive with beings, beautiful and fearful.<br/>
And as the chain of thought grew link by link,<br/>
It seemed, as though the midnight heavens waxed brighter,<br/>
The stars gazed fix’dly with their golden eyes,<br/>
And a strange light played o’er each sleeping billow,<br/>
That laid its head upon the sandy beach.<br/>
Anon there came along the rocky shore<br/>
A far-off sound of sweetest minstrelsy.<br/>
From no one point of heaven, or earth, it came;<br/>
But under, over, and about it breathed,<br/>
Filling my soul with thrilling, fearful pleasure.<br/>
It swelled, as though borne on the floating wings<br/>
<!-- page 47--><SPAN name="page47"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
47</span>Of the midsummer breeze: it died away<br/>
Towards heaven, as though it sank into the clouds,<br/>
That one by one melted like flakes of snow<br/>
In the moonbeams. Then came a rushing sound,<br/>
Like countless wings of bees, or butterflies;<br/>
And suddenly, as far as eye might view,<br/>
The coast was peopled with a world of elves,<br/>
Who in fantastic ringlets danced around,<br/>
With antic gestures, and wild beckoning motion,<br/>
Aimed at the moon. White was their snowy vesture,<br/>
And shining as the Alps, when that the sun<br/>
Gems their pale robes with diamonds. On their heads<br/>
Were wreaths of crimson and of yellow foxglove.<br/>
They were all fair, and light as dreams; anon<br/>
The dance broke off; and sailing through the air,<br/>
Some one way, and some other, they did each<br/>
Alight upon some waving branch, or flower,<br/>
That garlanded the rocks upon the shore.<br/>
One, chiefly, did I mark, one tiny sprite,<br/>
Who crept into an orange flower-bell,<br/>
And there lay nestling, whilst his eager lips<br/>
Drank from its virgin chalice the night dew,<br/>
That glistened, like a pearl, in its white bosom.</p>
<h2><!-- page 48--><SPAN name="page48"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>SONNET.</h2>
<p>Cover me with your everlasting arms,<br/>
Ye guardian giants of this solitude!<br/>
From the ill-sight of men, and from the rude,<br/>
Tumultuous din of yon wide world’s alarms!<br/>
Oh, knit your mighty limbs around, above,<br/>
And close me in for ever! let me dwell<br/>
With the wood spirits, in the darkest cell<br/>
That ever with your verdant locks ye wove.<br/>
The air is full of countless voices, joined<br/>
In one eternal hymn; the whispering wind,<br/>
The shuddering leaves, the hidden water-springs,<br/>
The work-song of the bees, whose honeyed wings<br/>
Hang in the golden tresses of the lime,<br/>
Or buried lie in purple beds of thyme.</p>
<h2><!-- page 49--><SPAN name="page49"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>WRITTEN ON CRAMOND BEACH.</h2>
<p>Farewell, old playmate! on thy sandy shore<br/>
My lingering feet will leave their print no more;<br/>
To thy loved side I never may return.<br/>
I pray thee, old companion, make due mourn<br/>
For the wild spirit who so oft has stood<br/>
Gazing in love and wonder on thy flood.<br/>
The form is now departing far away,<br/>
That half in anger oft, and half in play,<br/>
Thou hast pursued with thy white showers of foam.<br/>
Thy waters daily will besiege the home<br/>
I loved among the rocks; but there will be<br/>
No laughing cry, to hail thy victory,<br/>
Such as was wont to greet thee, when I fled,<br/>
With hurried footsteps, and averted head,<br/>
Like fallen monarch, from my venturous stand,<br/>
Chased by thy billows far along the sand.<br/>
And when at eventide thy warm waves drink<br/>
The amber clouds that in their bosom sink;<br/>
When sober twilight over thee has spread<br/>
Her purple pall, when the glad day is dead<br/>
<!-- page 50--><SPAN name="page50"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
50</span>My voice no more will mingle with the dirge<br/>
That rose in mighty moaning from thy surge,<br/>
Filling with awful harmony the air,<br/>
When thy vast soul and mine were joined in prayer.</p>
<h2>SONNET.</h2>
<p>Away, away! bear me away, away,<br/>
Into the boundless void, thou mighty wind!<br/>
That rushest on thy midnight way,<br/>
And leav’st this weary world, far, far behind!<br/>
Away, away! bear me away, away,<br/>
To the wide strandless deep,<br/>
Ye headlong waters! whose mad eddies leap<br/>
From the pollution of your bed of clay!<br/>
Away, away, bear me away, away,<br/>
Into the fountains of eternal light,<br/>
Ye rosy clouds! that to my longing sight<br/>
Seem melting in the sun’s devouring ray!<br/>
Away, away! oh, for some mighty blast,<br/>
To sweep this loathsome life into the past!</p>
<h2><!-- page 51--><SPAN name="page51"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>FRAGMENT.</h2>
<p>It was the harvest time: the broad, bright moon<br/>
Was at her full, and shone upon the fields<br/>
Where we had toiled the livelong day, to pile<br/>
In golden sheaves the earth’s abundant treasure.<br/>
The harvest task had given place to song<br/>
And merry dance; and these in turn were chased<br/>
By legends strange, and wild, unearthly tales<br/>
Of elves, and gnomes, and fairy sprites, that haunt<br/>
The woods and caves; where they do sleep all day,<br/>
And then come forth i’ the witching hour of night,<br/>
To dance by moonlight on the green thick sward.<br/>
The speaker was an aged villager,<br/>
In whom his oft-told tale awoke no fears,<br/>
Such as he filled his gaping listeners with.<br/>
Nor ever was there break in his discourse,<br/>
Save when with gray eyes lifted to the moon,<br/>
He conjured from the past strange instances<br/>
Of kidnapp’d infants, from their cradles snatch’d,<br/>
<!-- page 52--><SPAN name="page52"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
52</span>And changed for elvish sprites; of blights, and
blains,<br/>
Sent on the cattle by the vengeful fairies;<br/>
Of blasted crops, maim’d limbs, and unsound minds,<br/>
All plagues inflicted by these angered sprites.<br/>
Then would he pause, and wash his story down<br/>
With long-drawn draughts of amber ale; while all<br/>
The rest came crowding under the wide oak tree,<br/>
Piling the corn sheaves closer round the ring,<br/>
Whispering and shaking, laughing too, with fear;<br/>
And ever, if an acorn bobb’d from the boughs,<br/>
Or grasshopper from out the stubble chirrupp’d,<br/>
Blessing themselves from Robin Goodfellow!</p>
<h2><!-- page 53--><SPAN name="page53"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>SONNET.</h2>
<p>Oft let me wander hand in hand with Thought,<br/>
In woodland paths, and lone sequester’d shades,<br/>
What time the sunny banks and mossy glades,<br/>
With dewy wreaths of early violets wrought,<br/>
Into the air their fragrant incense fling,<br/>
To greet the triumph of the youthful Spring.<br/>
Lo, where she comes! ’scaped from the icy lair<br/>
Of hoary Winter; wanton, free, and fair!<br/>
Now smile the heavens again upon the earth,<br/>
Bright hill, and bosky dell, resound with mirth,<br/>
And voices, full of laughter and wild glee,<br/>
Shout through the air pregnant with harmony;<br/>
And wake poor sobbing Echo, who replies<br/>
With sleepy voice, that softly, slowly dies.</p>
<h2><!-- page 54--><SPAN name="page54"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>SONNET.</h2>
<p>I would I knew the lady of thy heart!<br/>
She whom thou lov’st perchance, as I love thee,—<br/>
She unto whom thy thoughts and wishes flee;<br/>
Those thoughts, in which, alas! I bear no part.<br/>
Oh, I have sat and sighed, thinking how fair,<br/>
How passing beautiful, thy love must be;<br/>
Of mind how high, of modesty how rare;<br/>
And then I’ve wept, I’ve wept in agony!<br/>
Oh, that I might but once behold those eyes,<br/>
That to thy enamour’d gaze alone seem fair;<br/>
Once hear that voice, whose music still replies<br/>
To the fond vows thy passionate accents swear:<br/>
Oh, that I might but know the truth and die,<br/>
Nor live in this long dream of misery!</p>
<h2><!-- page 55--><SPAN name="page55"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>A PROMISE.</h2>
<p> By the pure spring, whose haunted waters
flow<br/>
Through thy sequester’d dell unto the sea,<br/>
At sunny noon, I will appear to thee:<br/>
Not troubling the still fount with
drops of woe,<br/>
As when I last took leave of it and thee,<br/>
But gazing up at thee with tranquil brow,<br/>
And eyes full of life’s early happiness,<br/>
Of strength, of hope, of joy, and tenderness.<br/>
Beneath the shadowy tree, where thou and I<br/>
Were wont to sit, studying the harmony<br/>
Of gentle Shakspeare, and of Milton high,<br/>
At sunny noon I will be heard by thee;<br/>
Not sobbing forth each oft-repeated sound,<br/>
As when I last faultered them o’er to thee,<br/>
But uttering them in the air around,<br/>
With youth’s clear laughing voice of melody.<br/>
<!-- page 56--><SPAN name="page56"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
56</span>On the wild shore of the eternal deep,<br/>
Where we have stray’d so oft, and stood so long<br/>
Watching the mighty waters conquering sweep,<br/>
And listening to their loud triumphant song,<br/>
At sunny noon, dearest! I’ll be with thee:<br/>
Not as when last I linger’d on the strand,<br/>
Tracing our names on the inconstant sand;<br/>
But in each bright thing that around shall be:<br/>
My voice shall call thee from the ocean’s breast,<br/>
Thou’lt see my hair in its bright, showery crest,<br/>
In its dark, rocky depths, thou’lt see my
eyes,<br/>
My form, shall be the light cloud in the skies,<br/>
My spirit shall be with thee, warm and bright,<br/>
And flood thee o’er with
love, and life, and light.</p>
<h2><!-- page 57--><SPAN name="page57"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>A PROMISE.</h2>
<p>In the dark, lonely night,<br/>
When sleep and silence keep their watch o’er men;<br/>
False love! in thy despite,<br/>
I will be with thee then.<br/>
When in the world of dreams thy spirit strays,<br/>
Seeking, in vain, the peace it finds not here,<br/>
Thou shalt be led back to thine early days<br/>
Of life and love, and I will meet thee there.<br/>
I’ll come to thee, with the bright, sunny brow,<br/>
That was Hope’s throne before I met with thee;<br/>
And then I’ll show thee how ’tis furrowed now<br/>
By the untimely age of misery.<br/>
I’ll speak to thee, in the fond, joyous tone,<br/>
That wooed thee still with love’s impassioned spell;<br/>
And then I’ll teach thee how I’ve learnt to moan,<br/>
Since last upon thine ear its accents fell.<br/>
<!-- page 58--><SPAN name="page58"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
58</span>I’ll come to thee in all youth’s brightest
power,<br/>
As on the day thy faith to mine was plighted,<br/>
And then I’ll tell thee weary hour by hour,<br/>
How that spring’s early promise has been blighted.<br/>
I’ll tell thee of the long, long, dreary years,<br/>
That have passed o’er me hopeless, objectless;<br/>
My loathsome days, my nights of burning tears,<br/>
My wild despair, my utter loneliness,<br/>
My heart-sick dreams upon my feverish bed,<br/>
My fearful longing to be with the dead;—<br/>
In the dark lonely night,<br/>
When sleep and silence keep their watch o’er men;<br/>
False love! in thy despite,<br/>
We two shall meet again!</p>
<h2><!-- page 59--><SPAN name="page59"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>SONNET.</h2>
<p>Spirit of all sweet sounds! who in mid air<br/>
Sittest enthroned, vouchsafe to hear my prayer!<br/>
Let all those instruments of music sweet,<br/>
That in great nature’s hymn bear burthen meet,<br/>
Sing round this mossy pillow, where my head<br/>
From the bright noontide sky is sheltered.<br/>
Thou southern wind! wave, wave thy od’rous wings;<br/>
O’er your smooth channels gush, ye crystal springs!<br/>
Ye laughing elves! that through the rustling corn<br/>
Run chattering; thou tawny-coated bee,<br/>
Who at thy honey-work sing’st drowsily;<br/>
And ye, oh ye! who greet the dewy morn,<br/>
And fragrant eventide, with melody,<br/>
Ye wild wood minstrels, sing my lullaby!</p>
<h2><!-- page 60--><SPAN name="page60"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>TO ---</h2>
<p>I would I might be with thee, when the year<br/>
Begins to wane, and that thou walk’st alone<br/>
Upon the rocky strand, whilst loud and clear,<br/>
The autumn wind sings, from his cloudy throne,<br/>
Wild requiems for the summer that is gone.<br/>
Or when, in sad and contemplative mood,<br/>
Thy feet explore the leafy-paven wood:<br/>
I would my soul might reason then with thine,<br/>
Upon those themes most solemn and most strange,<br/>
Which every falling leaf and fading flower,<br/>
Whisper unto us with a voice divine;<br/>
Filling the brief space of one mortal hour,<br/>
With fearful thoughts of death, decay, and change,<br/>
And the high mystery of that after birth,<br/>
That comes to us, as well as to the earth.</p>
<h2><!-- page 61--><SPAN name="page61"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>SONNET.</h2>
<p>By jasper founts, whose falling waters make<br/>
Eternal music to the silent hours;<br/>
Or ’neath the gloom of solemn cypress bowers,<br/>
Through whose dark screen no prying sunbeams break:<br/>
How oft I dream I see thee wandering,<br/>
With thy majestic mien, and thoughtful eyes,<br/>
And lips, whereon all holy counsel lies,<br/>
And shining tresses of soft rippling gold,<br/>
Like to some shape beheld in days of old<br/>
By seer or prophet, when, as poets sing,<br/>
The gods had not forsaken yet the earth,<br/>
But loved to haunt each shady dell and grove;<br/>
When ev’ry breeze was the soft breath of love,<br/>
When the blue air rang with sweet sounds of mirth,<br/>
And this dark world seemed fair as at its birth.</p>
<h2><!-- page 62--><SPAN name="page62"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>THE VISION OF LIFE.</h2>
<p> Death and I,<br/>
On a hill so high,<br/>
Stood side by side:<br/>
And we saw below,<br/>
Running to and fro,<br/>
All things that be in the world so wide.</p>
<p> Ten thousand cries<br/>
From the gulf did rise,<br/>
With a wild discordant sound;<br/>
Laughter and wailing,<br/>
Prayer and railing,<br/>
As the ball spun round and round.</p>
<p> And over all<br/>
Hung a floating pall<br/>
Of dark and gory veils:<br/>
’Tis the blood of years,<br/>
And the sighs and tears,<br/>
Which this noisome marsh exhales.</p>
<p> <!-- page 63--><SPAN name="page63"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>All this did seem<br/>
Like a fearful dream,<br/>
Till Death cried with a joyful cry:<br/>
“Look down! look down!<br/>
It is all mine own,<br/>
Here comes life’s pageant by!”</p>
<p>Like to a masque in ancient revelries,<br/>
With mingling sound of thousand harmonies,<br/>
Soft lute and viol, trumpet-blast and gong,<br/>
They came along, and still they came along!<br/>
Thousands, and tens of thousands, all that e’er<br/>
Peopled the earth, or ploughed th’ unfathomed deep,<br/>
All that now breathe the universal air,<br/>
And all that in the womb of Time yet sleep.</p>
<p>Before this mighty host a woman came,<br/>
With hurried feet, and oft-averted head;<br/>
With accursed light<br/>
Her eyes were bright,<br/>
And with inviting hand them on she beckoned.<br/>
Her followed close, with wild acclaim,<br/>
Her servants three: Lust, with his eye of fire,<br/>
And burning lips, that tremble with desire,<br/>
Pale sunken cheek:—and as he staggered by,<br/>
<!-- page 64--><SPAN name="page64"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
64</span>The trumpet-blast was hush’d, and there arose<br/>
A melting strain of such soft melody,<br/>
As breath’d into the soul love’s ecstacies and
woes.<br/>
Loudly again the trumpet smote the air,<br/>
The double drum did roll, and to the sky<br/>
Bay’d War’s bloodhounds, the deep artillery;<br/>
And Glory,<br/>
With feet all gory,<br/>
And dazzling eyes, rushed by,<br/>
Waving a flashing sword and laurel wreath,<br/>
The pang, and the inheritance of death.</p>
<p>He pass’d like lightning—then ceased every
sound<br/>
Of war triumphant, and of love’s sweet song,<br/>
And all was silent—Creeping slow along,<br/>
With eager eyes, that wandered round and round,<br/>
Wild, haggard mien, and meagre, wasted frame,<br/>
Bow’d to the earth, pale, starving Av’rice came:<br/>
Clutching with palsied hands his golden god,<br/>
And tottering in the path the others trod.<br/>
These, one by one,<br/>
Came and were gone:<br/>
And after them followed the ceaseless stream<br/>
Of worshippers, who, with mad shout and scream,<br/>
Unhallow’d toil, and more unhallow’d mirth,<br/>
Follow their mistress, Pleasure, through the earth.<br/>
<!-- page 65--><SPAN name="page65"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
65</span>Death’s eyeless sockets glared upon them all,<br/>
And many in the train were seen to fall,<br/>
Livid and cold, beneath his empty gaze;<br/>
But not for this was stay’d the mighty throng,<br/>
Nor ceased the warlike clang, or wanton lays,<br/>
But still they
rush’d—along—along—along!</p>
<h2>SONNET.</h2>
<p>To a Lady who wrote under my likeness as Juliet, “Lieti
giorni e felice.”</p>
<p>Whence should they come, lady! those happy days<br/>
That thy fair hand and gentle heart invoke<br/>
Upon my head? Alas! such do not rise<br/>
On any, of the many, who with sighs<br/>
Bear through this journey-land of wo, life’s yoke.<br/>
The light of such lives not in thine own lays;<br/>
Such were not hers, that girl, so fond, so fair,<br/>
Beneath whose image thou hast traced thy pray’r.<br/>
Evil, and few, upon this darksome earth,<br/>
Must be the days of all of mortal birth;<br/>
Then why not mine? Sweet lady! wish again,<br/>
Not more of joy to me, but less of pain;<br/>
Calm slumber, when life’s troubled hours are past,<br/>
And with thy friendship cheer them while they last.</p>
<h2><!-- page 66--><SPAN name="page66"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>TO MY GUARDIAN ANGEL.</h2>
<p>Merciful spirit! who thy bright throne above<br/>
Hast left, to wander through this dismal earth<br/>
With me, poor child of sin!—Angel of love!<br/>
Whose guardian wings hung o’er me from my birth,<br/>
And who still walk’st unwearied by my side,<br/>
How oft, oh thou compassionate! must thou mourn<br/>
Over the wayward deeds, the thoughts of pride,<br/>
That thy pure eyes behold! Yet not aside<br/>
From thy sad task dost thou in anger turn;<br/>
But patiently, thou hast but gazed and sighed,<br/>
And followed still, striving with the divine<br/>
Powers of thy soul for mastery over mine;<br/>
And though all line of human hope be past,<br/>
Still fondly watching, hoping, to the last.</p>
<h2><!-- page 67--><SPAN name="page67"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>SONNET.</h2>
<p>Suggested by Sir Thomas Lawrence observing that we never dream
of ourselves younger than we are.</p>
<p>Not in our dreams, not even in our dreams,<br/>
May we return to that sweet land of youth,<br/>
That home of hope, of innocence, and truth,<br/>
Which as we farther roam but fairer seems.<br/>
In that dim shadowy world, where the soul strays<br/>
When she has laid her mortal charge to rest,<br/>
We oft behold far future hours and days,<br/>
But ne’er live o’er the past, the happiest,<br/>
How oft will fancy’s wild imaginings<br/>
Bear us in sleep to times and worlds unseen!<br/>
But ah! not e’en unfettered fancy’s wings<br/>
Can lead us back to aught that we have been,<br/>
Or waft us to that smiling, sunny shore,<br/>
Which e’en in slumber we may tread no more.</p>
<h2><!-- page 68--><SPAN name="page68"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>SONNET.</h2>
<p>Whene’er I recollect the happy time<br/>
When you and I held converse dear together,<br/>
There come a thousand thoughts of sunny weather,<br/>
Of early blossoms, and the fresh year’s prime;<br/>
Your memory lives for ever in my mind<br/>
With all the fragrant beauties of the spring,<br/>
With od’rous lime and silver hawthorn twined,<br/>
And many a noonday woodland wandering.<br/>
There’s not a thought of you, but brings along<br/>
Some sunny dream of river, field, and sky;<br/>
’Tis wafted on the blackbird’s sunset song,<br/>
Or some wild snatch of ancient melody.<br/>
And as I date it still, our love arose<br/>
’Twixt the last violet and the earliest rose.</p>
<h2><!-- page 69--><SPAN name="page69"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>TO THE SPRING.</h2>
<p>Hail to thee, spirit of hope! whom men call Spring;<br/>
Youngest and fairest of the four, who guide<br/>
Our mortal year along Time’s rapid tide.<br/>
Spirit of life! the old decrepid earth<br/>
Has heard thy voice, and at a wondrous birth,<br/>
Forth springing from her dark, mysterious womb,<br/>
A thousand germs of light and beauty come.<br/>
Thy breath is on the waters, and they leap<br/>
From their bright winter-woven fetters free;<br/>
Along the shore their sparkling billows sweep,<br/>
And greet thee with a gush of melody.<br/>
The air is full of music, wild and sweet,<br/>
Made by the joyous waving of the trees,<br/>
Wherein a thousand winged minstrels meet,<br/>
And by the work-song of the early bees,<br/>
In the white blossoms fondly murmuring,<br/>
And founts, that in the blessed sunshine sing;<br/>
<!-- page 70--><SPAN name="page70"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
70</span>Hail to thee! maiden, with the bright blue eyes!<br/>
And showery robe, all steeped in starry dew;<br/>
Hail to thee! as thou ridest through the skies,<br/>
Upon thy rainbow car of various hue.</p>
<h2>TO THE NIGHTINGALE.</h2>
<p>How passing sad! Listen, it sings again!<br/>
Art thou a spirit, that amongst the boughs,<br/>
The livelong day dost chaunt that wond’rous strain<br/>
Making wan Dian stoop her silver brows<br/>
Out of the clouds to hear thee? Who shall say,<br/>
Thou lone one! that thy melody is gay,<br/>
Let him come listen now to that one note,<br/>
That thou art pouring o’er and o’er
again<br/>
Through the sweet echoes of thy mellow throat,<br/>
With such a sobbing sound of deep, deep pain,<br/>
I prithee cease thy song! for from my heart<br/>
Thou hast made memory’s bitter waters start,<br/>
And filled my weary eyes with the soul’s
rain.</p>
<h2><!-- page 71--><SPAN name="page71"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>SONNET.</h2>
<p>Lady, whom my beloved loves so well!<br/>
When on his clasping arm thy head reclineth,<br/>
When on thy lips his ardent kisses dwell,<br/>
And the bright flood of burning light, that
shineth<br/>
In his dark eyes, is poured into thine;<br/>
When thou shalt lie enfolded to his heart,<br/>
In all the trusting helplessness of love;<br/>
If in such joy sorrow can find a part,<br/>
Oh, give one sigh unto a doom like mine!<br/>
Which I would have thee pity, but not prove.<br/>
One cold, calm, careless, wintry look, that fell<br/>
Haply by chance on me, is all that he<br/>
E’er gave my love; round that, my wild thoughts dwell<br/>
In one eternal pang of memory.</p>
<h2><!-- page 72--><SPAN name="page72"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>TO ---</h2>
<p>When the dawn<br/>
O’er hill and dale<br/>
Throws her bright veil,<br/>
Oh, think of me!<br/>
When the rain<br/>
With starry showers<br/>
Fills all the flowers,<br/>
Oh, think of me!<br/>
When the wind<br/>
Sweeps along,<br/>
Loud and strong,<br/>
Oh, think of me!<br/>
When the laugh<br/>
With silver sound<br/>
Goes echoing round,<br/>
Oh, think of me!<br/>
<!-- page 73--><SPAN name="page73"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
73</span>When the night<br/>
With solemn eyes<br/>
Looks from the skies,<br/>
Oh, think of me!<br/>
When the air<br/>
Still as death<br/>
Holds its breath,<br/>
Oh, think of me!<br/>
When the earth<br/>
Sleeping sound<br/>
Swings round and round,<br/>
Oh, think of me!<br/>
When thy soul<br/>
O’er life’s dark sea<br/>
Looks gloomily,<br/>
Oh, think of me!</p>
<h2><!-- page 74--><SPAN name="page74"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>WOMAN’S LOVE.</h2>
<p>A maiden meek, with solemn, steadfast eyes,<br/>
Full of eternal constancy and faith,<br/>
And smiling lips, through whose soft portal sighs<br/>
Truth’s holy voice, with ev’ry balmy
breath;<br/>
So journeys she along life’s crowded way,<br/>
Keeping her soul’s sweet counsel from all
sight;<br/>
Nor pomp, nor vanity, lead her astray,<br/>
Nor aught that men call dazzling, fair, or
bright:<br/>
For pity, sometimes, doth she pause, and stay<br/>
Those whom she meeteth mourning, for her heart<br/>
Knows well in suffering how to bear its part.<br/>
Patiently lives she through each dreary day,<br/>
Looking with little hope unto the morrow;<br/>
And still she walketh hand in hand with sorrow.</p>
<h2><!-- page 75--><SPAN name="page75"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>TO MRS. ---</h2>
<p>I never shall forget thee—’tis a word<br/>
Thou oft must hear, for surely there be none<br/>
On whom thy wond’rous eyes have ever shone<br/>
But for a moment, or who e’er have heard<br/>
Thy voice’s deep impassioned melody,<br/>
Can lose the memory of that look or tone.<br/>
But, not as these, do I say unto thee,<br/>
I never shall forget thee:—in thine eyes,<br/>
Whose light, like sunshine, makes the world rejoice,<br/>
A stream of sad and solemn splendour lies;<br/>
And there is sorrow in thy gentle voice.<br/>
Thou art not like the scenes in which I found thee,<br/>
Thou art not like the beings that surround thee;<br/>
To me, thou art a dream of hope and fear;<br/>
Yet why of fear?—oh sure! the Power that lent<br/>
Such gifts, to make thee fair, and excellent;<br/>
Still watches one whom it has deigned to bless<br/>
With such a dower of grace and loveliness;<br/>
Over the dangerous waves ’twill surely
steer<br/>
<!-- page 76--><SPAN name="page76"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
76</span>The richly freighted bark, through storm and blast,<br/>
And guide it safely to the port at last.<br/>
Such is my prayer; ’tis warm as ever fell<br/>
From off my lips: accept it, and farewell!<br/>
And though in this strange world where first I met thee;<br/>
We meet no more—I never shall forget thee.</p>
<h2><!-- page 77--><SPAN name="page77"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>AN ENTREATY.</h2>
<p>Once more, once more into the sunny fields<br/>
Oh, let me stray!<br/>
And drink the joy that young existence yields<br/>
In a bright, cloudless day.</p>
<p>Once more let me behold the summer sky,<br/>
With its blue eyes,<br/>
And join the wild wind’s voice of melody,<br/>
As far and free it flies.</p>
<p>Once more, once more, oh let me stand and hear<br/>
The gushing spring,<br/>
As its bright drops fall starlike, fast and clear,<br/>
And in the sunshine sing.</p>
<p>Once more, oh let me list the soft sweet breeze<br/>
At evening mourn:<br/>
Let me, oh let me say farewell to these,<br/>
And to my task I gaily will return.</p>
<p><!-- page 78--><SPAN name="page78"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
78</span>Oh, lovely earth! oh, blessed smiling sky!<br/>
Oh, music of the wood, the wave, the wind!<br/>
I do but linger till my ear and eye<br/>
Have traced ye on the tablets of my mind—</p>
<p>And then, fare ye well!<br/>
Bright hill and bosky dell,<br/>
Clear spring and haunted well,<br/>
Night-blowing flowers pale,<br/>
Smooth lawn and lonely vale,<br/>
Sleeping lakes and sparkling fountains,<br/>
Shadowy woods and sheltering mountains,<br/>
Flowery land and sunny sky,<br/>
And echo sweet, my playmate shy;<br/>
Fare ye well!—fare ye well!</p>
<h2><!-- page 79--><SPAN name="page79"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>LINES FOR MUSIC.</h2>
<p>Loud wind, strong wind, where art thou blowing?<br/>
Into the air, the viewless air,<br/>
To be lost there:<br/>
There am I blowing.</p>
<p>Clear wave, swift wave, where art thou flowing?<br/>
Unto the sea, the boundless
sea,<br/>
To be whelm’d there:<br/>
There am I flowing.</p>
<p>Young life, swift life, where art thou going?<br/>
Down to the grave, the loathsome
grave,<br/>
To moulder there:<br/>
There am I going.</p>
<h2><!-- page 80--><SPAN name="page80"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>TO ---</h2>
<p>When the glad sun looks smiling from the sky,<br/>
Upon each shadowy glen and woody height,<br/>
And that you tread those well known paths where I<br/>
Have stray’d with you,—do not forget me
quite.</p>
<p>When the warm hearth throws its bright glow around,<br/>
On many a smiling cheek, and glance of light,<br/>
And the gay laugh wakes with its joyous sound<br/>
The soul of mirth,—do not forget me quite.</p>
<p>You will not miss me; for with you remain<br/>
Hearts fond and warm, and spirits young and
bright,<br/>
’Tis but one word—“farewell;” and all
again<br/>
Will seem the same,—yet don’t forget me
quite.</p>
<h2><!-- page 81--><SPAN name="page81"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>THE PARTING.</h2>
<p>’Twas a fit hour for parting,<br/>
For athwart the leaden sky<br/>
The heavy clouds came gathering<br/>
And sailing gloomily:<br/>
The earth was drunk with heaven’s tears,<br/>
And each moaning autumn breeze<br/>
Shook the burthen of its weeping<br/>
Off the overladen trees.<br/>
The waterfall rushed swollen down,<br/>
In the gloaming, still and gray;<br/>
With a foam-wreath on the angry brow<br/>
Of each wave that flashed away.<br/>
My tears were mingling with the rain,<br/>
That fell so cold and fast,<br/>
And my spirit felt thy low deep sigh<br/>
Through the wild and roaring blast.<br/>
The beauty of the summer woods<br/>
Lay rustling round our feet,<br/>
And all fair things had passed away—<br/>
’Twas an hour for parting meet.</p>
<h2><!-- page 82--><SPAN name="page82"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>SONG.</h2>
<p>When you mournfully rivet your tear-laden eyes,<br/>
That have seen the last sunset of hope pass away,<br/>
On some bright orb that seems, through the still sapphire
skies,<br/>
In beauty and splendour to roll on its way:</p>
<p>Oh, remember this earth, if beheld from afar,<br/>
Appears wrapt in a halo as soft, and as bright,<br/>
As the pure silver radiance enshrining yon star,<br/>
Where your spirit is eagerly soaring to-night.</p>
<p>And at this very midnight, perhaps some poor heart,<br/>
That is aching, or breaking, in that distant
sphere;<br/>
Gazes down on this dark world, and longs to depart<br/>
From its own dismal home, to a happier one here.</p>
<h2><!-- page 83--><SPAN name="page83"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>TO A STAR.</h2>
<p>Thou little star, that in the purple clouds<br/>
Hang’st, like a dew-drop, in a violet bed;<br/>
First gem of evening, glittering on the shrouds,<br/>
’Mid whose dark folds the day lies pale and
dead:<br/>
As through my tears my soul looks up to thee,<br/>
Loathing the heavy chains that bind it here,<br/>
There comes a fearful thought that misery<br/>
Perhaps is found, even in thy distant sphere.<br/>
Art thou a world of sorrow and of sin,<br/>
The heritage of death, disease, decay,<br/>
A wilderness, like that we wander in,<br/>
Where all things fairest, soonest pass away?<br/>
And are there graves in thee, thou radiant world,<br/>
Round which life’s sweetest buds fall
witherëd,<br/>
Where hope’s bright wings in the dark earth lie furled,<br/>
And living hearts are mouldering with the dead?<br/>
<!-- page 84--><SPAN name="page84"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
84</span>Perchance they do not die, that dwell in thee,<br/>
Perchance theirs is a darker doom than ours;<br/>
Unchanging woe, and endless misery,<br/>
And mourning that hath neither days nor hours.<br/>
Horrible dream!—Oh dark and dismal path,<br/>
Where I now weeping walk, I will not leave thee;<br/>
Earth has one boon for all her children—death:<br/>
Open thy arms, oh mother! and receive me!<br/>
Take off the bitter burthen from the slave,<br/>
Give me my birthright! give—the grave, the
grave!</p>
<h2><!-- page 85--><SPAN name="page85"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>SONNET.</h2>
<p>Thou poisonous laurel leaf, that in the soil<br/>
Of life, which I am doomed to till full sore,<br/>
Spring’st like a noisome weed! I do not toil<br/>
For thee, and yet thou still com’st
dark’ning o’er<br/>
My plot of earth with thy
unwelcome shade.<br/>
Thou nightshade of the soul, beneath whose boughs<br/>
All fair and gentle buds hang withering!<br/>
Why hast thou wreathed thyself around my brows,<br/>
Casting from thence the blossoms of my spring,<br/>
Breathing on youth’s sweet
roses till they fade?<br/>
Alas! thou art an evil weed of woe,<br/>
Watered with tears and watched with sleepless
care,<br/>
Seldom doth envy thy green glories spare;<br/>
And yet men covet thee—ah, wherefore do they so!</p>
<h2><!-- page 86--><SPAN name="page86"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>SONNET.</h2>
<p>I hear a voice low in the sunset woods;<br/>
Listen, it says: “Decay, decay,
decay!”<br/>
I hear it in the murmuring of the floods,<br/>
And the wind sighs it as it flies away.<br/>
Autumn is come; seest thou not in the skies,<br/>
The stormy light of his fierce lurid eyes?<br/>
Autumn is come; his brazen feet have trod,<br/>
Withering and scorching, o’er the mossy sod.<br/>
The fainting year sees her fresh flowery wreath<br/>
Shrivel in his hot grasp; his burning breath<br/>
Dries the sweet water-springs that in the shade<br/>
Wandering along, delicious music made.<br/>
A flood of glory hangs upon the world,<br/>
Summer’s bright wings shining ere they are furled.</p>
<h2><!-- page 87--><SPAN name="page87"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>TO ---</h2>
<p>Is it a sin to wish that I may meet thee<br/>
In that dim world whither our spirits stray,<br/>
When sleep and darkness follow life and day?<br/>
Is it a sin, that there my voice should greet thee<br/>
With all that love that I must die concealing?<br/>
Will my tear-laden eyes sin in revealing<br/>
The agony that preys upon my soul?<br/>
Is’t not enough through the long, loathsome day,<br/>
To hold each look, and word, in stern control?<br/>
May I not wish the staring sunlight gone,<br/>
Day and its thousand torturing moments done,<br/>
And prying sights and sounds of men away?<br/>
Oh, still and silent Night! when all things
sleep,<br/>
Locked in thy swarthy breast my secret keep:<br/>
Come, with thy vision’d hopes and blessings
now!<br/>
I dream the only happiness I know.</p>
<h2><!-- page 88--><SPAN name="page88"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>SONNET.</h2>
<p>Written at four o’clock in the morning, after a
ball.</p>
<p>Oh, modest maiden morn! why dost thou blush,<br/>
Who thus betimes art walking in the sky?<br/>
’Tis I, whose cheek bears pleasure’s sleepless
flush,<br/>
Who shame to meet thy gray, cloud-lidded eye,<br/>
Shadowy, yet clear: from the bright eastern door,<br/>
Where the sun’s shafts lie bound with thongs
of fire,<br/>
Along the heaven’s amber-pavëd floor,<br/>
The glad hours move, hymning their early choir.<br/>
O, fair and fragrant morn! upon my brow<br/>
Press thy fresh lips, shake from thy dropping
hair<br/>
Cold showers of balmy dew on me, and ere<br/>
Day’s chariot-wheels upon th’ horizon glow,<br/>
Wrap me within thy sober cloak of gray,<br/>
And bear me to thy twilight bowers away.</p>
<h2><!-- page 89--><SPAN name="page89"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>LINES,<br/> In answer to a question.</h2>
<p>I’ll tell thee why this weary world meseemeth<br/>
But as the visions light of one who dreameth,<br/>
Which pass like clouds, leaving no trace behind;<br/>
Why this strange life, so full of sin and folly,<br/>
In me awakeneth no melancholy,<br/>
Nor leaveth shade, or sadness, on my mind.<br/>
’Tis not that with an undiscerning eye<br/>
I see the pageant wild go dancing by,<br/>
Mistaking that which falsest is, for true;<br/>
’Tis not that pleasure hath entwined me,<br/>
’Tis not that sorrow hath enshrined me;<br/>
I bear no badge of roses or of rue,<br/>
But in the inmost chambers of my soul<br/>
There is another world, a blessed home,<br/>
O’er which no living power holdeth control,<br/>
Anigh to which ill things do never come.<br/>
There shineth the glad sunlight of clear thought,<br/>
With hope, and faith, holding communion high,<br/>
Over a fragrant land with flowers wrought,<br/>
Where gush the living springs of poesy;<br/>
<!-- page 90--><SPAN name="page90"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
90</span>There speak the voices that I love to hear,<br/>
There smile the glances that I love to see,<br/>
There live the forms of those my soul holds dear,<br/>
For ever, in that secret world, with me.<br/>
They who have walked with me along life’s way,<br/>
And sever’d been by Fortune’s adverse tide,<br/>
Who ne’er again, through Time’s uncertain day,<br/>
In weal or woe, may wander by my side;<br/>
These all dwell here: nor these, whom life alone<br/>
Divideth from me, but the dead, the dead;<br/>
Those weary ones who to their rest are gone,<br/>
Whose footprints from the earth have vanishëd;<br/>
Here dwell they all: and here, within this world,<br/>
Like light within a summer sun cloud furled,<br/>
My spirit dwells. Therefore, this evil life,<br/>
With all its gilded snares, and fair deceivings,<br/>
Its wealth, its want, its pleasures, and its grievings,<br/>
Nor frights, nor frets me, by its idle strife.<br/>
O thou! who readest, of thy courtesy,<br/>
Whoe’er thou art, I wish the same to thee!</p>
<h2><!-- page 91--><SPAN name="page91"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>A FAREWELL.</h2>
<p>I shall come no more to the Cedar Hall,<br/>
The fairies’ palace beside the stream;<br/>
Where the yellow sun-rays at morning fall<br/>
Through their tresses dark, with a mellow gleam.</p>
<p>I shall tread no more the thick dewy lawn,<br/>
When the young moon hangs on the brow of night,<br/>
Nor see the morning, at early dawn,<br/>
Shake the fading stars from her robes of light.</p>
<p>I shall fly no more on my fiery steed,<br/>
O’er the springing sward,—through the
twilight wood;<br/>
Nor reign my courser, and check my speed,<br/>
By the lonely grange, and the haunted flood.</p>
<p>At fragrant noon, I shall lie no more<br/>
’Neath the oak’s broad shade, in the
leafy dell:<br/>
The sun is set,—the day is o’er,—<br/>
The summer is
past;—farewell!—farewell!</p>
<h2><!-- page 92--><SPAN name="page92"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>TO A PICTURE.</h2>
<p>Oh, serious eyes! how is it that the light,<br/>
The burning rays that mine pour into ye,<br/>
Still find ye cold, and dead, and dark, as night—<br/>
Oh, lifeless eyes! can ye not answer me?<br/>
Oh, lips! whereon mine own so often dwell,<br/>
Hath love’s warm, fearful, thrilling touch, no spell<br/>
To waken sense in ye?—oh, misery!—<br/>
Oh, breathless lips! can ye not speak to me?<br/>
Thou soulless mimicry of life! my tears<br/>
Fall scalding over thee; in vain, in vain;<br/>
I press thee to my heart, whose hopes, and fears,<br/>
Are all thine own; thou dost not feel the strain.<br/>
Oh, thou dull image! wilt thou not reply<br/>
To my fond prayers and wild idolatry?</p>
<h2><!-- page 93--><SPAN name="page93"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>SONNET.</h2>
<p>There’s not a fibre in my trembling frame<br/>
That does not vibrate when thy step draws near,<br/>
There’s not a pulse that throbs not when I hear<br/>
Thy voice, thy breathing, nay, thy very name.<br/>
When thou art with me, every sense seems dull,<br/>
And all I am, or know, or feel, is thee;<br/>
My soul grows faint, my veins run liquid flame,<br/>
And my bewildered spirit seems to swim<br/>
In eddying whirls of passion, dizzily.<br/>
When thou art gone, there creeps into my heart<br/>
A cold and bitter consciousness of pain:<br/>
The light, the warmth of life, with thee depart,<br/>
And I sit dreaming o’er and o’er again<br/>
Thy greeting clasp, thy parting look, and tone;<br/>
And suddenly I wake—and am alone.</p>
<h2><!-- page 94--><SPAN name="page94"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>AN INVITATION.</h2>
<p>Come where the white waves dance along the shore<br/>
Of some lone isle, lost in the unknown seas;<br/>
Whose golden sands by mortal foot before<br/>
Were never printed,—where the fragrant breeze,<br/>
That never swept o’er land or flood that man<br/>
Could call his own, th’ unearthly breeze shall fan<br/>
Our mingled tresses with its odorous sighs;<br/>
Where the eternal heaven’s blue, sunny eyes<br/>
Did ne’er look down on human shapes of earth,<br/>
Or aught of mortal mould and death-doomed birth:<br/>
Come there with me; and when we are alone<br/>
In that enchanted desert, where the tone<br/>
Of earthly voice, or language, yet did ne’er<br/>
With its strange music startle the still air,<br/>
When clasped in thy upholding arms I stand,<br/>
Upon that bright world’s coral-cradled strand,<br/>
When I can hide my face upon thy breast,<br/>
While thy heart answers mine together pressed,<br/>
Then fold me closer, bend thy head above me,<br/>
Listen—and I will tell thee how I love thee.</p>
<h2><!-- page 95--><SPAN name="page95"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>LINES FOR MUSIC.</h2>
<p> Oh,
sunny Love!<br/>
Crowned with fresh flowering May,<br/>
Breath like the Indian clove,<br/>
Eyes like the dawn of day;<br/>
Oh, sunny
Love!</p>
<p> Oh,
fatal Love!<br/>
Thy robe wreath is nightshade all,<br/>
With gloomy cypress wove,<br/>
Thy kiss is bitter gall,<br/>
Oh, fatal
Love!</p>
<h2><!-- page 96--><SPAN name="page96"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>SONG.</h2>
<p>Never, oh never more! shall I behold<br/>
Thy form so fair,<br/>
Or loosen from its braids the rippling gold<br/>
Of thy long hair.</p>
<p>Never, oh never more! shall I be blest<br/>
By thy voice low,<br/>
Or kiss, while thou art sleeping on my breast,<br/>
Thy marble brow.</p>
<p>Never, oh never more! shall I inhale<br/>
Thy fragrant sighs,<br/>
Or gaze, with fainting soul, upon the veil<br/>
Of thy bright eyes.</p>
<h2><!-- page 97--><SPAN name="page97"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>LINES ON A SLEEPING CHILD.</h2>
<p>Oh child! who to this evil world art come,<br/>
Led by the unseen hand of Him who guards thee,<br/>
Welcome unto this dungeon-house, thy home!<br/>
Welcome to all the woe this life awards thee!</p>
<p>Upon thy forehead yet the badge of sin<br/>
Hath worn no trace; thou look’st as though
from heaven,<br/>
But pain, and guilt, and misery lie within;<br/>
Poor exile! from thy happy birth-land driven.</p>
<p>Thine eyes are sealed by the soft hand of sleep,<br/>
And like unruffled waves thy slumber seems;<br/>
The time’s at hand when thou must wake to weep,<br/>
Or sleeping, walk a restless world of dreams.</p>
<p>How oft, as day by day life’s burthen lies<br/>
Heavier and darker on thy fainting soul,<br/>
Wilt thou towards heaven turn thy weary eyes,<br/>
And long in bitterness to reach the goal!</p>
<p><!-- page 98--><SPAN name="page98"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
98</span>How oft wilt thou, upon Time’s flinty road,<br/>
Gaze at thy far off early days, in vain;<br/>
Weeping, how oft wilt thou cast down thy load,<br/>
And curse and pray, then take it up again!</p>
<p>How many times shall the fiend Hope, extend<br/>
Her poisonous chalice to thy thirsty lips!<br/>
How oft shall Love its withering sunshine lend,<br/>
To leave thee only a more dark eclipse!</p>
<p>How oft shall Sorrow strain thee in her grasp,—<br/>
How oft shall Sin laugh at thine overthrow—<br/>
How oft shall Doubt, Despair, and Anguish clasp<br/>
Their knotted arms around thine aching brow!</p>
<p>Oh, living soul, hail to thy narrow cage!<br/>
Spirit of light, hail to thy gloomy cave!<br/>
Welcome to longing youth, to loathing age,<br/>
Welcome, immortal! welcome to the grave!</p>
<h2><!-- page 99--><SPAN name="page99"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>A RETROSPECT.</h2>
<p>Life wanes, and the bright sunlight of our youth<br/>
Sets o’er the mountain-tops, where once Hope
stood.<br/>
Oh, Innocence! oh, Trustfulness! oh, Truth!<br/>
Where are ye all, white-handed sisterhood,<br/>
Who with me on my way did walk along,<br/>
Singing sweet scraps of that immortal song<br/>
That’s hymn’d in Heaven, but hath no echo here?<br/>
Are ye departing, fellows bright and clear,<br/>
Of the young spirit, when it first alights<br/>
Upon this earth of darkness and dismay?<br/>
Farewell! fair children of th’ eternal day,<br/>
Blossoms of that far land where fall no blights,<br/>
Sweet kindred of my exiled soul, farewell!<br/>
Here I must wander, here ye may not dwell;<br/>
Back to your home beyond the founts of light<br/>
I see ye fly, and I am wrapt in night!</p>
<h2><!-- page 100--><SPAN name="page100"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>AN INVOCATION.</h2>
<p>Spirit, bright spirit! from thy narrow cell<br/>
Answer me! answer me! oh, let me hear<br/>
Thy voice, and know that thou indeed art near!<br/>
That from the bonds in which thou’rt forced to dwell<br/>
Thou hast not broken free, thou art not fled,<br/>
Thou hast not pined away, thou art not dead.<br/>
Speak to me through thy prison bars; my life<br/>
With all things round, is one eternal strife,<br/>
’Mid whose wild din I pause to hear thy voice;<br/>
Speak to me, look on me, thou born of light!<br/>
That I may know thou’rt with me, and rejoice.<br/>
Shall not this weary warfare pass away?<br/>
Shall there not come a better, brighter day?<br/>
Shall not thy chain and mine be broken quite,<br/>
And thou to heaven spring,<br/>
With thine immortal wing,<br/>
And I, still following,<br/>
<!-- page 101--><SPAN name="page101"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>With steps
that do not tire,<br/>
Reach my desire,<br/>
And to thy worship bring<br/>
Some worthy offering?<br/>
Oh! let but these dark days be once gone by,<br/>
And thou, unwilling captive, that dost strain,<br/>
With tiptoe longing, vainly, towards the sky,<br/>
O’er the whole kingdom of my life shalt
reign.<br/>
But, while I’m doomed beneath the yoke to bow,<br/>
Of sordid toiling in these caverns drear,<br/>
Oh, look upon me sometimes with thy brow<br/>
Of shining brightness; sometimes let me hear<br/>
Thy blessed voice, singing the songs of Heaven,<br/>
Whence thou and I, together have been driven;<br/>
Give me assurance that thou still art nigh,<br/>
Lest I sink down beneath my load, and die!</p>
<h2><!-- page 102--><SPAN name="page102"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>A LAMENT FOR THE WISSAHICCON.</h2>
<p>The waterfall is calling me<br/>
With its merry gleesome flow,<br/>
And the green boughs are beckoning me,<br/>
To where the wild flowers grow:</p>
<p>I may not go, I may not go,<br/>
To where the sunny waters flow,<br/>
To where the wild wood flowers blow;<br/>
I must stay here<br/>
In prison drear,<br/>
Oh, heavy life, wear on, wear on,<br/>
Would God that thou wert done!</p>
<p>The busy mill-wheel round and round<br/>
Goes turning, with its reckless sound,<br/>
And o’er the dam the wafers flow<br/>
Into the foaming stream below,<br/>
And deep and dark away they glide,<br/>
To meet the broad, bright river’s tide;<br/>
<!-- page 103--><SPAN name="page103"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
103</span>And all the way<br/>
They murmuring say:<br/>
“Oh, child! why art thou far away?<br/>
Come back into the sun, and stray<br/>
Upon our mossy side!”</p>
<p>I may not go, I may not go,<br/>
To where the gold-green waters run,<br/>
All shining in the summer sun,<br/>
And leap from off the dam below<br/>
Into a whirl of boiling snow,<br/>
Laughing and shouting as they go;<br/>
I must stay here<br/>
In prison drear,<br/>
Oh, heavy life, wear on, wear on,<br/>
Would God that thou wert done!</p>
<p>The soft spring wind goes passing by,<br/>
Into the forests wide and cool;<br/>
The clouds go trooping through the sky,<br/>
To look down on some glassy pool;<br/>
The sunshine makes the world rejoice,<br/>
And all of them, with gentle voice,<br/>
Call me away,<br/>
With them to stay,<br/>
The blessed, livelong summer’s day.</p>
<p><!-- page 104--><SPAN name="page104"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
104</span>I may not go, I may not go,<br/>
Where the sweet breathing spring winds blow,<br/>
Nor where the silver clouds go by,<br/>
Across the holy, deep blue sky,<br/>
Nor where the sunshine, warm and bright,<br/>
Comes down like a still shower of light;<br/>
I must stay here<br/>
In prison drear,<br/>
Oh, heavy life, wear on, wear on,<br/>
Would God that thou wert done!</p>
<p>Oh, that I were a thing with wings!<br/>
A bird, that in a May-hedge sings!<br/>
A lonely heather bell that swings<br/>
Upon some wild hill-side;<br/>
Or even a silly, senseless stone,<br/>
With dark, green, starry moss o’ergrown,<br/>
Round which the waters glide.</p>
<h2><!-- page 105--><SPAN name="page105"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>TO THE WISSAHICCON.</h2>
<p>My feet shall tread no more thy mossy side,<br/>
When once they turn away, thou <i>Pleasant
Water</i>,<br/>
Nor ever more, reflected in thy tide,<br/>
Will shine the eyes of the White Island’s
daughter.<br/>
But often in my dreams, when I am gone<br/>
Beyond the sea that parts thy home and mine,<br/>
Upon thy banks the evening sun will shine,<br/>
And I shall hear thy low, still flowing on.<br/>
And when the burden of existence lies<br/>
Upon my soul, darkly and heavily,<br/>
I’ll clasp my hands over my weary eyes,<br/>
Thou <i>Pleasant Water</i>, and thy clear waves
see.<br/>
Bright be thy course for ever and for ever,<br/>
Child of pure mountain springs, and mountain
snow;<br/>
<!-- page 106--><SPAN name="page106"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
106</span>And as thou wanderest on to meet the river<br/>
Oh, still in light and music mayst thou flow!<br/>
I never shall come back to thee again,<br/>
When once my sail is shadowed on the main,<br/>
Nor ever shall I hear thy laughing voice<br/>
As on their rippling way thy waves rejoice,<br/>
Nor ever see the dark green cedar throw<br/>
Its gloomy shade o’er the clear depths below,<br/>
Never, from stony rifts of granite gray<br/>
Sparkling like diamond rocks in the sun’s ray,<br/>
Shall I look down on thee, thou pleasant stream,<br/>
Beneath whose crystal folds the gold sands gleam;<br/>
Wherefore, farewell! but whensoe’er again<br/>
The wintry spell melts from the earth and air;<br/>
And the young Spring comes dancing through thy glen,<br/>
With fragrant, flowery breath, and sunny hair;<br/>
When through the snow the scarlet berries gleam,<br/>
Like jewels strewn upon thy banks, fair stream,<br/>
My spirit shall through many a summer’s day<br/>
Return, among thy peaceful woods to stray.</p>
<h2><!-- page 107--><SPAN name="page107"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>AN EVENING SONG.</h2>
<p> Good night, love!<br/>
May Heaven’s brightest stars watch over thee!<br/>
Good angels spread their wings, and cover thee,<br/>
And through the night,<br/>
So dark and
still,<br/>
Spirits of light<br/>
Charm thee from
ill!<br/>
My heart is hovering round thy dwelling-place,<br/>
Good night, dear love! God bless thee with his grace!</p>
<p> Good night, love!<br/>
Soft lullabies the night-wind sing to thee!<br/>
And on its wings sweet odours bring to thee!<br/>
And in thy dreaming<br/>
May all things
dear,<br/>
With gentle seeming,<br/>
Come smiling
near!<br/>
My knees are bowed, my hands are clasped in prayer—<br/>
Good night, dear love! God keep thee in his care!</p>
<h2><!-- page 108--><SPAN name="page108"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>THE DEATH-SONG.</h2>
<p>Mother, mother! my heart is wild,<br/>
Hold me upon your bosom dear,<br/>
Do not frown on your own poor child,<br/>
Death is darkly drawing near.</p>
<p>Mother, mother! the bitter shame<br/>
Eats into my very soul;<br/>
And longing love, like a wrapping flame,<br/>
Burns me away without control.</p>
<p>Mother, mother! upon my brow<br/>
The clammy death-sweats coldly rise;<br/>
How dim and strange your features grow<br/>
Through the hot mist that veils my eyes!</p>
<p>Mother, mother! sing me the song<br/>
They sing on sunny August eves,<br/>
The rustling barley-fields along,<br/>
Binding up the ripe, red sheaves.</p>
<p><!-- page 109--><SPAN name="page109"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
109</span>Mother, mother! I do not hear<br/>
Your voice—but his,—oh, guard me
well!<br/>
His breathing makes me faint with fear,<br/>
His clasping arms are round me still.</p>
<p>Mother, mother! unbind my vest,<br/>
Upon my heart lies his first token:<br/>
Now lay me in my narrow nest,<br/>
Your withered blossom, crushed and broken.</p>
<h2>IMPROMPTU.</h2>
<p>You say you’re glad I write—oh, say not so!<br/>
My fount of song, dear friend, ’s a bitter
well;<br/>
And when the numbers freely from it flow,<br/>
’Tis that my heart, and eyes, o’erflow
as well.</p>
<p>Castalia, fam’d of yore,—the spring divine,<br/>
Apollo’s smile upon its current wears:<br/>
Moore and Anacreon, found its waves were wine,<br/>
To me, it flows a sullen stream of tears.</p>
<h2><!-- page 110--><SPAN name="page110"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>WRITTEN AFTER LEAVING WEST POINT.</h2>
<p> The hours are past, love,<br/>
Oh, fled they not too fast, love!<br/>
Those happy hours, when down the mountain side,<br/>
We saw the rosy mists of morning glide,<br/>
And, hand in hand, went forth upon our way,<br/>
Full of young life and hope, to meet the day.</p>
<p> The hours are past, love,<br/>
Oh, fled they not too fast, love!<br/>
Those sunny hours, when from the mid-day heat,<br/>
We sought the waterfall with loitering feet,<br/>
And o’er the rocks that lock the gleaming pool,<br/>
Crept down into its depths, so dark and cool.</p>
<p> The hours are past, love,<br/>
Oh, fled they not too fast, love!<br/>
Those solemn hours, when through the violet sky,<br/>
Alike without a cloud, without a ray,<br/>
The round red autumn moon came glowingly,<br/>
While o’er the leaden waves our boat made way.</p>
<p> <!-- page 111--><SPAN name="page111"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>The hours are past, love,<br/>
Oh, fled they not too fast, love!<br/>
Those blessed hours, when the bright day was past,<br/>
And in the world we seemed to wake alone,<br/>
When heart to heart beat throbbingly, and fast,<br/>
And love was melting our two souls in one.</p>
<h2>FAITH.</h2>
<p>Better trust all, and be deceived,<br/>
And weep that trust, and that deceiving;<br/>
Than doubt one heart, that if believed,<br/>
Had blessed one’s life with true
believing.</p>
<p>Oh, in this mocking world, too fast<br/>
The doubting fiend o’ertakes our youth!<br/>
Better be cheated to the last,<br/>
Than loose the blessed hope of truth.</p>
<h2><!-- page 112--><SPAN name="page112"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>“’TIS AN OLD TALE AND OFTEN TOLD.”</h2>
<p>Are they indeed the bitterest tears we shed,<br/>
Those we let fall over the silent dead?<br/>
Can our thoughts image forth no darker doom,<br/>
Than that which wraps us in the peaceful tomb?<br/>
Whom have ye laid beneath that mossy grave,<br/>
Round which the slender, sunny, grass-blades wave?<br/>
Who are ye calling back to tread again<br/>
This weary walk of life? towards whom, in vain,<br/>
Are your fond eyes and yearning hearts upraised;<br/>
The young, the loved, the honoured, and the praised?<br/>
Come hither;—look upon the faded cheek<br/>
Of that still woman, who with eyelids meek<br/>
Veils her most mournful eyes;—upon her brow<br/>
Sometimes the sensitive blood will faintly glow,<br/>
When reckless hands her heart-wounds roughly tear,<br/>
But patience oftener sits palely there.<br/>
<!-- page 113--><SPAN name="page113"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
113</span>Beauty has left her—hope and joy have long<br/>
Fled from her heart, yet she is young, is <i>young</i>;<br/>
Has many years, as human tongues would tell,<br/>
Upon the face of this blank earth to dwell.<br/>
Looks she not sad? ’tis but a tale of old,<br/>
Told o’er and o’er, and ever to be told,<br/>
The hourly story of our every day,<br/>
Which when men hear, they sigh and turn away;<br/>
A tale too trite almost to find an ear,<br/>
A woe too common to deserve a tear.<br/>
She is the daughter of a distant land;—<br/>
Her kindred are far off;—her maiden hand,<br/>
Sought for by many, was obtained by one<br/>
Who owned a different birthland from her own.<br/>
But what reck’d she of that? as low she knelt<br/>
Breathing her marriage vows, her fond heart felt,<br/>
“For thee, I give up country, home, and friends;<br/>
Thy love for each, for all, shall make amends;”<br/>
And was she loved?—perishing by her side<br/>
The children of her bosom drooped and died;<br/>
The bitter life they drew from her cold breast<br/>
Flicker’d and failed; she laid them down to rest,<br/>
Two pale young blossoms in their early sleep,<br/>
And weeping said, “They have not lived to weep.”<br/>
And weeps she yet? no, to her weary eyes<br/>
The bliss of tears, her frozen heart denies;<br/>
<!-- page 114--><SPAN name="page114"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
114</span>Complaint, or sigh, breathes not upon her lips,<br/>
Her life is one dark, fatal, deep eclipse.<br/>
Lead <i>her</i> to the green grave where ye have laid<br/>
The creature that ye mourn;—let it be said,<br/>
“Here love, and youth, and beauty, are at rest!”<br/>
She only sadly murmurs, “Blest!—most blest!”<br/>
And turns from gazing, lest her misery<br/>
Should make her sin, and pray to Heaven to die.</p>
<h2>FRAGMENT.<br/> From an epistle written when the thermometer stood at 98° in the shade.<br/> * * * * *</h2>
<p>Oh! for the temperate airs that blow<br/>
Upon that darling of the sea,<br/>
Where neither sunshine, rain, nor snow,<br/>
For three days hold supremacy;<br/>
But ever-varying skies contend<br/>
The blessings of all climes to lend,<br/>
To make that tiny, wave-rocked isle,<br/>
In never-fading beauty smile.<br/>
<!-- page 115--><SPAN name="page115"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
115</span>England, oh England! for the breeze<br/>
That slowly stirs thy forest-trees!<br/>
Thy ferny brooks, thy mossy fountains,<br/>
Thy beechen woods, thy heathery mountains,<br/>
Thy lawny uplands, where the shadow<br/>
Of many a giant oak is sleeping;<br/>
The tangled copse, the sunny meadow,<br/>
Through which the summer rills run weeping.<br/>
Oh, land of flowers! while sinking here<br/>
Beneath the dog-star of the West,<br/>
The music of the waves I hear<br/>
That cradle thee upon their breast.<br/>
Fresh o’er thy rippling corn-fields fly<br/>
The wild-winged breezes of the sea,<br/>
While from thy smiling, summer sky,<br/>
The ripening sun looks tenderly.<br/>
And thou—to whom through all this heat<br/>
My parboiled thoughts will fondly turn,<br/>
Oh! in what “shady blest retreat”<br/>
Art thou ensconced, while here I burn?<br/>
Across the lawn, in the deep glade,<br/>
Where hand in hand we oft have strayed,<br/>
Or communed sweetly, side by side,<br/>
Hear’st thou the chiming ocean tide,<br/>
As gently on the pebbly beach<br/>
It lays its head, then ebbs away,<br/>
<!-- page 116--><SPAN name="page116"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
116</span>Or round the rocks, with nearer reach,<br/>
Throws up a cloud of silvery spray?<br/>
Or to the firry woods, that shed<br/>
Their spicy odours to the sun,<br/>
Goest thou with meditative tread,<br/>
Thinking of all things that are done<br/>
Beneath the sky?—a great, big thought,<br/>
Of which I know you’re very fond.<br/>
For me, my mind is solely wrought<br/>
To this one wish:—O! in a pond<br/>
Would I were over head and ears!<br/>
(Of a <i>cold</i> ducking I’ve no fears)<br/>
Or any where, where I am not;<br/>
For, bless the heat! it is too hot!</p>
<h2>AN APOLOGY.</h2>
<p>Blame not my tears, love: to you has been given<br/>
The brightest, best gift, God to mortals allows;<br/>
The sunlight of hope on your heart shines from Heaven,<br/>
And shines from your heart, on this life and its
woes.</p>
<p><!-- page 117--><SPAN name="page117"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
117</span>Blame not my tears, love: on you her best treasure<br/>
Kind nature has lavish’d, oh, long be it
yours!<br/>
For how barren soe’er be the path you now measure,<br/>
The future still woos you with hands full of
flowers.</p>
<p>Oh, ne’er be that gift, love, withdrawn from thy
keeping!<br/>
The jewel of life, its strong spirit, its wings;<br/>
If thou ever must weep, may it shine through thy weeping,<br/>
As the sun his warm rays through a spring shower
flings.</p>
<p>But blame not my tears, love: to me ’twas denied;<br/>
And when fate to my lips gave this life’s
mingled cup,<br/>
She had filled to the brim, from the dark bitter tide,<br/>
And forgotten to pour in the only sweet drop.</p>
<h2><!-- page 118--><SPAN name="page118"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>WRITTEN AFTER SPENDING A DAY AT WEST POINT.</h2>
<p>Were they but dreams? Upon the darkening world<br/>
Evening comes down, the wings of fire are furled,<br/>
On which the day soared to the sunny west:<br/>
The moon sits calmly, like a soul at rest,<br/>
Looking upon the never-resting earth;<br/>
All things in heaven wait on the solemn birth<br/>
Of night, but where has fled the happy dream<br/>
That at this hour, last night, our life did seem?<br/>
Where are the mountains with their tangled hair,<br/>
The leafy hollow, and the rocky stair?<br/>
Where are the shadows of the solemn hills,<br/>
And the fresh music of the summer rills?<br/>
Where are the wood-paths, winding, long and steep,<br/>
And the great, glorious river, broad and deep,<br/>
And the thick copses, where soft breezes meet,<br/>
And the wild torrent’s snowy, leaping feet,<br/>
The rustling, rocking boughs, the running streams,—<br/>
Where are they all? gone, gone! were they but dreams?<br/>
<!-- page 119--><SPAN name="page119"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
119</span>And where, oh where are the light footsteps gone,<br/>
That from the mountain-side came dancing down?<br/>
The voices full of mirth, the loving eyes,<br/>
The happy hearts, the human paradise,<br/>
The youth, the love, the life that revelled here,—<br/>
Are they too gone?—Upon Time’s shadowy bier,<br/>
The pale, cold hours of joys now past, are laid,<br/>
Perhaps, not soon from memory’s gaze to fade,<br/>
But never to be reckoned o’er again,<br/>
In all life’s future store of bliss and pain.<br/>
From the bright eyes the sunshine may depart,<br/>
Youth flies—love dies—and from the joyous heart<br/>
Hope’s gushing fountain ebbs too soon away,<br/>
Nor spares one drop for that disastrous day,<br/>
When from the barren waste of after life,<br/>
The weariness, the worldliness, the strife,<br/>
The soul looks o’er the desert of its way<br/>
To the green gardens of its early day:<br/>
The paradise, for which we vainly mourn,<br/>
The heaven, to which our ling’ring eyes still turn,<br/>
To which our footsteps never shall return.</p>
<h2><!-- page 120--><SPAN name="page120"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>SONG.</h2>
<p> Pass thy hand through my hair, lore;<br/>
One little year ago,<br/>
In a curtain bright and rare, love,<br/>
It fell golden o’er my
brow.<br/>
But the gold has passed away, love,<br/>
And the drooping curls are
thin,<br/>
And cold threads of wintry gray, love,<br/>
Glitter their folds within:<br/>
How should this be, in one short year?<br/>
It is not age—can it be care?</p>
<p> Fasten thine eyes on mine, love;<br/>
One little year ago,<br/>
Midsummer’s sunny shine, love,<br/>
Had not a warmer glow.<br/>
But the light is there no more, love,<br/>
Save in melancholy gleams,<br/>
Like wan moonlight wand’ring o’er,
love,<br/>
Dim lands in troubled dreams:<br/>
How should this be, in one short year?<br/>
It is not age—can it be care?</p>
<p> <!-- page 121--><SPAN name="page121"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>Lay thy cheek to my cheek, love,<br/>
One little year ago<br/>
It was ripe, and round, and sleek, love,<br/>
As the autumn peaches grow.<br/>
But the rosy hue has fled, love,<br/>
Save a flush that goes and
comes,<br/>
Like a flow’r born from the dead, love,<br/>
And blooming over tombs:<br/>
How should this be, in one short year?<br/>
It is not age—can it be care?</p>
<h2><!-- page 122--><SPAN name="page122"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>TO MRS. DULANEY.</h2>
<p> What was thine errand
here?<br/>
Thy beauty was more exquisite than aught<br/>
That from this marred earth<br/>
Takes its imperfect birth;<br/>
It was a radiant, heavenly beauty, caught<br/>
From some far higher sphere,<br/>
And though an angel now, thou still must bear<br/>
The lovely semblance that thou here didst wear.</p>
<p> What was thine errand
here?<br/>
Thy gentle thoughts, and holy, humble mind,<br/>
With earthly creatures coarse,<br/>
Held not discourse,<br/>
But with fine spirits, of some purer kind,<br/>
Dwelt in communion dear;<br/>
And sure they speak to thee that language now,<br/>
Which thou wert wont to speak to us below.</p>
<p> <!-- page 123--><SPAN name="page123"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>What was
thine errand here?<br/>
To adorn anguish, and ennoble death,<br/>
And make infirmity<br/>
A patient victory,<br/>
And crown life’s baseness with a glorious wreath,<br/>
That fades not on thy bier,<br/>
But fits, immortal soul! thy triumph still,<br/>
In that bright world where thou art gone to dwell.</p>
<h2>IMPROMPTU,<br/> Written among the ruins of the Sonnenberg.</h2>
<p>Thou who within thyself dost not behold<br/>
Ruins as great as these, though not as old,<br/>
Can’st scarce through life have travelled many a year,<br/>
Or lack’st the spirit of a pilgrim here.<br/>
Youth hath its walls of strength, its towers of pride;<br/>
Love, its warm hearth-stones; Hope, its prospects wide;<br/>
Life’s fortress in thee, held these one, and all,<br/>
And they have fallen to ruin, or shall fall.</p>
<h2><!-- page 124--><SPAN name="page124"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>LINES,<br/> Addressed to the Young Gentlemen leaving the Academy at Lenox, Massachusetts.</h2>
<p>Life is before ye—and while now ye stand<br/>
Eager to spring upon the promised land,<br/>
Fair smiles the way, where yet your feet have trod<br/>
But few light steps, upon a flowery sod;<br/>
Round ye are youth’s green bowers, and to your eyes<br/>
Th’ horizon’s line joins earth with the bright
skies;<br/>
Daring and triumph, pleasure, fame, and joy,<br/>
Friendship unwavering, love without alloy,<br/>
Brave thoughts of noble deeds, and glory won,<br/>
Like angels, beckon ye to venture on.<br/>
And if o’er the bright scene some shadows rise,<br/>
Far off they seem, at hand the sunshine lies;<br/>
The distant clouds, which of ye pause to fear?<br/>
Shall not a brightness gild them when more near?<br/>
<!-- page 125--><SPAN name="page125"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
125</span>Dismay and doubt ye know not, for the power<br/>
Of youth is strong within ye at this hour,<br/>
And the great mortal conflict seems to ye<br/>
Not so much strife as certain victory—<br/>
A glory ending in eternity.<br/>
Life is before ye—oh! if ye could look<br/>
Into the secrets of that sealëd book,<br/>
Strong as ye are in youth, and hope, and faith,<br/>
Ye should sink down, and falter, “Give us death!”<br/>
Could the dread Sphinx’s lips but once disclose,<br/>
And utter but a whisper of the woes<br/>
Which must o’ertake ye, in your lifelong doom,<br/>
Well might ye cry, “Our cradle be our tomb!”<br/>
Could ye foresee your spirit’s broken wings,<br/>
Earth’s brightest triumphs what despisëd things,<br/>
Friendship how feeble, love how fierce a flame,<br/>
Your joy half sorrow, half your glory shame,<br/>
Hollowness, weariness, and, worst of all,<br/>
Self-scorn that pities not its own deep fall,<br/>
Fast gathering darkness, and fast waning light,—<br/>
Oh could ye see it all, ye might, ye might<br/>
Cower in the dust, unequal to the strife,<br/>
And die, but in beholding what is life.</p>
<p>Life is before ye—from the fated road<br/>
Ye cannot turn: then take ye up your load.<br/>
<!-- page 126--><SPAN name="page126"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
126</span>Not yours to tread, or leave the unknown way,<br/>
Ye must go o’er it, meet ye what ye may.<br/>
Gird up your souls within ye to the deed,<br/>
Angels, and fellow-spirits, bid ye speed!<br/>
What though the brightness dim, the pleasure fade,<br/>
The glory wane,—oh! not of these is made<br/>
The awful life that to your trust is given.<br/>
Children of God! inheritors of heaven!<br/>
Mourn not the perishing of each fair toy,<br/>
Ye were ordained to do, not to enjoy,<br/>
To suffer, which is nobler than to dare;<br/>
A sacred burthen is this life ye bear,<br/>
Look on it, lift it, bear it solemnly,<br/>
Stand up and walk beneath it steadfastly;<br/>
Fail not for sorrow, falter not for sin,<br/>
But onward, upward, till the goal ye win;<br/>
God guard ye, and God guide ye on your way,<br/>
Young pilgrim warriors who set forth to-day!</p>
<h2><!-- page 127--><SPAN name="page127"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>THE PRAYER OF A LONELY HEART.</h2>
<p>I am alone—oh be thou near to me,<br/>
Great God! from whom the meanest are not far.<br/>
Not in presumption of the daring spirit,<br/>
Striving to find the secrets of itself,<br/>
Make I my weeping prayer; in the deep want<br/>
Of utter loneliness, my God! I seek thee;<br/>
If the worm may creep up to thy fellowship,<br/>
Or dust, instinct with yearning, rise towards thee.<br/>
I have no fellow, Father! of my kind;<br/>
None that be kindred, none companion to me,<br/>
And the vast love, and harmony, and brotherhood,<br/>
Of the dumb creatures thou hast made below me,<br/>
Vexes my soul with its own bitter lot.<br/>
Around me grow the trees, each by the other;<br/>
Innumerable leaves, each like the other,<br/>
Whisper and breathe, and live and move together.<br/>
Around me spring the flowers; each rosy cup<br/>
Hath sisters, leaning their fair cheeks against it.<br/>
The birds fly all above me; not alone,<br/>
But coupled in free fellowship, or mustering<br/>
A joyous band, weeping in companies<br/>
The wide blue fields between the clouds;—the clouds<br/>
<!-- page 128--><SPAN name="page128"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
128</span>Troop in society, each on the other<br/>
Shedding, like sympathy, reflected light.<br/>
The waves, a multitude, together run<br/>
To the great breast of the receiving sea:<br/>
Nothing but hath its kind, its company,<br/>
Oh God! save I alone! then, let me come,<br/>
Good Father! to thy feet, when even as now,<br/>
Tears, that no human hand is near to wipe,<br/>
O’erbrim my eyes, oh wipe them, thou, my Father!<br/>
When in my heart the stores of its affections,<br/>
Piled up unused, locked fast, are like to burst<br/>
The fleshly casket, that may not contain them,<br/>
Let me come nigh to thee;—accept thou them,<br/>
Dear Father!—Fount of Love! Compassionate God!<br/>
When in my spirit burns the fire, the power,<br/>
That have made men utter the words of angels,<br/>
And none are near to bid me speak and live:<br/>
Hearken, oh Father! Maker of my spirit!<br/>
God of my soul, to thee I will outpour<br/>
The hymns resounding through my troubled mind,<br/>
The sighs and sorrows of my lonely heart,<br/>
The tears, and weeping, of my weary eyes:<br/>
Be thou my fellow, glorious, gracious God!<br/>
And fit me for such fellowship with thee!</p>
<h2><!-- page 129--><SPAN name="page129"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>ABSENCE.</h2>
<p>What shall I do with all the days and hours<br/>
That must be counted ere I see thy face?<br/>
How shall I charm the interval that lowers<br/>
Between this time and that sweet time of grace?</p>
<p>Shall I in slumber steep each weary sense,<br/>
Weary with longing?—shall I flee away<br/>
Into past days, and with some fond pretence<br/>
Cheat myself to forget the present day?</p>
<p>Shall love for thee lay on my soul the sin<br/>
Of casting from me God’s great gift of
time;<br/>
Shall I these mists of memory locked within,<br/>
Leave, and forget, life’s purposes
sublime?</p>
<p>Oh! how, or by what means, may I contrive<br/>
To bring the hour that brings thee back more
near?<br/>
How may I teach my drooping hope to live<br/>
Until that blessed time, and thou art here?</p>
<p><!-- page 130--><SPAN name="page130"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
130</span>I’ll tell thee: for thy sake, I will lay hold<br/>
Of all good aims, and consecrate to thee,<br/>
In worthy deeds, each moment that is told<br/>
While thou, beloved one! art far from me.</p>
<p>For thee I will arouse my thoughts to try<br/>
All heavenward flights, all high and holy
strains;<br/>
For thy dear sake I will walk patiently<br/>
Through these long hours, nor call their minutes
pains.</p>
<p>I will this dreary blank of absence make<br/>
A noble task time, and will therein strive<br/>
To follow excellence, and to o’ertake<br/>
More good than I have won, since yet I live.</p>
<p>So may this doomed time build up in me<br/>
A thousand graces which shall thus be thine;<br/>
So may my love and longing hallowed be,<br/>
And thy dear thought an influence divine.</p>
<h2><!-- page 131--><SPAN name="page131"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>RETURN.</h2>
<p>When the bright sun back on his yearly road<br/>
Comes towards us, his great glory seems to me,<br/>
As from the sky he pours it all abroad,<br/>
A golden herald, my beloved, of thee.</p>
<p>When from the south the gentle winds do blow,<br/>
Calling the flowers that sleep beneath the earth,<br/>
It sounds like sweetest music, that doth go<br/>
Before thy coming, full of love and mirth.</p>
<p>When one by one the violets appear,<br/>
Opening their purple vests so modestly,<br/>
To greet the virgin daughter of the year,<br/>
Each seems a fragrant prophecy of thee.</p>
<p>For with the spring thou shalt return again;<br/>
Therefore the wind, the flower, and clear
sunshine,<br/>
A double worship from my heart obtain,<br/>
A love and welcome not their own, but thine.</p>
<h2><!-- page 132--><SPAN name="page132"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>LINES,<br/> Written in London.</h2>
<p>Struggle not with thy life!—the heavy doom<br/>
Resist not, it will bow thee like a slave:<br/>
Strive not! thou shalt not conquer; to thy tomb<br/>
Thou shalt go crushed, and ground, though
ne’er so brave.</p>
<p>Complain not of thy life!—for what art thou<br/>
More than thy fellows, that thou should’st not
weep?<br/>
Brave thoughts still lodge beneath a furrowed brow,<br/>
And the way-wearied have the sweetest sleep.</p>
<p>Marvel not at thy life!—patience shall see<br/>
The perfect work of wisdom to her given;<br/>
Hold fast thy soul through this high mystery,<br/>
And it shall lead thee to the gates of heaven.</p>
<h2><!-- page 133--><SPAN name="page133"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>TO ---</h2>
<p>What recks the sun, how weep the heavy flowers<br/>
All the sad night, when he is far away?<br/>
What recks he, how they mourn, through those dark hours,<br/>
Till back again he leads the smiling day?</p>
<p>As lifts each watery bloom its tearful eye,<br/>
And blesses from its lowly seat, the god,<br/>
In his great glory he goes through the sky,<br/>
And recks not of the blessing from the sod.</p>
<p>And what is it to thee, oh, thou, my fate!<br/>
That all my hope, and joy, remains with thee?<br/>
That thy departing, leaves me desolate,<br/>
That thy returning, brings back life to me?</p>
<p>I blame not thee, for all the strife, and woe,<br/>
That for thy sake daily disturbs my life;<br/>
I blame not thee, that Heaven has made me so,<br/>
That all the love I can, is woe, and strife.</p>
<p><!-- page 134--><SPAN name="page134"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
134</span>I blame not thee, that I may ne’er impart<br/>
The tempest, and the death, and the despair,<br/>
That words, and looks, of thine make in my heart,<br/>
And turn by turn, riot and stagnate there.</p>
<p>Oh! I have found my sin’s sharp scourge in thee,<br/>
For loving thee, as one should love but Heaven;<br/>
Therefore, oh, thou beloved! I blame not thee,<br/>
But by my anguish hope to be forgiven.</p>
<h2>TO ---</h2>
<p>The fountain of my life, which flowed so free,<br/>
The plenteous waves, which brimming gushed along,<br/>
Bright, deep, and swift, with a perpetual song,<br/>
Doubtless have long since seemed dried up to thee:<br/>
How should they not? from the shrunk, narrow bed,<br/>
Where once that glory flowed, have ebbed away<br/>
Light, life, and motion, and along its way<br/>
The dull stream slowly creeps a shallow thread,—<br/>
Yet, at the hidden source, if hands unblest<br/>
Disturb the wells whence that sad stream takes
birth,<br/>
The swollen waters once again gush forth,<br/>
Dark, bitter floods, rolling in wild unrest.</p>
<h2><!-- page 135--><SPAN name="page135"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>EPISTLE FROM THE RHINE.<br/> To Y---, with a bowl of Bohemian glass.</h2>
<p>From rocky hills, where climbs the vine;<br/>
Where on his waves the wandering Rhine<br/>
Sees imaged ruins, towns and towers,<br/>
Bare mountain scalps, green forest bowers;<br/>
From that broad land of poetry,<br/>
Wild legend, noble history,<br/>
This token many a day bore I,<br/>
To lay it at your feet, dear Y---.</p>
<p>Little the stupid bowl will tell<br/>
Of all that on its way befell,<br/>
Since from old Frankfort’s free domain,<br/>
Where smiling vineyards skirt the main,<br/>
It took its way; what sunsets red<br/>
Their splendours o’er the mountains shed,<br/>
How the blue Taunus’ distant height<br/>
Like hills of fire gave back the light,<br/>
And how, on river, rock, and sky,<br/>
The sun declined so tenderly,<br/>
<!-- page 136--><SPAN name="page136"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
136</span>That o’er the scene white moonlight fell,<br/>
Ere we had bid the day farewell.<br/>
From Maintz, where many a warrior priest<br/>
Was wont of yore to fight and feast,<br/>
The broad stream bore us down its tide,<br/>
Till where upon its steeper side,<br/>
Grim Ehrenfels, with turrets brown,<br/>
On Hatto’s wave-worn tower looks down.<br/>
Here did we rest,—my dearest Y---,<br/>
This bowl could all as well as I,<br/>
Describe that scene, when in the deep,<br/>
Still, middle night, all wrapped in sleep,<br/>
The hamlet lone, the dark blue sky,<br/>
The eddying river sweeping by,<br/>
Lay ’neath the clear unclouded light<br/>
Of the full moon: broad, brimming, bright,<br/>
The glorious flood went rolling by<br/>
Its world of waves, while silently<br/>
The shaggy hills on either side,<br/>
Watched like huge giants by the tide.<br/>
From where the savage bishop’s tower<br/>
Obstructs the flood, a sullen roar<br/>
Broke on the stillness of the night,<br/>
And the rough waters, yeasty white,<br/>
Foamed round that whirlpool dread and deep,<br/>
Where still thy voice is heard to weep,<br/>
<!-- page 137--><SPAN name="page137"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
137</span>Gisela! maiden most unblest,<br/>
Thou Jephtha’s daughter of the West!<br/>
Who shall recall the shadowy train<br/>
That, in the magic light, my brain<br/>
Conjured upon the glassy wave,<br/>
From castle, convent, crag and cave?<br/>
Down swept the Lord of Allemain,<br/>
Broad-browed, deep-chested Charlemagne,<br/>
And his fair child, who tottering bore<br/>
Her lover o’er the treacherous floor<br/>
Of new-fallen snow, that her small feet<br/>
Alone might print that tell-tale sheet,<br/>
Nor other trace show the stern guard,<br/>
The nightly path of Eginhard.<br/>
What waving plumes and banners passed,<br/>
With trumpet clang and bugle blast,<br/>
And on the night-wind faintly borne,<br/>
Strains from that mighty hunting-horn,<br/>
Which through these woods, in other days,<br/>
Startled the echoes of the chase.<br/>
On trooped the vision; lord and dame,<br/>
On fiery steed and palfrey tame,<br/>
Pilgrims, with palms and cockle-shells,<br/>
And motley fools, with cap and bells,<br/>
Princes and Counties Palatine,<br/>
Who ruled and revelled on the Rhine,<br/>
<!-- page 138--><SPAN name="page138"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
138</span>Abbot and monk, with many a torch,<br/>
Came winding from each convent porch;<br/>
And holy maids from Nonnenwerth,<br/>
In the pale moonlight all came forth;<br/>
Thy love, Roland, among the rest,<br/>
Her meek hands folded on her breast,<br/>
Her sad eyes turned to heaven, where thou<br/>
Once more shalt hear love’s early vow,—<br/>
That vow, which led thee home again<br/>
From Roncevalles’ bloody plain,—<br/>
That vow, that ne’er again was spoken<br/>
Till death the nun’s drear oath had broken.<br/>
Down from each crumbling castle poured,<br/>
Of ruthless robber-knights, the horde,<br/>
Sweeping with clang and clamour by,<br/>
Like storm-cloud rattling through the sky:<br/>
Pageant so glorious ne’er, I ween,<br/>
On lonely river bank was seen.</p>
<p>So passed that night: but with the day<br/>
The vision melted all away;<br/>
And wrapped in sullen mist and rain,<br/>
The river bore us on again,<br/>
With heavy hearts and tearful eyes,<br/>
That answered well the weeping skies<br/>
<!-- page 139--><SPAN name="page139"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
139</span>Of autumn, which now hung o’er all<br/>
The scene their leaden, dropping pall,<br/>
Beneath whose dark gray veils, once more<br/>
We hailed our native Albion’s shore,<br/>
Our pilgrimage of pleasure o’er.</p>
<h2>LINES FOR MUSIC.</h2>
<p>Good night! from music’s softest spell<br/>
Go to thy dreams: and in thy slumbers,<br/>
Fairies, with magic harp and shell,<br/>
Sing o’er to thee thy own sweet numbers.</p>
<p>Good night! from Hope’s intense desire<br/>
Go to thy dreams: and may to-morrow,<br/>
Love with the sun returning, fire<br/>
These evening mists of doubt and sorrow.</p>
<p>Good night! from hours of weary waking<br/>
I’ll to my dreams: still in my sleep<br/>
To feel the spirit’s restless aching,<br/>
And ev’n with eyelids closed, to weep.</p>
<h2><!-- page 140--><SPAN name="page140"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>SONNET.</h2>
<p>Say thou not sadly, “never,” and “no
more,”<br/>
But from thy lips banish those falsest words;<br/>
While life remains that which was thine before<br/>
Again may be thine; in Time’s storehouse lie<br/>
Days, hours, and moments, that have unknown
hoards<br/>
Of joy, as well as sorrow: passing by,<br/>
Smiles, come with tears; therefore with hopeful eye<br/>
Look thou on dear things, though they turn away,<br/>
For thou and they, perchance, some future day<br/>
Shall meet again, and the gone bliss return;<br/>
For its departure then make thou no mourn,<br/>
But with stout heart bid what thou lov’st farewell;<br/>
That which the past hath given the future gives as well.</p>
<h2>SONNET.</h2>
<p>Though thou return unto the former things,<br/>
Fields, woods, and gardens, where thy feet have strayed<br/>
<!-- page 141--><SPAN name="page141"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
141</span>In other days, and not a bough, branch, blade<br/>
Of tree, or meadow, but the same appears<br/>
As when thou lovedst them in former years,<br/>
They shall not <i>seem</i> the same; the spirit brings<br/>
Change from the inward, though the outward be<br/>
E’en as it was, when thou didst weep to see<br/>
It last, and spak’st that prophecy of pain,<br/>
“Farewell! I shall not look on ye again!”<br/>
And so thou never didst—no, though e’en now<br/>
Thine eyes behold all they so loved of yore,<br/>
The <i>Thou</i> that did behold them then, no
more<br/>
Lives in this world, it is another Thou.</p>
<h2>SONNET.</h2>
<p>Like one who walketh in a plenteous land,<br/>
By flowing waters, under shady trees,<br/>
Through sunny meadows, where the summer bees<br/>
Feed in the thyme and clover; on each hand<br/>
Fair gardens lying, where of fruit and flower<br/>
The bounteous season hath poured out its dower:<br/>
Where saffron skies roof in the earth with light,<br/>
And birds sing thankfully towards Heaven, while he<br/>
<!-- page 142--><SPAN name="page142"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
142</span>With a sad heart walks through this jubilee,<br/>
Beholding how beyond this happy land,<br/>
Stretches a thirsty desert of gray sand,<br/>
Where all the air is one thick, leaden blight,<br/>
Where all things dwarf and dwindle,—so walk I,<br/>
Through my rich, present life, to what beyond doth lie.</p>
<h2>SONNET.</h2>
<p>Blaspheme not thou thy sacred life, nor turn<br/>
O’er joys that God hath for a season lent,<br/>
Perchance to try thy spirit, and its bent,<br/>
Effeminate soul and base! weakly to mourn.<br/>
There lies no desert in the land of life,<br/>
For e’en that tract that barrenest doth seem,<br/>
Laboured of thee in faith and hope, shall teem<br/>
With heavenly harvests and rich gatherings, rife.<br/>
Haply no more, music, and mirth and love,<br/>
And glorious things of old and younger art,<br/>
Shall of thy days make one perpetual feast;<br/>
<!-- page 143--><SPAN name="page143"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
143</span>But when these bright companions all depart,<br/>
Lay thou thy head upon the ample breast<br/>
Of Hope, and thou shalt hear the angels sing above.</p>
<h2>SONNET.</h2>
<p>But to be still! oh, but to cease awhile<br/>
The panting breath and hurrying steps of life,<br/>
The sights, the sounds, the struggle, and the
strife<br/>
Of hourly being; the sharp biting file<br/>
Of action, fretting on the tightened chain<br/>
Of rough existence; all that is not pain,<br/>
But utter weariness; oh! to be free<br/>
But for a while from conscious entity!<br/>
To shut the banging doors and windows wide,<br/>
Of restless sense, and let the soul abide<br/>
Darkly and stilly, for a little space,<br/>
Gathering its strength up to pursue the race;<br/>
Oh, Heavens! to rest a moment, but to rest<br/>
From this quick, gasping life, were to be blest!</p>
<h2><!-- page 144--><SPAN name="page144"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>SONNET.</h2>
<p>Art thou already weary of the way?<br/>
Thou who hast yet but half the way gone
o’er:<br/>
Get up, and lift thy burthen: lo, before<br/>
Thy feet the road goes stretching far away.<br/>
If thou already faint, who hast but come<br/>
Through half thy pilgrimage, with fellows gay,<br/>
Love, youth, and hope, under the rosy bloom<br/>
And temperate airs, of early breaking day;<br/>
Look yonder, how the heavens stoop and gloom,<br/>
There cease the trees to shade, the flowers to spring,<br/>
And the angels leave thee; what wilt thou become<br/>
Through yon drear stretch of dismal wandering,<br/>
Lonely and dark? I shall take courage, friend,<br/>
For comes not every step more near the end?</p>
<p style="text-align: center">London: <span class="smcap">Stewart</span> and <span class="smcap">Murray</span>, Old Bailey.</p>
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